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1 <?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
2 <!DOCTYPE book
3 PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.2//EN"
4 "http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.2/docbookx.dtd"
5 [<!ENTITY imgscale "60">]>
6 <!-- $Revision$ -->
7 <book>
8 <bookinfo>
9 <title>User's Manual for Thuban 1.2 (Draft)</title>
10 <authorgroup>
11 <author>
12 <firstname>Jonathan</firstname><surname>Coles</surname>
13 </author>
14 <author>
15 <firstname>Jan-Oliver</firstname><surname>Wagner</surname>
16 </author>
17 <author>
18 <firstname>Frank</firstname><surname>Koormann</surname>
19 </author>
20 </authorgroup>
21 <copyright>
22 <year>2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007</year>
23 <holder>Intevation GmbH</holder>
24 </copyright>
25 <revhistory>
26 <!-- comment this first revision out when releasing a real version -->
27 <!--
28 <revision>
29 <revnumber>SVN version $Id$</revnumber>
30 <date></date>
31 <revremark>Under development.</revremark>
32 </revision>
33 -->
34 <revision>
35 <revnumber>1.2.0</revnumber>
36 <date>20-Feb-2007</date>
37 <revremark>
38 Removed all installation instructions in favor
39 of a link to the website. It is not wise to
40 double the README contents here.
41 </revremark>
42 </revision>
43 <revision>
44 <revnumber>1.0.0</revnumber>
45 <date>22-Jan-2004</date>
46 <revremark>
47 Corresponds to Thuban 1.0.0.
48 New: Installation instructions for Win32.
49 </revremark>
50 </revision>
51 <revision>
52 <revnumber>1.0pre3</revnumber>
53 <date>04-Dec-2003</date>
54 <revremark>
55 Corresponds to Thuban 1.0rc1.
56 New: I18n, right button legend menu, EPSG projectons,
57 PostGIS support.
58 </revremark>
59 </revision>
60 <revision>
61 <revnumber>1.0pre2</revnumber>
62 <date>29-Aug-2003</date>
63 <revremark>
64 Corresponds to Thuban development release 0.8.1.
65 New: chapter on extensions.
66 </revremark>
67 </revision>
68 <revision>
69 <revnumber>1.0pre1</revnumber>
70 <date>08-Aug-2003</date>
71 <revremark>Corresponds to Thuban development release 0.8.1.</revremark>
72 </revision>
73 </revhistory>
74
75 </bookinfo>
76
77 <chapter><title>Introduction</title>
78 <para>
79 Thuban is an interactive geographic data viewer.
80 Its development had been started because there was no simple interactive
81 viewer for geographic information available as Free Software. Thuban is
82 written mainly in Python and uses the wxWidgets (former wxWindows)
83 library allowing it to
84 run on many different platforms, including GNU/Linux and Windows.
85 </para>
86 <para>
87 Geographic data viewers are a necessary tool as they allow one to
88 get a visual
89 impression of the positional relationship of the information that may not
90 be apparent from simple inspection of the data values themselves.
91 Thuban allows the user to create a session that displays
92 geographic data and then explore that data through navigation and
93 manipulation of how it is drawn. The results can then be saved or printed.
94 </para>
95 <para>
96 Thuban arranges a session in a hierarchy. A session contains a map which
97 consists of layers. Each layer represents a data set. For
98 instance, there may be a layer for roads and another layer for buildings.
99 These layers can either be vector shapes or images.
100 </para>
101
102 <section><title>Installation</title>
103 <para>
104 Thuban is actively supported under Debian 4.0 (Etch)
105 and Windows (XP). Of course it is possible to run Thuban
106 on a variety of other platforms.
107
108 Please check <ulink url="http://thuban.intevation.org/">
109 Thuban's Website
110 </ulink> about how to install Thuban and the lastest information
111 about the supported platforms.
112 </para>
113 </section>
114
115 <section><title>Internationalization</title>
116 <para>
117 Thuban is implemented with internationalization support. So far Thuban
118 is translated by volunteers to the following languages (apart from its
119 main language: English):
120 <itemizedlist>
121 <listitem><para>French</para></listitem>
122 <listitem><para>German</para></listitem>
123 <listitem><para>Italian</para></listitem>
124 <listitem><para>Portuguese (Brazilian)</para></listitem>
125 <listitem><para>Russian</para></listitem>
126 <listitem><para>Spanish</para></listitem>
127 </itemizedlist>
128 </para>
129
130 <para>
131 To use internationalization under POSIX systems (like GNU/Linux)
132 you have to set the environment variable LC_ALL accordingly (e.g.
133 LC_ALL=fr_FR for the french language support). Please check your
134 systems documentation for details and supported settings.
135 Specifiying LC_ALL on the command line while launching thuban
136 allows appication specific language settings:
137 </para>
138 <programlisting>
139 LC_ALL=fr_FR thuban.py
140 </programlisting>
141
142 <para>
143 MS Windows users have to specify the language to be used via the control
144 bar (which effects all applications).
