Hi, You can load an Excel spreadsheet that contains fields with coordinates directly as a layer. More info: http://blog.gvsig.org/2014/12/11/gvsig-2-1-from-excel-to-gvsig/
Regards, Alvaro El 26/03/15 a las 11:18, César Martínez Izquierdo escribió: > Hi Zethu, > > If you are using gvSIG 2.1 final version, you have to load the Excel > file as a gvSIG table (new table document). > Then, create a new View (ensure that the coordinate system is set to > EPSG:4326) and add the Excel table as event layer (from View -> Add > Event Layer menu). Then select the right columns for X and Y and you > are done! > > Good luck! > > César > > On 26 March 2015 at 05:16, Zethu Gumede <zethugum...@gmail.com> wrote: >> Hi, >> >> I've saved them on a Microsoft Excel spreadsheet. I created columns for >> latitude and longitude coordinates. >> >> >> _______________________________________________ >> Gvsig_internacional mailing list >> Gvsig_internacional@listserv.gva.es >> >> To see the archives, edit your preferences or unsubscribe from this mailing >> list, please access this url: >> >> http://listserv.gva.es/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/gvsig_internacional >> > > _______________________________________________ Gvsig_internacional mailing list Gvsig_internacional@listserv.gva.es To see the archives, edit your preferences or unsubscribe from this mailing list, please access this url: http://listserv.gva.es/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/gvsig_internacional