Thomas wrote:
> I am a new user, just discovered grass and OSGeo. My current
> interest is accessing the files from NaturalEarthData,
> converting them into matlab format, and, using octave to
> manipulate and/or plot.
>
> I use Linux and Unix. Octave 3.4.0, Gnuplot, Grass
> 6.4.0. This workstati
Le 27/02/2011 22:28, Tristan Nunez a écrit :
Hi Patrick,
If I understand the question, I haven't done this in GRASS, but one
cumbersome approach without using a function like r.drain to find a
cost distance *corridor* between two patches is to calculate a
separate cost distance surface for every
I am a new user, just discovered grass and OSGeo. My current interest is
accessing the files from NaturalEarthData, converting them into matlab
format, and, using octave to manipulate and/or plot.
I use Linux and Unix. Octave 3.4.0, Gnuplot, Grass 6.4.0. This
workstation has Ubuntu 10.04.
I down
There will be a GRASS workshop (alongside with a QGIS and OpenLayers
ones) and several presentations regarding FOSS4G, during a conference
"Wolne Oprogramowanie w Geoinformatyce" in Wrocław, Poland, 12-13.05.2011.
More information (going to appear) on
http://www.gislab.up.wroc.pl/wogis2011.
Chee
Hi Patrick,
If I understand the question, I haven't done this in GRASS, but one
cumbersome approach without using a function like r.drain to find a
cost distance *corridor* between two patches is to calculate a
separate cost distance surface for every individual patch, from (and
only from) that in
Dear listers,
I am trying to compute and represent the least cost paths between
discrete patches (say distribution areas of a given species included in
a landscape matrix). For training, I use a homogeneous cost surface (the
landscape matrix, 'movecost') and a raster 'monkeygroup' of 12 discre