145 </para>
146 </section>
147
148 <section><title>The Main Window</title>
149 <para>
150 <figure>
151 <title>The Main Window</title>
152 <mediaobject>
153 <imageobject> <imagedata fileref="../images/1_2_mainwindow.png" format="PNG" scale="&imgscale;"/> </imageobject>
154 <imageobject> <imagedata fileref="./images/1_2_mainwindow.ps" format="EPS" scale="&imgscale;"/> </imageobject>
155 </mediaobject>
156 </figure>
157 </para>
158
159 <para>
160 The map window shows the current state of the map and is where
161 the user can interact with the map using the tools.
162 </para>
163
164 <para>
165 The legend on the left displays a list of the current layers and
166 any visible classification groups. In the example, each shape layer
167 has a default classification which specifies how the shapes in each
168 layer are drawn. Layers that are higher in the list appear
169 ``closer'' to the user. The legend can be closed by clicking on the
170 small X in the upper right-hand region of the legend.
171 To open it again, use
172 <menuchoice>
173 <guimenu>Map</guimenu>
174 <guimenuitem>Legend</guimenuitem>
175 </menuchoice>.
176 The legend is also dockable, which means that it can be detached
177 from the main window by clicking on the small button next to the
178 close button. It can be attached by clicking the same button
179 again.
180 </para>
181 <para>
182 The status bar displays different information depending on the
183 current context. If the user is selecting an item from the menu
184 then the status bar will display a short help message indicating
185 what each menu item is for. If the user has a tool selected then
186 the position of the cursor on the map is displayed.
187 </para>
188 <para>
189 The tool bar provides quick access to the commonly needed tools.
190 By hovering over each button the user can see a short messages
191 describing what the tool does. The tools provided are Zoom In, Zoom
192 Out, Pan, Full Extent, Full Layer Extent, Full Shape Extent, Identify,
193 and Label. Each of the tools will be explained in further detail later
194 in the manual.
195 </para>
196 </section>
197
198 </chapter>
199
200 <chapter><title>Session Management</title>
201
202 <section><title>Starting a New Session</title>
203 <para>
204 A new session can be started from
205 <menuchoice>
206 <guimenu>File</guimenu>
207 <guimenuitem>New Session</guimenuitem>
208 </menuchoice>.
209 If a session is already loaded and has been modified without
210 being saved a prompt will ask if the current session should
211 be saved. A new session consists of an empty map with no
212 layers, no tables and no projection.
213 </para>
214 </section>
215
216 <section><title>Opening a Session</title>
217 <para>
218 A session can be opened from
219 <menuchoice>
220 <guimenu>File</guimenu>
221 <guimenuitem>Open Session</guimenuitem>
222 </menuchoice>. A dialog box will open allowing the user to browse
223 for a Thuban Session file. Thuban session files end with
224 <varname>.thuban</varname>. Selecting a file a clicking
225 <guibutton>OK</guibutton> will load the session into Thuban.
226 </para>
227
228 <para>
229 If a session is already loaded and has been modified without
230 being saved a prompt will ask if the current session should
231 be saved.
232 </para>
233
234 <para>
235 Thuban provides a path recovery feature: If a (shape) file referenced
236 in a Thuban session cannot be found at the specified location, the user
237 is prompted a file dialog. Here a new location can be selected for the
238 currents layer data source. Cancelling the dialog removes the layer
239 from the session. If a new location has been selected, Thuban checks
240 this again, if further layers data sources are missing. The user is
241 informed about this and can accept or cancel the suggestion.
242 </para>
243 </section>
244
245 <section><title>Saving a Session</title>
246 <para>
247 A session can be saved from
248 <menuchoice>
249 <guimenu>File</guimenu>
250 <guimenuitem>Save Session</guimenuitem>
251 </menuchoice>.
252 In the case the session is not a new and unsaved one,
253 the corresponding file is updated with the current session
254 data.
255 In the case the current session is a new one and yet unsaved
256 a dialog box will open allowing the user to browse
257 the file system and select a place to save the session. Thuban
258 sessions should be saved under a name ending in
259 <varname>.thuban</varname>. If the file already exists the user
260 will be prompted to save under a different name or overwrite the
261 existing file.
262 </para>
263 </section>
264
265 <section><title>The Session Info-Tree</title>
266 <para>
267 <figure>
268 <title>Session Info Tree</title>
269 <mediaobject>
270 <imageobject><imagedata fileref="../images/2_4_session_tree.png" format="PNG" scale="&imgscale;"/></imageobject>
271 <imageobject><imagedata fileref="./images/2_4_session_tree.eps" format="EPS" scale="&imgscale;"/></imageobject>
272 </mediaobject>
273 </figure>
274 </para>
275 <para>
276 The session info-tree is primarily intended for developers working
277 with Thuban. It displays many of the internal values for the session,
278 map, and layers. It can be opened from
279 <menuchoice>
280 <guimenu>File</guimenu>
281 <guimenuitem>Session Tree</guimenuitem>
282 </menuchoice>.
283 </para>
284 </section>
285 </chapter>
286
287 <chapter><title>Map Management</title>
288 <para>
289 The map consists of a number of layers where each layer represents a
290 different type of data set. By interacting with the map the user can
291 visually explore the data.
292 </para>
293 <para>
294 The map can have a name that will appear in the Thuban title bar.
295 The map name can be changed using
296 <menuchoice>
297 <guimenu>Map</guimenu>
298 <guimenuitem>Rename</guimenuitem>
299 </menuchoice>.
300 </para>
301 <para>
302 <inlinemediaobject>
303 <imageobject>
304 <imagedata fileref="../images/3_rename_map.png" format="PNG" scale="&imgscale;"/>
305 </imageobject>
306 <imageobject>
307 <imagedata fileref="./images/3_rename_map.eps" format="EPS" scale="&imgscale;"/>
308 </imageobject>
309 <textobject> <phrase>Rename Map</phrase> </textobject>
310 </inlinemediaobject>
311 </para>
312
313 <section><title>Adding and Removing Layers</title>
314 <para>
315 There are three types of layers that can be added to a map:
316 Shape layers, database layers
317 and image layers. Shape layers are stored in Shapefile format, a
318 widely used file format for storing geographic objects. These
319 files have the extension ``.shp''. Associated with
320 the shape file is a database file which stores attributes for
321 each shape in the Shape file. This file, in dBase format,
322 has the extension ``.dbf''. Both files must have the same base name.
323 For example, if there is a shape file named roads.shp there must
324 also be a file roads.dbf.
325 </para>
326 <itemizedlist>
327 <listitem>
328 <para>
329 Shape layers can be added to the map with
330 <menuchoice>
331 <guimenu>Map</guimenu>
332 <guimenuitem>Add Layer</guimenuitem>
333 </menuchoice>.
334 Initially, only the ``.shp'' files are shown which is enough for the
335 selection. However, if you switch to display all files and select one
336 of the associated files (e.g. ``.dbf''), Thuban will recognize the base
337 name and load the corresponding Shape file.
338 </para>
339 <para>
340 The file dialog for Shape files allows to select multiple files.
341 Use the shift-button together with the left mouse button to extend
342 the selection.
343 </para>
344 </listitem>
345
346 <listitem>
347 <para>Database layers can be added to the map with
348 <menuchoice>
349 <guimenu>Map</guimenu>
350 <guimenuitem>Add Database Layer</guimenuitem>
351 </menuchoice>.
352 A dialog with two lists is opened. The left list displays all
353 database connections currently open for the session. You can retrieve
354 a list of available layers from the selected database which is
355 displayed on the right hand. From this list one layer can be selected,
356 the dialog is closed afterwards.
357 </para>
358 <para>
359 See appendix ``Working with PostGIS'' for details.
360 </para>
361 </listitem>
362
363 <listitem>
364 <para>
365 Image layers can be added to the map with
366 <menuchoice>
367 <guimenu>Map</guimenu>
368 <guimenuitem>Add Image Layer</guimenuitem>
369 </menuchoice>.
370 It is important to select a valid image file that has geographic
371 data associated with it. The data can be embedded in the file itself,
372 or in another file. If geographic information cannot be found, Thuban
373 will report an error.
374 </para>
375 </listitem>
376 </itemizedlist>
377 </section>
378
379 <section><title>Navigation</title>
380 <para>
381 The map can be explored by using the navigation tools available on
382 the tool bar or from the
383 <menuchoice><guimenu>Map</guimenu></menuchoice> menu.
384 </para>
385 <itemizedlist>
386 <listitem>
387 <para>
388 The ZoomIn tool
389 <inlinemediaobject>
390 <imageobject>
391 <imagedata fileref="../images/3_2_zoomin.png" format="PNG" scale="&imgscale;"/>
392 </imageobject>
393 <imageobject>
394 <imagedata fileref="./images/3_2_zoomin.eps" format="EPS" scale="&imgscale;"/>
395 </imageobject>
396 <textobject> <phrase>ZoomIn Tool</phrase> </textobject>
397 </inlinemediaobject>
398 enlarges a region of the map. Clicking once on the map
399 will double the magnification and center the map on the point that
400 was clicked. Clicking and dragging selects a region that will be
401 enlarged to fit the window.
402 </para>
403 </listitem>
404 <listitem>
405 <para>
406 The ZoomOut tool
407 <inlinemediaobject>
408 <imageobject>
409 <imagedata fileref="../images/3_2_zoomout.png" format="PNG" scale="&imgscale;"/>
410 </imageobject>
411 <imageobject>
412 <imagedata fileref="./images/3_2_zoomout.eps" format="EPS" scale="&imgscale;"/>
413 </imageobject>
414 <textobject> <phrase>ZoomOut Tool</phrase> </textobject>
415 </inlinemediaobject>
416 shrinks the map so that a larger region is visible. A single click
417 reduces the magnification by a factor of two. Clicking and dragging
418 selects a box such that the current contents of the window will be
419 scaled to fit into that box.
420 </para>
421 </listitem>
422 <listitem>
423 <para>
424 The Pan tool
425 <inlinemediaobject>
426 <imageobject>
427 <imagedata fileref="../images/3_2_pan.png" format="PNG" scale="&imgscale;"/>
428 </imageobject>
429 <imageobject>
430 <imagedata fileref="./images/3_2_pan.eps" format="EPS" scale="&imgscale;"/>
431 </imageobject>
432 <textobject> <phrase>Pan Tool</phrase> </textobject>
433 </inlinemediaobject>
434 allows the user to move the map around by clicking and dragging.
435 </para>
436 </listitem>
437 <listitem>
438 <para>
439 The Full Extent tool
440 <inlinemediaobject>
441 <imageobject>
442 <imagedata fileref="../images/3_2_fullextent.png" format="PNG" scale="&imgscale;"/>
443 </imageobject>
444 <imageobject>
445 <imagedata fileref="./images/3_2_fullextent.eps" format="EPS" scale="&imgscale;"/>
446 </imageobject>
447 <textobject> <phrase>Full Extent Tool</phrase> </textobject>
448 </inlinemediaobject>
449 rescales the viewable region so that the entire map is visible.
450 </para>
451 </listitem>
452 <listitem>
453 <para>
454 The Full Layer Extent tool
455 <inlinemediaobject>
456 <imageobject>
457 <imagedata fileref="../images/3_2_fulllayerextent.png" format="PNG" scale="&imgscale;"/>
458 </imageobject>
459 <imageobject>
460 <imagedata fileref="./images/3_2_fulllayerextent.eps" format="EPS" scale="&imgscale;"/>
461 </imageobject>
462 <textobject> <phrase>Full Layer Extent Tool</phrase> </textobject>
463 </inlinemediaobject>
464 rescales the viewable region so that the currently selected
465 layer fits within the window. If no layer is selected this button
466 will be disabled.
467 </para>
468 </listitem>
469 <listitem>
470 <para>
471 The Full Shape Extent tool
472 <inlinemediaobject>
473 <imageobject>
474 <imagedata fileref="../images/3_2_fullshapeextent.png" format="PNG" scale="&imgscale;"/>
475 </imageobject>
476 <imageobject>
477 <imagedata fileref="./images/3_2_fullshapeextent.eps" format="EPS" scale="&imgscale;"/>
478 </imageobject>
479 <textobject> <phrase>Full Shape Extent Tool</phrase> </textobject>
480 </inlinemediaobject>
481 rescales the viewable region so that the currently selected
482 shape fits within the window. If the shape is a point, it is
483 centered and the map is zoomed all the way in. If no shape is
484 selected this button will be disabled. This feature is especially
485 helpful when identifying an object related to a selected record
486 in a tableview (see below).
487
488 </para>
489 </listitem>
490 </itemizedlist>
491 </section>
492
493 <section><title>Object Identification</title>
494 <para>
495 Objects on the map can be identified using the Identify tool
496 <inlinemediaobject>
497 <imageobject>
498 <imagedata fileref="../images/3_3_identify.png" format="PNG" scale="&imgscale;"/>
499 </imageobject>
500 <imageobject>
501 <imagedata fileref="./images/3_3_identify.eps" format="EPS" scale="&imgscale;"/>
502 </imageobject>
503 <textobject> <phrase>Identify Tool</phrase> </textobject>
504 </inlinemediaobject>.
505 Clicking on an object selects that object and opens a dialog which
506 shows all the table attributes for that object. Any current selection
507 is lost. Objects on the map are typically shapes and this document
508 will often refer to objects as shapes.
509 </para>
510 </section>
511
512 <section><title>Object Labeling</title>
513 <para>
514 Objects can be labeled using the Label tool
515 <inlinemediaobject>
516 <imageobject>
517 <imagedata fileref="../images/3_3_label.png" format="PNG" scale="&imgscale;"/>
518 </imageobject>
519 <imageobject>
520 <imagedata fileref="./images/3_3_label.eps" format="EPS" scale="&imgscale;"/>
521 </imageobject>
522 <textobject> <phrase>Label Tool</phrase> </textobject>
523 </inlinemediaobject>.
524 Clicking on an object selects that object and opens a dialog which
525 displays the table attributes for that object. An attribute can
526 be selected to be the label on the map. The label will be placed
527 at the center of the shape. Clicking on an object that already has
528 a label will remove the label.
529 </para>
530 </section>
531
532 <section><title>The Legend</title>
533 <para>
534 <inlinemediaobject>
535 <imageobject>
536 <imagedata fileref="../images/3_5_legend.png" format="PNG" scale="&imgscale;"/>
537 </imageobject>
538 <imageobject>
539 <imagedata fileref="./images/3_5_legend.eps" format="EPS" scale="&imgscale;"/>
540 </imageobject>
541 <textobject> <phrase>Legend</phrase> </textobject>
542 </inlinemediaobject>
543 </para>
544 <para>
545 The Legend provides an overview of the layers in the map. Layers
546 that appear higher in the legend will appear ``closer'' to the user.
547 If a layer supports classification (currently, only shape layers
548 have this feature) then the classification groups will be shown
549 below each layer. The properties for each group are also displayed
550 with a small graphic. Polygon layers appear as rectangles, lines
551 appear as curved lines, and points appear as circles.
552 </para>
553 <para>
554 Along the top of the legend is a toolbar which allows quick access
555 to some of the layer manipulation options under
556 <menuchoice><guimenu>Map</guimenu></menuchoice>.
