Further to Jody's comment, CityGML is an application profile (also
referred to as a community schema), which provides more details about a
specific domain than GML. I describe it in more detail here:
http://cameronshorter.blogspot.com/2008/10/community-schemas-making-sense-out-of.html
On 04/08/
berryman kirjoitti:
For instance, I'm not just interested in the location of streets, I'm
interested in the location of each lane. I also need to know how street
topology and traffic direction so that I can make path planning determinations.
Finally, it would even be
ideal if I could encode
Good Morning berryman,
Google 'gis traffic analysis' for some possible answers
Your message really has 2 parts as I see it so I'll give a shot towards
each.
First:
You might want to start by rereading the manuals for your GIS software
package in use and other GIS references specifically areas o
Did you has a look to openstreetmap?
cheers
-- Giovanni --
On Tue, 2010-08-03 at 17:07 -0700, berryman wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I am hope to use GIS for a traffic analysis program that I am involved with.
> After having looked at a couple weeks worth of GIS resources, I still feel
> like I haven't
The idea of geometry is the same for each system from national GIS datasets; to
small datasets used to track each fire hydrant for a city. You are correct you
need a bit of information about each data set (units, projection, when the data
when collected and what accuracy).
You may consider look