Note: This document is for an older version of GRASS GIS that has been discontinued. You should upgrade, and read the current manual page.
NAME
r.out.mat  - Exports a GRASS raster to a binary MAT-File.
KEYWORDS
raster, 
export, 
output
SYNOPSIS
r.out.mat
r.out.mat --help
r.out.mat input=name output=name  [--overwrite]  [--help]  [--verbose]  [--quiet]  [--ui] 
Flags:
- --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 raster map
 
- output=name [required]
 
- Name for output binary MAT file
 
 
r.out.mat will export a GRASS raster map to a MAT-File which can
be loaded into Matlab or Octave for plotting or further analysis. 
Attributes such as map title and bounds will also be exported into 
additional array variables.
Specifically, the following array variables are created:
  -  map_data
  
 -  map_name
  
 -  map_title (if it exists)
  
 -  map_northern_edge
  
 -  map_southern_edge
  
 -  map_eastern_edge
  
 -  map_western_edge
 
In addition, 
r.out.mat makes for a nice binary container format
for transferring georeferenced maps around, even if you don't use Matlab 
or Octave. 
r.out.mat exports a Version 4 MAT-File. These files should 
successfully load into more modern versions of Matlab and Octave 
without any problems.
Everything should be Endian safe, so the resultant file can be simply 
copied between different system architectures without binary translation.
As there is no IEEE value for 
NaN for integer maps, GRASS's null 
value is used to represent it within these maps. You'll have to do something 
like this to clean them once the map is loaded into Matlab:
    map_data(find(map_data < -1e9)) = NaN;
Null values in maps containing either floating point or double-precision 
floating point data should translate into 
NaN values as expected.
r.out.mat must load the entire map into memory before writing, 
therefore it might have problems with 
huge maps.
(a 3000x4000 DCELL map uses about 100mb RAM)
GRASS defines its map bounds at the outer-edge of the bounding cells, not at
the coordinates of their centroids. Thus, the following Matlab commands may 
be used to determine the map's resolution information:
    [rows cols] = size(map_data)
    x_range = map_eastern_edge - map_western_edge
    y_range = map_northern_edge - map_southern_edge
    ns_res = y_range/rows
    ew_res = x_range/cols
 
In Matlab, plot with either:
imagesc(map_data), axis equal, axis tight, colorbar
or
contourf(map_data, 24), axis ij, axis equal, axis tight, colorbar
 
Add support for exporting map history, category information, color map, etc.
Option to export as a version 5 MAT-File, with map and support information 
stored in a single structured array.
r.in.mat
r.out.ascii, r.out.bin
r.null
The Octave project
Hamish Bowman 
Department of Marine Science
University of Otago
New Zealand
SOURCE CODE
  Available at:
  r.out.mat source code
  (history)
  Latest change: Monday Nov 18 20:15:32 2019 in commit: 1a1d107e4f6e1b846f9841c2c6fabf015c5f720d
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© 2003-2023
GRASS Development Team,
GRASS GIS 7.8.9dev Reference Manual