557 </para>
558
559 <itemizedlist>
560 <listitem>
561 <para>
562 The Move Layer to Top tool
563 <inlinemediaobject>
564 <imageobject>
565 <imagedata fileref="../images/3_5_totop.png" format="PNG" scale="&imgscale;"/>
566 </imageobject>
567 <imageobject>
568 <imagedata fileref="./images/3_5_totop.eps" format="EPS" scale="&imgscale;"/>
569 </imageobject>
570 <textobject> <phrase>Move Layer to Top</phrase> </textobject>
571 </inlinemediaobject> raises the selected layer to the top of the map.
572 </para>
573 </listitem>
574 <listitem>
575
576 <para>
577 The Move Layer Up tool
578 <inlinemediaobject>
579 <imageobject>
580 <imagedata fileref="../images/3_5_moveup.png" format="PNG" scale="&imgscale;"/>
581 </imageobject>
582 <imageobject>
583 <imagedata fileref="./images/3_5_moveup.eps" format="EPS" scale="&imgscale;"/>
584 </imageobject>
585 <textobject> <phrase>Move Layer Up</phrase> </textobject>
586 </inlinemediaobject> raises the selected layer one level.
587 </para>
588 </listitem>
589 <listitem>
590
591 <para>
592 The Move Layer Down tool
593 <inlinemediaobject>
594 <imageobject>
595 <imagedata fileref="../images/3_5_movedown.png" format="PNG" scale="&imgscale;"/>
596 </imageobject>
597 <imageobject>
598 <imagedata fileref="./images/3_5_movedown.eps" format="EPS" scale="&imgscale;"/>
599 </imageobject>
600 <textobject> <phrase>Move Layer Down</phrase> </textobject>
601 </inlinemediaobject> lowers the selected layer one level.
602 </para>
603
604 </listitem>
605 <listitem>
606 <para>
607 The Move Layer to Bottom tool
608 <inlinemediaobject>
609 <imageobject>
610 <imagedata fileref="../images/3_5_tobottom.png" format="PNG" scale="&imgscale;"/>
611 </imageobject>
612 <imageobject>
613 <imagedata fileref="./images/3_5_tobottom.eps" format="EPS" scale="&imgscale;"/>
614 </imageobject>
615 <textobject> <phrase>Move Layer to Bottom</phrase> </textobject>
616 </inlinemediaobject> lowers the selected layer to the bottom of the map.
617 </para>
618
619 </listitem>
620 <listitem>
621 <para>
622 The Visible tool
623 <inlinemediaobject>
624 <imageobject>
625 <imagedata fileref="../images/3_5_visible.png" format="PNG" scale="&imgscale;"/>
626 </imageobject>
627 <imageobject>
628 <imagedata fileref="./images/3_5_visible.eps" format="EPS" scale="&imgscale;"/>
629 </imageobject>
630 <textobject> <phrase>Visible</phrase> </textobject>
631 </inlinemediaobject> shows the selected layer in the map if it was
632 hidden.
633 </para>
634
635 </listitem>
636 <listitem>
637 <para>
638 The Invisible tool
639 <inlinemediaobject>
640 <imageobject>
641 <imagedata fileref="../images/3_5_invisible.png" format="PNG" scale="&imgscale;"/>
642 </imageobject>
643 <imageobject>
644 <imagedata fileref="./images/3_5_invisible.eps" format="EPS" scale="&imgscale;"/>
645 </imageobject>
646 <textobject> <phrase>Invisible</phrase> </textobject>
647 </inlinemediaobject> hides the selected layer in the map.
648 </para>
649
650 </listitem>
651 <listitem>
652 <para>
653 The Properties tool
654 <inlinemediaobject>
655 <imageobject>
656 <imagedata fileref="../images/3_5_props.png" format="PNG" scale="&imgscale;"/>
657 </imageobject>
658 <imageobject>
659 <imagedata fileref="./images/3_5_props.eps" format="EPS" scale="&imgscale;"/>
660 </imageobject>
661 <textobject> <phrase>Properties</phrase> </textobject>
662 </inlinemediaobject> opens the layer's properties dialog box.
663 Double-clicking on a layer or a group of a layer will open the
664 properties dialog for that layer.
665 </para>
666 </listitem>
667 </itemizedlist>
668
669 <para>
670 The most used layer related actions are also available from a
671 popup menu. It is raised when a layer is clicked with the right mouse
672 button.
673 </para>
674
675 <para>
676 <figure>
677 <title>Layer Popup Menu</title>
678 <mediaobject>
679 <imageobject><imagedata fileref="../images/3_5_popup_menu.png" format="PNG" scale="&imgscale;"/></imageobject>
680 <imageobject><imagedata fileref="./images/3_5_popup_menu.eps" format="EPS" scale="&imgscale;"/></imageobject>
681 </mediaobject>
682 </figure>
683 </para>
684
685 <para>
686 Along the bottom of the legend is the scalebar. The scalebar
687 will be available if there are any layers and the map has a
688 projection set.
689 </para>
690 </section>
691
692 <section><title>Exporting</title>
693 <para>
694 Under Windows, maps can be exported in Enhanced Metafile format
695 (<varname>.wmf</varname>)
696 from
697 <menuchoice>
698 <guimenu>Map</guimenu>
699 <guimenuitem>Export</guimenuitem>
700 </menuchoice> for use in reports, presentations, or further
701 modification. The current map view, legend, and, if available,
702 scalebar are exported. Under other platforms this option is not
703 available. Clicking this menu item open a file selection dialog
704 that lets the user select a location to export the map.
