NAME
v.buffer - Creates a buffer around vector features of given type.
KEYWORDS
vector,
buffer,
area,
circle,
geometry,
line,
grow,
shrink
SYNOPSIS
v.buffer
v.buffer --help
v.buffer [-sct] input=name [layer=string] [cats=range] [where=sql_query] [type=string[,string,...]] output=name [distance=float] [minordistance=float] [angle=float] [column=name] [scale=float] [tolerance=float] [--overwrite] [--help] [--verbose] [--quiet] [--ui]
Flags:
- -s
- Make outside corners straight
- -c
- Do not make caps at the ends of polylines
- -t
- Transfer categories and attributes
- --overwrite
- Allow output files to overwrite existing files
- --help
- Print usage summary
- --verbose
- Verbose module output
- --quiet
- Quiet module output
- --ui
- Force launching GUI dialog
Parameters:
- input=name [required]
- Name of input vector map
- Or data source for direct OGR access
- layer=string
- Layer number or name ('-1' for all layers)
- A single vector map can be connected to multiple database tables. This number determines which table to use. When used with direct OGR access this is the layer name.
- Default: -1
- cats=range
- Category values
- Example: 1,3,7-9,13
- where=sql_query
- WHERE conditions of SQL statement without 'where' keyword
- Example: income < 1000 and population >= 10000
- type=string[,string,...]
- Input feature type
- Options: point, line, boundary, centroid, area
- Default: point,line,area
- output=name [required]
- Name for output vector map
- distance=float
- Buffer distance along major axis in map units
- minordistance=float
- Buffer distance along minor axis in map units
- angle=float
- Angle of major axis in degrees
- Default: 0
- column=name
- Name of column to use for buffer distances
- scale=float
- Scaling factor for attribute column values
- Default: 1.0
- tolerance=float
- Maximum distance between theoretical arc and polygon segments as multiple of buffer (default 0.01)
v.buffer creates a buffer around features of
given
type, which have a category in the
given
layer. The
tolerance controls the number of vector
segments being generated (the smaller the value, the more vector
segments are generated).
Internal buffers for areas can be generated with negative distance
values ("inward buffer" or "negative buffer" or "shrinking").
v.buffer fusions the geometries of buffers by default.
Categories and attribute table will not be transferred (this would
not make sense as one buffer geometry can be the result of many
different input geometries). To transfer the categories and
attributes the user can set the -t flag. This will result in
buffers being cut up where buffers of individual input geometries
overlap. Each part that is the result of overlapping buffers of
multiple geometries will have multiple categories corresponding to
those geometries, and multiple buffer areas can have the same
category. The buffer for the input feature with category X can thus
be retrieved by selecting all buffer areas with category X (see
example below).
Buffers for lines and areas are generated using the algorithms from
the GEOS library.
For advanced users: the built-in buffer algorithm is no longer
used, as we use GEOS instead. If GRASS was not compiled with GEOS support
or the environmental
variable GRASS_VECTOR_BUFFER is defined, then GRASS
generates buffers using the built-in buffering algorithm (which is still
buggy for some input data).
The options minordistance, angle, tolerance are
kept for backward compatibility and have no effect with GEOS buffering.
The following vector line related corners (also called "cap") exist:
- no cap:
- rounded cap:
- square cap:
By default
v.buffer creates rounded buffers (blue color on
figure below):
Straight corners with caps are created using the
-s flag (red color on
the figure below), while the
-c flag doesn't make caps at the ends of
polylines (green color on the figure below):
With a point vector map as input data, square buffers are created instead
of round buffers by using the
-s flag.
All examples are based on the North Carolina sample dataset.
v.buffer input=roadsmajor output=roadsmajor_buffer type=line distance=100
Buffer of 100m along the "roadsmajor" lines (map subset, original center line
shown in black)
v.buffer input=hospitals output=hospitals_circled type=point distance=2000
Buffer of 2000m around the "hospitals" points (map subset, original points
shown in black, new area centroids in red)
v.buffer input=hospitals output=hospitals_circled type=point distance=1000 -t
# display buffer around hospital with category 36,
# this buffer is composed of several areas:
d.vect map=hospitals_circled type=area layer=1 cats=36
# extract this buffer, dissolving boundaries
v.extract in=hospitals_circled output=hospital_36_circled layer=1 cats=36 -d
v.buffer input=lakes output=lakes_buffer type=area distance=100
Buffer of 100m around the "lakes" polygons (map subset, original areas
shown in black)
In this example, an internal buffer ("inward buffer" or "negative buffer")
is generated using a negative
distance value:
v.buffer input=lakes output=lakes_buffer type=area distance=-50
Internal buffer of 50m inside the "lakes" polygons (map subset, original areas
shown in black)
Not all features are buffered, only the polygons that allow creation inside
a topological cleaned polygon.
r.buffer,
v.parallel,
v.extract,
v.type,
v.patch,
v.db.connect
Radim Blazek
Rewritten by Rosen Matev (with support through the
Google Summer of Code program 2008)
Rewritten by Markus Metz (2011, 2012)
SOURCE CODE
Available at:
v.buffer source code
(history)
Latest change: Monday Nov 25 13:02:55 2024 in commit: 036451f730761c9f4b6c31f27cb2c4c1812864a5
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GRASS Development Team,
GRASS GIS 8.5.0dev Reference Manual