sorry Paolo, you're right.
I'm using QGIS from osgeo:
- 2.8.3 64bit on win10 (laptop)
- 2.10.1 32bit on win7 (workstation)
thank you!
Il 15/10/2015 17.52, qgis-user-requ...@lists.osgeo.org ha scritto:
Message: 1
Date: Thu, 15 Oct 2015 08:26:23 +0200
From: Paolo
HI Jan.
What is happening is that the coords in the shape file that you can see in the
attributes table are just copies of the actual coords used to display the data.
It is simple to update these coords from the underlying data.
In qgis,
1. open the attribute table for your shapefile.
2. Make
Hi,
I would go with the TIN if your points are far apart. That will not create the
bumps that you see. IDW is good but you may have to change the IDW
weights from 2 (1\2, the typical gravity model) to 3 or 4 to smooth thing
out. Be careful and make sure you original values don't shift too
Not a QGIS (or GRASS) based solution, but GMT (Generic Mapping Tools) has some
excellent gridding tools, and for the same price :-)
xyz2grd http://gmt.soest.hawaii.edu/doc/5.1.0/xyz2grd.htmlsurface (very
powerful & configureable) http://gmt.soest.hawaii.edu/doc/5.1.0/surface.html
Or if you really want geoPDF, it is explained here:
http://www.northrivergeographic.com/archives/migrating-a-project-from-arcgis-to-qgis-georeferenced-pdfs
Goyo
2015-10-18 15:33 GMT+02:00 Goyo :
> You can export a world file with georeferencing information along with
> the
You can export a world file with georeferencing information along with
the composer. In the "Composition" tab, "Export settings", check
"World file on" and select the map (I guess there will be just one map
in your case).
I do not think this will work for pdfs but it will do for image
formats
I suppose it's is a download counter, but better have confirmation by @elpaso
regards
Luigi Pirelli
**
* LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/luigipirelli
* Elance: