Note: A new GRASS GIS stable version has been released: GRASS GIS 7.8, available here.
Updated manual page: here
NAME
r.distance - Locates the closest points between objects in two raster maps.
KEYWORDS
raster,
distance
SYNOPSIS
r.distance
r.distance --help
r.distance [-lon] map=name1,name2[,name1,name2,...] [separator=character] [sort=string] [--help] [--verbose] [--quiet] [--ui]
Flags:
- -l
- Include category labels in the output
- -o
- Report zero distance if rasters are overlapping
- -n
- Report null objects as *
- --help
- Print usage summary
- --verbose
- Verbose module output
- --quiet
- Quiet module output
- --ui
- Force launching GUI dialog
Parameters:
- map=name1,name2[,name1,name2,...] [required]
- Name of two input raster maps for computing inter-class distances
- separator=character
- Field separator
- Special characters: pipe, comma, space, tab, newline
- Default: :
- sort=string
- Sort output by distance
- Default: sorted by categories
- Options: asc, desc
- asc: Sort by distance in ascending order
- desc: Sort by distance in descending order
r.distance locates the closest points between "objects" in two raster maps. An
"object" is defined as all the grid cells that have the same category
number, and closest means having the shortest "straight-line" distance.
The cell centers are considered for the distance calculation (two
adjacent grid cells have the distance between their cell centers).
The output is an ascii list, one line per pair of objects, in the following form:
cat1:cat2:distance:east1:north1:east2:north2
- cat1
- Category number from map1
- cat2
- Category number from map2
- distance
- The distance in meters between "cat1" and "cat2"
- east1,north1
- The coordinates of the grid cell "cat1" which is closest to "cat2"
- east2,north2
- The coordinates of the grid cell "cat2" which is closest to "cat1"
-l
The -l flag outputs the category labels of the matched raster objects at the
beginning of the line, if they exist.
-o
The -o flag reports zero distance if the input rasters are overlapping.
The output format lends itself to filtering. For example, to "see" lines
connecting each of the category pairs in two maps, filter the output using
awk and then into
d.graph:
r.distance map=map1,map2 | \
awk -F: '{print "move",$4,$5,"\ndraw",$6,$7}' | d.graph -m
To create a vector map of all the "map1" coordinates, filter the output into
awk and then into v.in.ascii:
r.distance map=map1,map2 | \
awk -F: '{print $4,$5}' | v.in.ascii format=point output=name separator=space
r.buffer,
r.cost,
r.drain,
r.grow,
r.grow.distance,
v.distance
Michael Shapiro, U.S. Army Construction Engineering Research Laboratory
Last changed: $Date$
SOURCE CODE
Available at: r.distance source code (history)
Note: A new GRASS GIS stable version has been released: GRASS GIS 7.8, available here.
Updated manual page: here
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© 2003-2019
GRASS Development Team,
GRASS GIS 7.4.5dev Reference Manual