Hi,
If you are on Windows, you could always use the OSGEO4W installer and install
both the 2.8 and 3x versions of QGIS. This way, you could use the plugins for
the 2.8 QGIS and that could solve the problem.
Nicolas
> Le 13 janv. 2019 à 16:56, Mike Shand a écrit :
>
> Hi Rutger,
>
> It would
Hi Rutger,
It would be useful to know the source for the digitised contours and the
procedure you used to create the shapefile.
You may have three options:
1. Go back to Adobe Illustrator and digitise some well defined known
reference points such as grid intersections or road junctions, with
Hi Rutger,
If you have successfully converted your Adobe Illustrator file into an
ESRI shapefile (using Avenza MaPublisher or DXf export ?) please first
check the quality of the linework in QGIS. Any Illustrator vector
bezier curves will probably have been simplified to straight lines. To
a
hi
I use 2.18.27 and I don't find the tools of the geo procecess tools
( clip, difference,barrier and so on)
can you help?
thanks
boaz
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Unsu
On 13/01/2019 13:19, Wouter Impens wrote:
> Hi Rutger,
>
> I don't know if it's the most efficient way, but I would import the
> image rather as a raster and use de Gdal georeferencer plugin to put it
> in the right place.
> Then you could use de raster to polygon tool to change into a shapefile.
Hi Rutger,
I don't know if it's the most efficient way, but I would import the image
rather as a raster and use de Gdal georeferencer plugin to put it in the
right place.
Then you could use de raster to polygon tool to change into a shapefile.
Hope this helps
Kind regards
Wouter Impens
Op 12 ja