705 </para>
706 </section>
707
708 <section><title>Printing</title>
709 <para>
710 The map can be printed using
711 <menuchoice>
712 <guimenu>Map</guimenu>
713 <guimenuitem>Print</guimenuitem>
714 </menuchoice>. The current map view, legend, and, if available,
715 scalebar are printed. A standard printing dialog will open allowing
716 the user to configure the printer. This dialog will differ depending
717 on which platform Thuban is running.
718 </para>
719 </section>
720
721 </chapter>
722
723 <chapter><title>Layer Management</title>
724 <para>
725 </para>
726
727 <section><title>Types of Layers</title>
728 <para>
729 There are three types of layers supported by Thuban: shape layers,
730 database layers and
731 image layers. Shape layers consist of vector based shapes with
732 geo-referenced coordinates. There are three types of supported
733 shapes: polygons, lines (arc), and points. Database layers are similar
734 to shape layers but loaded from a database instead of the file system.
735 Image layers can be any image
736 file format supported by the Geo-spatial Data Abstraction Library
737 (GDAL). The images must have geographic
738 coordinate data either embedded within the file or in a separate
739 file that is in the same directory as the image file. GeoTIFF files
740 work very well with Thuban and were designed specifically to be image
741 layers in GIS programs.
742 </para>
743 <para>
744 All actions in the
745 <menuchoice>
746 <guimenu>Layer</guimenu>
747 </menuchoice> menu act on the currently selected layer in the legend.
748 </para>
749 </section>
750
751 <section><title>Properties</title>
752 <para>
753 To view the properties for a layer it must first be selected in the
754 legend. The menu option
755 <menuchoice>
756 <guimenu>Layer</guimenu>
757 <guimenuitem>Properties</guimenuitem>
758 </menuchoice> opens a dialog that displays a layer's properties.
759 All layers have a title which can be modified in the text field
760 provided. The type of layer is also shows. If the type is a type
761 of shape (polygon, arc, point) the classification table will be
762 shown. Image layers have no other properties other than title
763 and type.
764 </para>
765 <para>
766 <figure>
767 <title>Properties Window</title>
768 <mediaobject>
769 <imageobject><imagedata fileref="../images/4_2_layer_properties.png" format="PNG" scale="&imgscale;"/></imageobject>
770 <imageobject><imagedata fileref="./images/4_2_layer_properties.eps" format="EPS" scale="&imgscale;"/></imageobject>
771 </mediaobject>
772 </figure>
773 </para>
774 <para>
775 <figure>
776 <title>Properties Window</title>
777 <mediaobject>
778 <imageobject><imagedata fileref="../images/4_2_raster_layer_properties.png" format="PNG" scale="&imgscale;"/></imageobject>
779 <imageobject><imagedata fileref="./images/4_2_raster_layer_properties.eps" format="EPS" scale="&imgscale;"/></imageobject>
780 </mediaobject>
781 </figure>
782 </para>
783 </section>
784
785 <section><title>Visibility</title>
786 <para>
787 Sometimes it is not desirable to view all layers at the same time.
788 Some layers may take a long time to draw and so while navigating
789 around the map the user may not want to wait for the map to redraw
790 all the layers each time the map is changed. Each layer can be
791 independently turned on or off using the
792 <menuchoice>
793 <guimenu>Layer</guimenu>
794 <guimenuitem>Show</guimenuitem>
795 </menuchoice>
796 or
797 <menuchoice>
798 <guimenu>Layer</guimenu>
799 <guimenuitem>Hide</guimenuitem>
800 </menuchoice> options respectively.
801 </para>
802 </section>
803
804 <section><title>Duplication</title>
805 <para>
806 Layers and all their properties, including classifications, can
807 be duplicated using
808 <menuchoice>
809 <guimenu>Layer</guimenu>
810 <guimenuitem>Duplicate</guimenuitem>
811 </menuchoice>. Duplicating a layer is useful if the user wishes
812 to model a layer in several different ways. Even though the layers
813 overlap, by carefully selecting the shape properties it is possible
814 to display several pieces of information at once. For example, one
815 copy of a roads layer may be classified on a length property and
816 another copy may be classified on a type property. If the length
817 property was expressed with color and the type property expressed
818 with line thickness then it would be possible to view both
819 classifications by placing the type property copy over the
820 length property copy.
821 </para>
822 </section>
823
824 </chapter>
825
826 <chapter><title>Layer Classifications</title>
827 <para>
828 A layer classification is a way of assigning drawing properties to
829 groups of shapes based on attributes stored in the layer's table.
830 Only layer's with shapes can have a classification; image layers
831 cannot be classified.
832 </para>
833 <para>
834 A classification consists of a number of groups, each group
835 having a value or range of values to match against, and symbol
836 properties which control how a shape is drawn on the map. The user
837 selects which field in the table is used by the classification and
838 when the map is drawn the value for that field for each shape is
839 compared with each group's value. The properties of the first group
840 to match are used to draw the shape. This allows the user to get a
841 visual impression of not only how the data is laid out but also what
842 kind of data lies where.
