Hi Brent, with GRASS' ps.map you can do that rather easily:
- define the raster and vector map names - define (optionally) legend stuff - activate "geogrid" to overlay a geographic grid onto the output map - define paper size It generated a Postscript file (use ps2pdf to make PDF) which can be printed then. See http://grass.itc.it/gdp/html_grass63/ps.map.html Example screenshot (a bit low-res, sorry): http://www.gdf-hannover.de/lit_html/grass60_v1.2/img35.png Code for that map: http://www.gdf-hannover.de/lit_html/grass60_v1.2_en/node78.html Markus On 9/6/07, Brent Fraser <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Hi all, > > I've been looking for an Open Source desktop application > that will: > > 1. Combine raster and vector spatial data, and (re)project > them > 2. Render a graticule (lines and labels showing latitude and > longitude) (and no, I don't want to create a shapefile to do > that) > 3. Print to a large format plotter (paper 24 inches wide or > greater) > > So far I've looked at uDig, Quantum GIS, and gvSig. As far > as I can tell, none of them can do Step 2, and only gvSig > does Step 3 successfully. > > Any pointers would be appreciated! > > Brent Fraser > GeoAnalytic Inc. > Calgary, Alberta > > _______________________________________________ > Discuss mailing list > Discuss@lists.osgeo.org > http://lists.osgeo.org/mailman/listinfo/discuss > -- Open Source Geospatial Foundation http://www.osgeo.org/ http://osgeo.org/grass _______________________________________________ Discuss mailing list Discuss@lists.osgeo.org http://lists.osgeo.org/mailman/listinfo/discuss