Life doesn't get any easier - one answer brings up a bunch of questions :)
At this moment I am certain that our whole country uses CS-63 for cadastral
purposes. BTW, I've done some research and here's what I've found out. It
seems that the soviets invented this system to supposedly make it
Sat 29 Dec 2007 16:52, Ziegler Stefan wrote:
No arcs? Lucky you! I found this:
http://www.urigal.net/medias/files/gis-tools.tar.gz These are some
python scripts for doing some surveying calculation like lat/lon - UTM
or polar-coords - cartesian-coords.
i recently had a look at it, looks
I see. I'm pretty sure I'll not be using GPS in the nearest future. Actually
I'm beginning to understand why our country is still using the CS-63. All of
our reference points are in CS-63. Can't understand why bloody KGB or
whatever doesn't release specs for CS-63 zones. I'm so pissed...
I am trying to compile qgis 0.9.1 on my Fedora Core 6 system. (qgis
0.8.1 is already installed and working). Fedora 6 runs on Qt-3.3, but
I've added Qt4 and Qt4-devel thru yum.
I've downloaded and compiled SIP, but when I get to compiling PyQt4
here's the error:
python configure.py -w -q
On Jan 12, 2008 2:36 PM, Micha Silver [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
1- What do I lose by not having Python bindings?
Python support in QGIS is optional, that's why it compiles and works
also without it. The most interesting part of the python support for
ordinary users is ability to use plugins