Hi Kris,
Your best bet will be to follow the recommendations of the others and figure
out how to get rasters to load into Power Bi. This may be better approached by
finding a Power Bi community and asking them, because you are likely not the
first person to have attempted this.
While you can
Charles,
Thanks for the reply. I have the KML tools plugin installed. In that there
is a tool called "Export KMZ". That lets me export each individual layer to
a kmz. But it does not export the entire map to kmz.
Regards.
On Thu, Aug 12, 2021 at 4:58 PM Charles Dixon-Paver
wrote:
> I think you
I think you may be able to use the kml tools plugin to achieve your desired
result
On Thu, 12 Aug 2021, 22:55 krishna Ayyala, wrote:
> Hello,
> I have a QGIS map saved with ".qgz" extension. This map has four layers.
> One layer has points, one layer has lines and two layers have polygons. Is
>
I was receiving mail in digest mode, so it didn't appear that I could
respond to a message. Is there a way to do this?
Thank you, Jurgen -- that trick did the job. Is this "fix" documented
anywhere? Is there any more reliable solution? I'm concerned that some of
our devs won't remember to put
Hello,
I have a QGIS map saved with ".qgz" extension. This map has four layers.
One layer has points, one layer has lines and two layers have polygons. Is
it possible to convert the entire map to kmz without losing the symbology.
I know how to convert each layer into kmz. But, I am exploring to
Did you write to the corresponding author listed for the paper? At the end it
makes it sound like they were still working on things. Maybe they have done
something in the last 5 years (or maybe not).
I think everything that I want to do can be accomplished using the ArcGIS
visual within Power BI but then the shape file I created needs to be put
onto their server as a public map and also I would need to buy a license
for their product. UGH.
On Thu, Aug 12, 2021 at 12:44 PM Ben Hur Pintor
Hi Kris,
I see. As I mentioned, you can't save the XYZ tile layer as a local file
(either as a raster or vector) as it is served as tiles (e.g. images)
served from online.
One solution is to load the XYZ tile layer as a basemap layer in PowerBI.
If this is not available in PowerBI and you need
Have a look at this video, it seems to allow you to utilise MapBox as a
background Map
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N33d7fCVsZw
Regards,
Richard.
——
Richard McDonnell MSc GIS, FME Certified Professional
FRM Data Management
——
Oifig na nOibreacha Poiblí
Office of Public Works
Sráid
I'm using a shape file that I created and the OpenStreetMap from the XYZ
Tiles in the QGIS app. Tableau has a lot more capability than Power BI ...
When I export the 2 layers from QGIS, I want one to sit on top of the other
and be one file. I'm thinking this might not be possible. I did find a
Hi Kris,
The OpenStreetMap (OSM) raster layer you mentioned, was this a TIFF file
(something you loaded locally) or was this a basemap loaded as an XYZ tile
layer (i.e. you loaded the OpenStreetMap tile layer found by default under
XYZ Tiles in the QGIS browser)? In the case of the latter, it's
Hi,
I read about this plugin in “A QGIS Plugin for Offshore Wave Hindcasting
Based on Geographic Transposition of Wave Gauge Data”, Journal of
Applied Engineering Sciences, 6(19), 2/2016, pp. 33-40 [Pasanisi, F.,
Tebano, C., 2016. ] but couldn't find it in QGIS. I've searched all the
web but
Hi Kris;
I am not familiar with MapShaper, however, the vector data and the
raster layer (Openstreetmap) are fundamentally different animals. You
could:
1) generate a geopackage which can store both raster and vector data
types, but I do not know if you can read such a database with
My issue seems to be with the raster layer, can't seem to figure out how to
have it export together with the vector layer.
On Thu, Aug 12, 2021 at 5:27 AM Richard McDonnell
wrote:
> Hi,
>
> There is a TopoJSON Writer Plugin available for QGIS, you might give that
> a try. It should write the
Hi,
There is a TopoJSON Writer Plugin available for QGIS, you might give that a
try. It should write the vector dataset out as TopoKSON for you.
Regards,
Richard
——
Richard McDonnell MSc GIS, FME Certified Professional
FRM Data Management
——
Oifig na nOibreacha Poiblí
Office of Public Works
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