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Python Geospatial Development

Python Geospatial Development - Third Edition

By : Westra
4.3 (4)
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Python Geospatial Development

Python Geospatial Development

4.3 (4)
By: Westra

Overview of this book

Geospatial development links your data to locations on the surface of the Earth. Writing geospatial programs involves tasks such as grouping data by location, storing and analyzing large amounts of spatial information, performing complex geospatial calculations, and drawing colorful interactive maps. In order to do this well, you’ll need appropriate tools and techniques, as well as a thorough understanding of geospatial concepts such as map projections, datums, and coordinate systems. This book provides an overview of the major geospatial concepts, data sources, and toolkits. It starts by showing you how to store and access spatial data using Python, how to perform a range of spatial calculations, and how to store spatial data in a database. Further on, the book teaches you how to build your own slippy map interface within a web application, and finishes with the detailed construction of a geospatial data editor using the GeoDjango framework. By the end of this book, you will be able to confidently use Python to write your own geospatial applications ranging from quick, one-off utilities to sophisticated web-based applications using maps and other geospatial data.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)
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14
Index

Defining the ShapeEditor's applications


We now have a Django project for our overall ShapeEditor system. We next need to break down our project into applications, following Django's design philosophy of having applications be small and relatively self-contained. Looking back at our design for the overall project, we can see several possible candidates for breaking the functionality into separate applications:

  • Importing and exporting shapefiles

  • Selecting features

  • Editing features

  • The tile map server

We're going to combine the first three into a single application called shapefiles, which will handle all the shapefile-related logic. We'll then have another application called tms, which implements our tile map server. Finally, we'll define one more application, which we'll called shared, to hold the database models and Python modules that are shared across these applications.

For example, we might have a module named utils.py that is needed by both the shapefile and tms applications. We'll place...

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