thomas.ad...@noaa.gov wrote:
> sudo g.extension extension=v.strahler
>
> I get the message:
>
> GRASS 6.4.1 (ffpi):~/grass/data > sudo g.extension extension=v.strahler
> [sudo] password for teaiii:
> sudo: g.extension: command not found
sudo resets the environment, including PATH. In fact, it
FYI - right now Roger Bivand speaking...
best
Markus
-
Von: Ralf Schäfer
Datum: 13. Juli 2011 22:17:05 MESZ
An: grass-user@lists.osgeo.org
Betreff: LIivestreaming during GEOSTAT summer school - Free analysis of
spatio-temporal data including GRASS GIS
Dear all,
the GEOSTAT Summer school 20
Glynn wrote:
> Modify the g.extension script to use sudo rather than "su -c ...".
I've already done that. Try the -u flag.
Hamish
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On Mon, 25 Jul 2011, Glynn Clements wrote:
As Markus mentions, EPSG:32107 is identical to EPSG:3429 except that
the units are metres rather than US feet.
Thank you.
Whichever you choose, source data could use either (or both), so be
careful to check.
My source data are in neither. Some
Hi there,
I've been using r.sun to compute irradiation on a raster with a resolution
of 0.5 m². The output of r.sun is in WH/m², does this mean that I have to
convert the output to another unit (pixel size = 0.25 m², WH/m² output from
r.sun * 4? Or perhaps output / 4, since the output's for 1 m² b
My current package should, mostly. Since the modules are all plain *nix-based
tools, they should have no problems. There may be issues with the wxPython GUI.
If you compile it yourself it should be fine.
I plan to take the upgrade plunge next weekend, and can start wroking on
updating my pack
Salvatore,
With my brief test of GRASS 6.4.1 on Lion, it looks OK.
Regards,
Tom
On 7/25/11 2:24 AM, Salvatore Mellino wrote:
Hi,
I'm ready to buy a new mac pro. It is with Lion, I want to know if GRASS works
under Lion.
Thanks,
Salvatore___
gras
On Mon, Jul 25, 2011 at 11:43 AM, Hamish wrote:
> Glynn wrote:
>> Modify the g.extension script to use sudo rather than "su -c ...".
>
> I've already done that. Try the -u flag.
I have drastically simplified g.extension to two lines, being
a wrapper for the way better g.extension.py which is incl
I had this problem as well and I used a "user level" solution
I started grass with sudo (sudo grass) and then created a new mapset (u
can' t have access to the previous ones) to enter grass.
After that you can install extensions without being prompted for a root
password. Then exit and enter g
Hello all,
I would like to use r.mapcalc to fill the null cells of one raster with the
value of the same cells from in a second raster (while leaving all other cells
as they are in the first raster).
Clearly I am having some kind of brain frizz because this should be simple but
I can't get it
Thus spake Rebecca Bennett (rabenn...@ymail.com):
> I would like to use r.mapcalc to fill the null cells of one raster
> with the value of the same cells from in a second raster (while
> leaving all other cells as they are in the first raster).
rasterA="if(isnull(rasterA), rasterB, rasterA)"
--
just the ticket - thank you Hendrik!
>
>From: Hendrik Hoeth
>To: Rebecca Bennett
>Cc: grass-user@lists.osgeo.org
>Sent: Monday, 25 July 2011, 22:24
>Subject: Re: [GRASS-user] mapcalc
>
>Thus spake Rebecca Bennett (rabenn...@ymail.com):
>
>> I would like to use
> > Glynn wrote:
> >> Modify the g.extension script to use sudo rather than "su -c ...".
Hamish:
> > I've already done that. Try the -u flag.
Markus:
> I have drastically simplified g.extension to two lines, being
> a wrapper for the way better g.extension.py which is included
> in the wxGUI of 6.4
Thanks for the solution! Here is what I ended up using
for i in {1999..2010; do
v.extract Fire_Burn_History_Project_clean output="Fire_year"$i
where="YEAR_='$i'";
done
--
View this message in context:
http://osgeo-org.1803224.n2.nabble.com/Loops-v-extract-for-fire-data-tp6595999p6620556.htm
Having a bit of trouble with r.in.wms
2 things
**
1: I am trying to get a DEM for southern CA off of a WMS server using an
example from the help files.
Worked great until I looked at the output (image below). Any ideas?
g.re
Actually, you can create a root password in Ubuntu.
At a command prompt:
type "sudo su"
Enter your sudo password
type "passwd"
choose your root password
Hope this helps!
Andy Wickert
PhD Candidate
University of Colorado
Geological Sciences & Institute of Arctic and Alpine Research
1560 30th St.
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