On Wed, Dec 29, 2010 at 12:29 PM, Samuel Dyck wrote:
> Hi
>
> I've been merging the street names from Canvec 7 in areas in Manitoba with
> Canvec 6 imports sans street names. And I noticed that what CanVec 6 called
> schools have all become prisons in Canvec 7. Now I aware of prison
> overcrowding
Hi
I've been merging the street names from Canvec 7 in areas in Manitoba
with Canvec 6 imports sans street names. And I noticed that what CanVec
6 called schools have all become prisons in Canvec 7. Now I aware of
prison overcrowding problems but I doubt that all the schools in
southern Manit
On Wed, Dec 29, 2010 at 11:40, Sam Vekemans wrote:
> cool, does it have the ability to saveAs .shp? :)
>
Not yet. GDAL export (i.e. SHP, GML, KML, you name it, is coming...)
> What is the maximum file size that it can handle?
>
The size of your RAM. I don't know what your gml's are made of but
cool, does it have the ability to saveAs .shp? :)
What is the maximum file size that it can handle?
unlike josm, where i can pump up the ram that the program uses, is
there a way to make it use more resources?
thanks,
sam
On 12/29/10, Chris Browet wrote:
>>
>> So it would be cool if someone
>
> So it would be cool if someone who knows how, to convert it to .shp
> format, or explain how (using python) .and just share the files.
>
Just for info, Merkaartor 0.17 should be able to open your gml directly (as
far as GDAL can...)
If you have problems, send me an example and I'll fix it for
Hi,
So apparently mygeodata.eu is able to convert the .gml files of canvec
into .shp file.
then (of course) shp-to-osm.jar to convert it to osm, and josm to
convert it to .gpx
The only challenge is the map projection that i cant get right.
The .gml files are great, as it's a national and pr
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