Il 01/09/2016 13:30, Etienne Trimaille ha scritto:
> BTW, Paolo, is it possible to get QuickOSM trusted ?
Done.
All the best.
--
Paolo Cavallini - www.faunalia.eu
QGIS & PostGIS courses: http://www.faunalia.eu/training.html
___
Qgis-user mailing list
Thanks Kimaidou. QuickOSM is also a nice idea, especially for a small area
like 1MB !
You can draw your model in QGIS Processing, look at the end of the video :
https://vimeo.com/108737868
I agree is not very convenient to have all these boxes in QuickOSM, one
called "quickquery" would be very appr
Hi,
Look at the Processing Toolbox ( menu Processing / Toolbox ). Once QuickOsm
is installed, there is a new tree item "QuickOSM" with many algs available.
Regards
Michaƫl
2016-09-01 13:29 GMT+02:00 Robin Paulson :
> On 2016-09-01 22:00, Paolo Cavallini wrote:
>
>> If your data is not that big,
On 2016-09-01 22:00, Paolo Cavallini wrote:
If your data is not that big, you could use QuickOsm processing
scripts
to automate this a bit ( and use a macro at project opening to launch
the processing model you have build combining QuickOsm algs and others
more generic algs to do the job.)
If Qu
Il 01/09/2016 08:08, kimaidou ha scritto:
> Hi,
>
> If your data is not that big, you could use QuickOsm processing scripts
> to automate this a bit ( and use a macro at project opening to launch
> the processing model you have build combining QuickOsm algs and others
> more generic algs to do the
Hi,
If your data is not that big, you could use QuickOsm processing scripts to
automate this a bit ( and use a macro at project opening to launch the
processing model you have build combining QuickOsm algs and others more
generic algs to do the job.)
If QuickOsm lacks some features, you should imp
On 2016-09-01 10:04, Robin Paulson wrote:
On 2016-08-29 04:24, Etienne Trimaille wrote:
You have to set up a database with the OSM diff to get an up to date
OSM database. Then you can add your PostGIS layers in QGIS.
You can have a look to this docker project :
https://github.com/kartoza/docker
On 2016-08-29 02:56, Greg Troxel wrote:
Robin Paulson writes:
at the moment there are various ways to add openstreetmap data to
qgis. as far as i can tell, they all rely upon downloading a
.osm/obf/pbf file in some semi-automated way and importing it. none of
the existing tools allow for any e
You have to set up a database with the OSM diff to get an up to date OSM
database. Then you can add your PostGIS layers in QGIS.
You can have a look to this docker project :
https://github.com/kartoza/docker-osm
These OSM layers are updated every two minutes by default, and you can see
these layer
Robin Paulson writes:
> at the moment there are various ways to add openstreetmap data to
> qgis. as far as i can tell, they all rely upon downloading a
> .osm/obf/pbf file in some semi-automated way and importing it. none of
> the existing tools allow for any existing data to be deleted and
> r
Hi,
I can't give you any input on your question, but just would like to know
from you what the use case/advantage for this kind of plugin/functionality
is.
Cheers
Bernd
Am 28.08.2016, 06:06 Uhr, schrieb Robin Paulson :
at the moment there are various ways to add openstreetmap data to qgi
at the moment there are various ways to add openstreetmap data to qgis.
as far as i can tell, they all rely upon downloading a .osm/obf/pbf file
in some semi-automated way and importing it. none of the existing tools
allow for any existing data to be deleted and replaced with the new.
what i w
12 matches
Mail list logo