843 </para>
844 <para>
845 A layer always has a classification. When a new layer is added to the
846 map, a default classification is created with the DEFAULT group. This
847 group cannot be removed but can be hidden (see below). Every shape in the
848 layer, regardless of its attributes, will match this group if no other
849 group matches.
850 </para>
851
852 <section><title>Editing Classifications</title>
853 <para>
854 A layer's classification can be modified under the properties dialog
855 (<menuchoice>
856 <guimenu>Layer</guimenu>
857 <guimenuitem>Properties</guimenuitem>
858 </menuchoice>). The layer's classification field can be set to None,
859 which simply assigns a DEFAULT group to the classification. No new
860 groups can be added to the classification if the field is None.
861 The user must first select a field to classify on. New groups can
862 be added to the classification with the <guibutton>Add</guibutton>
863 button.
864 </para>
865 <para>
866 To apply the changes to the map the user can click
867 either <guibutton>Try</guibutton> or <guibutton>OK</guibutton>.
868 <guibutton>Try</guibutton> will not close the dialog box, allowing
869 the user to see how the classification changes the map.
870 <guibutton>Revert</guibutton> will undo the last classification applied
871 to the map. <guibutton>OK</guibutton> will commit the changes and
872 close the dialog. The user will be unable to undo the changes.
873 <guibutton>Close</guibutton> simply closes the dialog box. If any
874 changes have not been applied with <guibutton>Try</guibutton> the
875 changes will not be applied to the map.
876 </para>
877 <para>
878 <figure>
879 <title>Properties Window</title>
880 <mediaobject>
881 <imageobject><imagedata fileref="../images/5_classification.png" format="PNG" scale="&imgscale;"/></imageobject>
882 <imageobject><imagedata fileref="./images/5_classification.eps" format="EPS" scale="&imgscale;"/></imageobject>
883 </mediaobject>
884 </figure>
885 </para>
886 <para>
887 The order of the groups in the classification is significant
888 except for the DEFAULT group, which remains at the top. When shapes
889 are matched against groups the matching begins at the first group
890 after the DEFAULT group so that groups higher in the list will
891 be checked first. Matching for a
892 given shape will stop at the first group that matches. The user can
893 use <guibutton>Move Up</guibutton> and <guibutton>Move Down</guibutton>
894 to change the order of the groups. The DEFAULT group will always
895 match a shape that hasn't matched another group.
896 </para>
897 <section><title>Visible</title>
898 <para>
899 The Visible column has check-boxes that determine whether a
900 classification group will be displayed in the legend. This is
901 useful if the user knows that the groups completely cover
902 the data set and don't want the DEFAULT group to be displayed
903 in the legend and on a printout.
904 </para>
905 </section>
906 <section><title>Symbols</title>
907 <para>
908 Each type of shape has its own type of symbol. Thuban supports three
909 types of shapes: polygons, lines, and points. Polygons and points
910 have outline and fill color, while lines have only line color. Each
911 group has associated symbol properties. To edit the symbol
912 properties for a group the user can double click on the Symbol
913 column or select a group and click the
914 <guibutton>Edit Symbol</guibutton> button.
915 </para>
916 </section>
917 <section><title>Value</title>
918 <para>
919 The Value column of the classification table is the value that will
920 be matched when the map is being drawn. The type of filter that can
921 entered into this field depends on the type of data of the
922 classification field:
923 </para>
924 <para>
925 If the field is of type Text, anything entered
926 into the field is valid. By default the text will be compared
927 literally to the
928 value of the shape attribute, including case sensitivity.
929 Alternatively the comparison can be based on regular experessions.
930 Right-click on the row label to open a popup menu with the options
931 <guibutton>Singleton</guibutton> (literal comparison) and
932 <guibutton>Pattern</guibutton> (regular expressions).
933 </para>
934 <para>
935 If the type is Integer, then any valid integer may be entered. In
936 addition, with special syntax, a range of values can be entered.
937 A range from <varname>start</varname> to <varname>end</varname>
938 inclusive is specified like this: <literal>[start;end]</literal>.
939 The exclusive range is specified like this:
940 <literal>]start;end[</literal>. Ranges can include infinity like
941 this: <literal>[-oo;oo]</literal>. Field types can also be of type
942 Decimal. They represent any rational number and can be used in
943 ranges as well.
944 </para>
945 </section>
946 <section><title>Label</title>
947 <para>
948 By default, the text that is displayed for a group in the legend
949 is the value for that group. The label can substitute a more
950 descriptive term in the legend.
951 </para>
952 </section>
953 </section>
954
955 <section><title>Generating Classes</title>
956 <para>
957 <figure>
958 <title>Generate Class</title>
959 <mediaobject>
960 <imageobject><imagedata fileref="../images/5_3_genclass.png" format="PNG" scale="&imgscale;"/></imageobject>
961 <imageobject><imagedata fileref="./images/5_3_genclass.eps" format="EPS" scale="&imgscale;"/></imageobject>
962 </mediaobject>
963 </figure>
964 </para>
965 <para>
966 Creating a classification by hand can be tedious.
967 Thuban, therefore, provides a means of generating an entire
968 classification at once while still giving the user control over
969 how it appears. Clicking <guibutton>Generate Class</guibutton>
970 opens the <varname>Generate Classification</varname> dialog.
