Book Image

Mastering Geospatial Development with QGIS 3.x - Third Edition

By : Shammunul Islam, Simon Miles, Kurt Menke, GISP, Richard Smith Jr., GISP, Luigi Pirelli, John Van Hoesen, GISP
Book Image

Mastering Geospatial Development with QGIS 3.x - Third Edition

By: Shammunul Islam, Simon Miles, Kurt Menke, GISP, Richard Smith Jr., GISP, Luigi Pirelli, John Van Hoesen, GISP

Overview of this book

QGIS is an open source solution to GIS and widely used by GIS professionals all over the world. It is the leading alternative to proprietary GIS software. Although QGIS is described as intuitive, it is also, by default, complex. Knowing which tools to use and how to apply them is essential to producing valuable deliverables on time. Starting with a refresher on the QGIS basics and getting you acquainted with the latest QGIS 3.6 updates, this book will take you all the way through to teaching you how to create a spatial database and a GeoPackage. Next, you will learn how to style raster and vector data by choosing and managing different colors. The book will then focus on processing raster and vector data. You will be then taught advanced applications, such as creating and editing vector data. Along with that, you will also learn about the newly updated Processing Toolbox, which will help you develop the advanced data visualizations. The book will then explain to you the graphic modeler, how to create QGIS plugins with PyQGIS, and how to integrate Python analysis scripts with QGIS. By the end of the book, you will understand how to work with all aspects of QGIS and will be ready to use it for any type of GIS work.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
Title Page
Copyright and Credits
About Packt
Contributors
Preface
Index

Merging rasters


In most cases, rasters are supplied in tiles; if there are lot of them, this means that you need to think about how you are going to manage them. Sometimes, the best practical measure to do this is to merge the rasters together into a single file. This can present some complications, normally in terms of the size of the merged raster output.

In a new QGIS project, load in the raster layers SU55SW, SU55SE, SU55NW, and SU55NE from the repository for this chapter, the link of which is in the Preface. Then, follow these steps:

  1. Go to Raster | Miscellaneous | Merge:
  1. In the Merge window, choose the files that you want to merge from the Input layers browser button (SU55SW, SU55SE, SU55NW, and SU55NE).
  2. Check the Grab pseudocolor table from first layer option. This will make sure that the right color bands are applied across all of the merged files. Keep all other values and settings as listed.
  3. Set the Merged field to be the location, name, and file type for the new merge raster, or leave...