Welcome to maritime GIS around New Zealand :-)

The standard problem!

Work in a 0-360 space instead of +-180. EPSG4326 supports both extents 
(according to EPSG anyway). The problem is the lack of a flag to specify which 
you want.

Improvements in the geography datatype will help in this area. 

There are a few workarounds, but the only real solution is a mod 360 approach, 
as used in GMT & in the geography datatype (sort of)

Brent Wood


--- On Fri, 9/9/11, Sarah Berke <skbe...@uchicago.edu> wrote:

From: Sarah Berke <skbe...@uchicago.edu>
Subject: Re: [postgis-users] Problem with convex hulls that cross the dateline
To: postgis-users@postgis.refractions.net
Date: Friday, September 9, 2011, 7:22 AM

Thanks very much, Regina, Paul, and Ben for the responses. I don't think my 
hacking skills are quite up to following Paul's suggestion, but I can try to 
find an equal area projection for the Pacific Ocean. It seems like that would 
work. I also rather like the idea of translating the points--if I did that, 
would it then be easy to just translate the entire hull back into position?



Thanks,
Sarah
_________________________________
Sarah K Berke
Postdoctoral Scholar
Department of the Geophysical Sciences
University of Chicago
5734 S. Ellis Ave
Chicago, IL 60637









------------------------------



Message: 2

Date: Wed, 7 Sep 2011 01:18:51 -0400

From: "Paragon Corporation" <l...@pcorp.us>

Subject: Re: [postgis-users] Problem with convex hulls that cross the

        dateline

To: "'PostGIS Users Discussion'"

        <postgis-users@postgis.refractions.net>

Message-ID: <F8675FD4BB254CD09D2359CF11685DEA@D>

Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"



 Sarah,

 >  I'm having trouble making convex hulls that cross the international

dateline. Imagine 4 points making a square with the international dateline

running down the middle--I would like the convex hull to be that square, but

instead I get a giant rectangle that goes across the entire planet. I've

done some reading, and it sounds like GEOS generally has a hard time dealing

with the dateline--is that accurate?

Yes GEOS  only deals with planar coordinates.  Geography is the only

geodetic aware type and there is no ConvexHull function for it.



 >  Does anyone know of a way to get around this? I was thinking that it

might work if I use an SRID that is just like 4326 but with a central

meridian of 180, does that sound like a good plan?

No.  You should use a planar projection of some sort.  4326 squashed on a

map is no good.  Paul Ramsey might have some thoughts on the matter.



>   I'm pretty new to postGIS and I'm not sure how to either find such an

SRID or how to define it--I've been trying to find an explanation of SRID

syntax and so far coming up empty. If anyone has advice for solving this

problem, or for places where I can learn more about defining custom SRIDs,

I'd be really grateful!



You might want to check out http://spatialreference.org



 >  Here's an example--if you make this table and then look at it in QGIS

(or whatever) along with a world map, you'll see a big rectangle spanning

the entire map. On a map with

>  central meridian of zero, I'd want to see half the polygon on the left

side of the map and the other half on the right side.



 >  CREATE TABLE example AS

 >  SELECT ST_ConvexHull(

   >   ST_Collect(ST_GeomFromText('MULTIPOINT(175 5, 175 30, -175 5, -175

30)') ))::geography(Polygon, 4326) ;



My guess is you'll have to cut your area into pieces.  Still then its not

that pretty when you try to rejoin.



Sorry couldn't be more help,

Regina

http://www.postgis.us



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Message: 3

Date: Tue, 6 Sep 2011 22:21:48 -0700

From: Paul Ramsey <pram...@opengeo.org>

Subject: Re: [postgis-users] Problem with convex hulls that cross the

        dateline

To: PostGIS Users Discussion <postgis-users@postgis.refractions.net>

Message-ID:

        <CACowWR0YVqT5_wasbLoscmCnqNFAqVT2ioA=yjq6uv_yx9c...@mail.gmail.com>

Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1



On Tue, Sep 6, 2011 at 10:18 PM, Paragon Corporation <l...@pcorp.us> wrote:

> ?Sarah,

> ?> ?I'm having trouble making convex hulls that cross the international

> dateline. Imagine 4 points making a square with the international dateline

> running down the middle--I would like the convex hull to be that square, but

> instead I get a giant rectangle that goes across the entire planet. I've

> done some reading, and it sounds like GEOS generally has a hard time dealing

> with the dateline--is that accurate?

> Yes GEOS? only deals with planar coordinates.? Geography is the only

> geodetic aware type and there is no ConvexHull function for it.



Although you could hack one up easily enough by copying the ideas in

ST_Buffer(geography)



P





------------------------------



Message: 4

Date: Wed, 7 Sep 2011 13:43:52 +0800

From: Ben Madin <li...@remoteinformation.com.au>

Subject: Re: [postgis-users] Problem with convex hulls that cross the

        dateline

To: PostGIS Users Discussion <postgis-users@postgis.refractions.net>

Message-ID:

        <6afe8509-2218-4cb2-956a-1269ab5cd...@remoteinformation.com.au>

Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii



Sarah,



I'm sure that there are good reasons not to do this, but could you translate 
your points left or right, create your convex hull then translate the polygon 
back...?



Otherwise you could project it onto a custom projection that covers your area 
of interest? As an example look for an equal area proj string (I know there is 
one for Australia GDA94 Albers - http://www.spatialreference.org/ref/epsg/3577) 
and shift the lat and lon parameters...





cheers



Ben





On 07/09/2011, at 1:13 AM, Sarah Berke wrote:



> Hello,

>

> I'm having trouble making convex hulls that cross the international dateline. 
> Imagine 4 points making a square with the international dateline running down 
> the middle--I would like the convex hull to be that square, but instead I get 
> a giant rectangle that goes across the entire planet. I've done some reading, 
> and it sounds like GEOS generally has a hard time dealing with the 
> dateline--is that accurate? Does anyone know of a way to get around this? I 
> was thinking that it might work if I use an SRID that is just like 4326 but 
> with a central meridian of 180, does that sound like a good plan?  I'm pretty 
> new to postGIS and I'm not sure how to either find such an SRID or how to 
> define it--I've been trying to find an explanation of SRID syntax and so far 
> coming up empty. If anyone has advice for solving this problem, or for places 
> where I can learn more about defining custom SRIDs, I'd be really grateful!



>

> Here's an example--if you make this table and then look at it in QGIS (or 
> whatever) along with a world map, you'll see a big rectangle spanning the 
> entire map. On a map with central meridian of zero, I'd want to see half the 
> polygon on the left side of the map and the other half on the right side.



>

> CREATE TABLE example AS

> SELECT ST_ConvexHull(

>     ST_Collect(ST_GeomFromText('MULTIPOINT(175 5, 175 30, -175 5, -175 30)') 
> ))::geography(Polygon, 4326) ;

>

>

> Thanks very much,

> Sarah

>

> _________________________________

> Sarah K Berke

> Postdoctoral Scholar

> Department of the Geophysical Sciences

> University of Chicago

> 5734 S. Ellis Ave

> Chicago, IL 60637

> _______________________________________________

> postgis-users mailing list

> postgis-users@postgis.refractions.net

> http://postgis.refractions.net/mailman/listinfo/postgis-users







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