This is a fork of GeoRuby with some updates and extra funcionality.
It is intended as a holder for geometric data. The data model roughly follows the OGC “Simple Features for SQL” specification, so it should play nice with data returned from PostGIS or any Spatial Extensions (MongoDB, MySQL…). Although without any kind of advanced functionalities (such as geometric operators or reprojections). It also supports various output and input formats (GeoRSS, KML, Shapefile).
OGC:“www.opengis.org/docs/99-049.pdf”
The following geometric data types are provided :
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Point
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Line String
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Linear Ring
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Polygon
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Multi Point
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Multi Line String
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Multi Polygon
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Geometry Collection
They can be in 2D, 3DZ, 3DM, and 4D.
On top of this an Envelope class is available, to contain the bounding box of a geometry.
To install the latest version, just type:
gem install nofxx-georuby
Creating a 3D Point:
Point.from_x_y_z(10.0, 20.0, 5.0)
Creating a LineString:
LineString.from_coordinates([[1,1],[2,2]],4326))
These geometries can be input and output in WKB/EWKB/WKT/EWKT format as well as the related HexWKB and HexEWKB formats. HexEWKB and WKB are the default form under which geometric data is returned respectively from PostGIS and MySql.
GeoRSS Simple, GeoRSS W3CGeo, GeoRSS GML can also be input and output. Note that they will not output valid RSS, but just the part strictly concerning the geometry as outlined in www.georss.org/1/ . Since the model does not allow multiple geometries, for geometry collections, only the first geometry will be output. Similarly, for polygons, the GeoRSS output will only contain the outer ring. As for W3CGeo output, only points can be output, so the first point of the geometry is chosen. By default the Simple format is output. Envelope can also be output in these formats: The box geometric type is chosen (except for W3CGeo, where the center of the envelope is chose). These formats can also be input and a GeoRuby geometry will be created. Note that it will not read a valid RSS file, only a geometry string.
On top of that, there is now support for KML output and input. As for GeoRSS, a valid KML file will not be output, but only the geometric data. Options :id
, :extrude
, :tesselate
and :altitude_mode
can be given. Note that if the :altitude_mode
option is not passed or set to clampToGround
, the altitude data will not be output even if present. Envelopes output a LatLonAltBox instead of a geometry. For the output, the following geometric types are supported : Point, LineString, Polygon.
Georuby has support for reading ESRI shapefiles (www.esri.com/library/whitepapers/pdfs/shapefile.pdf). A tool called shp2sql.rb
is also provided: it shows how to use the SHP reading functionality together with the spatial adapter plugin for Rails to import spatial features into MySQL and PostGIS.
Here is an example of Shapefile reading, that goes through all the geometries in a file and disaply the values of the attributes :
require 'geo_ruby/shp' ShpFile.open(shpfile) do |shp| shp.each do |shape| geom = shape.geometry #a GeoRuby SimpleFeature att_data = shape.data #a Hash shp.fields.each do |field| puts att_data[field.name] end end end
Support for ESRI shapefile creation and modification has been added as well. New shapefiles can be created given a geometry type and specifications for the DBF fields. Data can be added and removed from an existing shapefile. An update operation is also provided for convenience: it just performs a ‘delete’ and an ‘add’, which means the index of the modified record will change. Note that once a shapefile has been created, GeoRuby does not allow the modification of the schema (it will probably be done in a subsequent version).
Here is an example of how to create a new Shapefile with 2 fields :
shpfile = ShpFile.create('hello.shp',ShpType::POINT,[Dbf::Field.new("Hoyoyo","C",10),Dbf::Field.new("Boyoul","N",10,0)])
The file is then open for reading and writing.
Here is an example of how to write to a shapefile (created or not with GeoRuby) :
shpfile = ShpFile.open('places.shp') shpfile.transaction do |tr| tr.add(ShpRecord.new(Point.from_x_y(123.4,123.4),'Hoyoyo' => "AEZ",'Bouyoul' => 45)) tr.update(4,ShpRecord.new(Point.from_x_y(-16.67,16.41),'Hoyoyo' => "EatMe",'Bouyoul' => 42)) tr.delete(1) end shpfile.close
Note the transaction is just there so the operations on the files can be buffered. Nothing happens on the original files until the block has finished executing. Calling tr.rollback
at anytime during the execution will prevent the modifications.
Also currently, error reporting is minimal and it has not been tested that thoroughly so caveat emptor and backup before performing any destructive operation.
You can read and convert GPX Files to LineString/Polygon:
gpxfile = GpxFile.open(tour.gpx') gpxfile.as_line_string => GeoRuby::SimpleFeatures::LineString..
Basic GeoJSON support has been implemented per v1.0 of the spec.
USAGE:
input - GeoRuby::SimpleFeatures::Geometry.from_geojson(geojson_string) output - call #as_geojson or #to_json on any SimpleFeature Geometry instance
TODO:
* Refactor to support extremely large GeoJSON input streams / files. Currently the entire GeoJSON representation must be loaded into memory as a String * Improve srid/crs support on input and add support on output * Implement bounding-box spport per spec on input/output? * Improved / more tests
GeoJSON support implemented by Marcus Mateus and released courtesy SimpliTex.
The SHP reading part uses the DBF library (rubyforge.org/projects/dbf/) by Keith Morrison (infused.org). Thanks also to Pramukta Kumar and Pete Schwamb for their contributions.
GeoRuby is released under the MIT license.
Any questions, enhancement proposals, bug notifications or corrections can be sent to [email protected].
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Writing of ESRI shapefiles
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Reading of ESRI shapefiles
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Addition of a small tool to import spatial features in MySQL and PostGIS from a SHP file
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Schema modification of existing shapefiles
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More error reporting when writing shapefiles
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More tests on writing shapefiles ; tests on real-world shapefiles
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Better shp2sql import tool
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Documentation