Note: This document is for an older version of GRASS GIS that will be discontinued soon. You should upgrade, and read the current manual page.
NAME
v.mapcalc - Vector map calculator.
KEYWORDS
vector,
algebra
SYNOPSIS
v.mapcalc
v.mapcalc --help
v.mapcalc expression=expression [--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:
- expression=expression [required]
- Expression to evaluate
v.mapcalc performs overlay and buffer functions on
vector map layers. New vector map layers can be created which are
expressions of existing vector map layers, boolean vector operations
and buffer functions.
The module expects its input as expression in the following form:
result = expression
This structure is similar to r.mapcalc, see
r.mapcalc.
Where
result is the name of a vector map layer that will contain the result of the calculation and
expression is any valid combination of boolean and buffer operations for existing vector map layers.
The input is given by using the first module option
expression= . This option passes a
quoted
expression on the command line, for example:
v.mapcalc expression="A = B"
Where
A is the new vector map layer that will be equal to the existing vector map layer
B in this case.
will give the same result.
The module supports the following boolean vector operations:
Boolean Name Operator Meaning Precedence Correspondent function
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
AND & Intersection 1 (v.overlay operator=and)
OR | Union 1 (v.overlay operator=or)
DISJOINT OR + Disjoint union 1 (v.patch)
XOR ^ Symmetric difference 1 (v.overlay operator=xor)
NOT ~ Complement 1 (v.overlay operator=not)
And vector functions:
buff_p(A, size) Buffer the points of vector map layer A with size
buff_l(A, size) Buffer the lines of vector map layer A with size
buff_a(A, size) Buffer the areas of vector map layer A with size
As shown in the operator table above, the boolean vector operators do not have different precedence.
In default setting the expression will be left associatively evaluated. To define specific precedence use parentheses
around these expressions, for example:
v.mapcalc expression="D = A & B | C"
Here the first intermediate result is the intersection of vector map layers
A & B.
This intermediate vector map layer is taken to create the union with vector map
C to get the final result
D.
It represents the default behaviour of left associativity.
v.mapcalc expression="D = A & (B | C)"
Here the first intermediate result is taken from the parenthesized union of vector map layers
B | C.
Afterwards the intersection of the intermediate vector map layer and
A will be evaluated to get the final
result vector map layer
D.
It should be noticed, that the order in which the operations are performed does matter.
Different order of operations can lead to a different result.
This example needed specific region setting. It should work in UTM and LL test locations.
First set the regions extent and create two vector maps with one random points, respectively:
g.region s=0 n=30 w=0 e=50 b=0 t=50 res=10 res3=10 -p3
v.random --o -z output=point_1 n=1 seed=1
v.random --o -z output=point_2 n=1 seed=2
v.info point_1
v.info point_2
Then the vector algebra is used to create buffers around those points, cut out a subset and apply different boolean operation
on the subsets in one statement:
v.mapcalc --o expr="buff_and = (buff_p(point_1, 30.0) ~ buff_p(point_1, 20.0)) & \
(buff_p(point_2, 35) ~ buff_p(point_2, 25))"
v.mapcalc --o expr="buff_or = (buff_p(point_1, 30.0) ~ buff_p(point_1, 20.0)) | \
(buff_p(point_2, 35) ~ buff_p(point_2, 25))"
v.mapcalc --o expr="buff_xor = (buff_p(point_1, 30.0) ~ buff_p(point_1, 20.0)) ^ \
(buff_p(point_2, 35) ~ buff_p(point_2, 25))"
v.mapcalc --o expr="buff_not = (buff_p(point_1, 30.0) ~ buff_p(point_1, 20.0)) ~ \
(buff_p(point_2, 35) ~ buff_p(point_2, 25))"
The use of this module requires the following software to be installed:
PLY(Python-Lex-Yacc)
# Ubuntu/Debian
sudo apt-get install python-ply
# Fedora
sudo dnf install python-ply
v.overlay,
v.buffer,
v.patch,
r.mapcalc
Thomas Leppelt, Soeren Gebbert, Thuenen Institut, Germany
SOURCE CODE
Available at:
v.mapcalc source code
(history)
Latest change: Tuesday Mar 26 20:41:36 2024 in commit: 3b09b1d78f6e96ffebacac6e36f0afd91ad0c091
Note: This document is for an older version of GRASS GIS that will be discontinued soon. You should upgrade, and read the current manual page.
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GRASS Development Team,
GRASS GIS 8.2.2dev Reference Manual