Hey,
I was wondering if it was possible to use gdalwarp to convert a .tif file and
.tfw file into a plain .tif file. I'm looking to use the rotation parameters in
the .tfw file to rotate the image itself. I've managed to do this with a gif
and gfw file into both gif and tif formats, however it
I would everyone advise to read
Frederick P. Brooks: The Mythical Man-Month. Essays on Software Engineering
Brooks was manager of IBM's OS/360, the classical mammoth operating
system of the nineteen-sixties. He wrote this book in 1975 (it is still
in print) about what can go wrong in
Hi all,
2009/12/26 Martin Landa landa.mar...@gmail.com:
2009/12/26 Even Rouault even.roua...@mines-paris.org:
As 1.7.0 release should happen soon, the top priority is to be careful not
to break GDAL building. You can have a look at the various slavebots at
Simon Hewitt wrote:
Hey,
I was wondering if it was possible to use gdalwarp to convert a .tif file
and .tfw file into a plain .tif file. I'm looking to use the rotation
parameters in the .tfw file to rotate the image itself. I've managed to do
this with a gif and gfw file into both gif and tif
image_in1.tif is a .tif without georeferencing info. image_in2.tif is a .tif
with georeferencing info. What do I add to the gdal_translate command below so
that the output image_out3.tif, whose pixels will be identical to the pixels in
image_in1.tif, will include the georeferencing info in
Martin,
we are obviously late on the initial schedule... We aim at issuing
1.7.0-beta2 very soon, but as it is not issued yet, it still gives you
the opportunity to commit the driver if you're confident enough it won't
cause too much build problems. If so, please commit the code very soon.
Greg Coats wrote:
image_in1.tif is a .tif without georeferencing info. image_in2.tif is a .tif
with georeferencing info. What do I add to the gdal_translate command below so
that the output image_out3.tif, whose pixels will be identical to the pixels in
image_in1.tif, will include the
hello
how can I get the data with ogrinfo in browse mode ?
regards
Ahmet Temiz
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Folks,
I need to create a new NITF image and set some RPC parameters I grabbed
from another NITF file. According to the online documentation
(http://www.gdal.org/frmt_nitf.html):
Most file header, imagery header metadata and security fields can be
set with appropriate *creation options*
2010/1/6 Frank Warmerdam warmer...@pobox.com:
Greg Coats wrote:
image_in1.tif is a .tif without georeferencing info. image_in2.tif is a
.tif with georeferencing info. What do I add to the gdal_translate command
below so that the output image_out3.tif, whose pixels will be identical to
the
Ozy,
You can't set the RPC parameters this way as they are not contained in
the main file header or imagery header, but they are derived from the
RPC00A or RPC00B TRE. So you could set them by using the
TRE=RPC00A=xx or TRE=RPC00B= creation options. You can get
the xx value
Hi: when we try and display a DigitalGlobe image in QGIS we only see a dark
green land mass and a slightly lighter green water area. The JPG image that
came with it showed a lot of variation in colour. Could someone please have a
look at the GDALINFO listing of the image below and help me
undefined
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I have a simple .tif, created in Photoshop, that consists of a horizontal line,
a vertical line, and some text, and that (thanks to Frank) is now a
georeferenced GeoTIFF. Is there a command line tool that will read in the
georeferenced GeoTIFF and write out a georeferenced vector file, likely a
Greg,
Try the gdal_polygonize.py program from http://gdal.org/gdal_utilities.html
You may have to do some post processing on the shapefile.
On Thu, Jan 7, 2010 at 7:13 AM, Greg Coats gregco...@mac.com wrote:
I have a simple .tif, created in Photoshop, that consists of a horizontal
line, a
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