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  2. Triangulated irregular network - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Triangulated_irregular_network

    Data input is therefore flexible and fewer points need to be stored than in a raster DEM, with regularly distributed points. While a TIN may be considered less suited than a raster DEM for certain kinds of GIS applications, such as analysis of a surface's slope and aspect, it is often used in CAD to create contour lines. A DTM and DSM can be ...

  3. Wikipedia talk : Graphics Lab/Resources/QGIS/Get ready

    en.wikipedia.org/.../Resources/QGIS/Get_ready

    Zoom is easy enough to find, but QGIS is still user-unfriendly enough that crop is nowhere obvious to be found in the toolbars or menus. The so-called "help" command is completely inoperative on the toolbars and menus and merely informs a user the map is "Map Canvas" which is something like the opposite of help.

  4. QGIS - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/QGIS

    QGIS functions as geographic information system (GIS) software, allowing users to analyze and edit spatial information, in addition to composing and exporting graphical maps. [2] QGIS supports raster, vector, mesh, and point cloud layers. [4] Vector data is stored as either point, line, or polygon features.

  5. Wikipedia : Graphics Lab/Resources/QGIS/Get ready

    en.wikipedia.org/.../Resources/QGIS/Get_ready

    QGis (full name: Quantum GIS) is a GPL license, cross-platform (Windows, Linux, Mac), and rather friendly cartographic software application. It is a Geographic Information System (GIS) program you can use to create, view, and analyze maps.

  6. Regression-kriging - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Regression-kriging

    In applied statistics and geostatistics, regression-kriging (RK) is a spatial prediction technique that combines a regression of the dependent variable on auxiliary variables (such as parameters derived from digital elevation modelling, remote sensing/imagery, and thematic maps) with interpolation of the regression residuals.

  7. Data model (GIS) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Data_model_(GIS)

    Because the world is much more complex than can be represented in a computer, all geospatial data are incomplete approximations of the world. [9] Thus, most geospatial data models encode some form of strategy for collecting a finite sample of an often infinite domain, and a structure to organize the sample in such a way as to enable interpolation of the nature of the unsampled portion.

  8. Kriging - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kriging

    In geostatistical models, sampled data are interpreted as the result of a random process. The fact that these models incorporate uncertainty in their conceptualization doesn't mean that the phenomenon – the forest, the aquifer, the mineral deposit – has resulted from a random process, but rather it allows one to build a methodological basis for the spatial inference of quantities in ...

  9. Vector overlay - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vector_overlay

    Vector overlay is an operation (or class of operations) in a geographic information system (GIS) for integrating two or more vector spatial data sets. Terms such as polygon overlay, map overlay, and topological overlay are often used synonymously, although they are not identical in the range of operations they include.