971 Under the <varname>Generate</varname> pull down there are at most
972 three different ways to generate classifications:
973 Unique Values, Uniform Distribution, and Quantiles. Some options
974 may not be available if the data type for the field does not
975 support them. For instance, <varname>Uniform Distribution</varname>
976 doesn't make sense for a Text field.
977 </para>
978 <para>
979 For every way of generating a classification, a color scheme must
980 be selected. Thuban provides several different color schemes that
981 affect how the group properties change over the classification.
982 It may be desirable that only certain properties change over the
983 classification. If the shape type is a polygon or a point then
984 the <guibutton>Fix Border Color</guibutton> option will be available.
985 This allows the user to select a border color for all classification
986 groups.
987 It is also possible to create a custom color scheme. Selecting
988 this option will display two symbols: the one of the left has the
989 properties of the first group and the one on the right has the
990 properties of the last group. Thuban will interpolate between these
991 two properties to generate the other groups.
992 <figure>
993 <title>Custom Color Scheme</title>
994 <mediaobject>
995 <imageobject><imagedata fileref="../images/5_2_custom_ramp.png" format="PNG" scale="&imgscale;"/></imageobject>
996 <imageobject><imagedata fileref="./images/5_2_custom_ramp.eps" format="EPS" scale="&imgscale;"/></imageobject>
997 </mediaobject>
998 </figure>
999 </para>
1000 <para>
1001 The Unique Values option lets the user select specific values that
1002 appear in the table. Clicking <guibutton>Retrieve From Table</guibutton>
1003 searches the table for all unique values and displays them in the
1004 list on the left. Items can be selected and moved to the list on the
1005 right. Each list can be sorted or reversed for easier searching.
1006 The classification that is generated will be in the same order as
1007 the list on the right.
1008 <figure>
1009 <title>Unique Values</title>
1010 <mediaobject>
1011 <imageobject><imagedata fileref="../images/5_2_unique_values.png" format="PNG" scale="&imgscale;"/></imageobject>
1012 <imageobject><imagedata fileref="./images/5_2_unique_values.eps" format="EPS" scale="&imgscale;"/></imageobject>
1013 </mediaobject>
1014 </figure>
1015 </para>
1016 <para>
1017 The Uniform Distribution option creates a user specified number of
1018 groups of ranges such that each range covers equal intervals. The
1019 minimum and maximum values can automatically be retrieved from the
1020 table by clicking <guibutton>Retrieve From Table</guibutton>. The
1021 stepping is how large each interval is. Adjusting this value will
1022 automatically recalculate how many groups is appropriate.
1023 <figure>
1024 <title>Uniform Distribution</title>
1025 <mediaobject>
1026 <imageobject><imagedata fileref="../images/5_2_uniform_dist.png" format="PNG" scale="&imgscale;"/></imageobject>
1027 <imageobject><imagedata fileref="./images/5_2_uniform_dist.eps" format="EPS" scale="&imgscale;"/></imageobject>
1028 </mediaobject>
1029 </figure>
1030 </para>
1031 <para>
1032 The Quantiles option generates ranges based on the number of items
1033 in the table. For example, by specifying five groups Thuban will
1034 generate five groups with appropriate ranges such that 20% of the table
1035 data is in each group. If it is impossible to generate exact
1036 groupings, Thuban will issue a warning but allow the user to continue.
1037 <figure>
1038 <title>Quantiles</title>
1039 <mediaobject>
1040 <imageobject><imagedata fileref="../images/5_2_quantiles.png" format="PNG" scale="&imgscale;"/></imageobject>
1041 <imageobject><imagedata fileref="./images/5_2_quantiles.eps" format="EPS" scale="&imgscale;"/></imageobject>
1042 </mediaobject>
1043 </figure>
1044 </para>
1045 </section>
1046 </chapter>
1047
1048 <chapter><title>Projection Management</title>
1049 <para>
1050 Projections control how the geographic data is displayed on the screen.
1051 If multiple layers are loaded into Thuban where the geographic data
1052 is in a different projection system, then the user must specify a
1053 projection for each layer. The user must also tell Thuban which
1054 projection the map is in. This can be the same as the layers or a different
1055 projection in which case the layers are reprojected into that space.
1056 The map projection can be set using
1057 <menuchoice>
1058 <guimenu>Map</guimenu>
1059 <guimenuitem>Projection</guimenuitem>
1060 </menuchoice> and the layer projection can be set using
1061 <menuchoice>
1062 <guimenu>Layer</guimenu>
1063 <guimenuitem>Projection</guimenuitem>
1064 </menuchoice>.
1065 <figure>
1066 <title>Projection Window</title>
1067 <mediaobject>
1068 <imageobject><imagedata fileref="../images/6_projection.png" format="PNG" scale="&imgscale;"/></imageobject>
1069 <imageobject><imagedata fileref="./images/6_projection.eps" format="EPS" scale="&imgscale;"/></imageobject>
1070 </mediaobject>
1071 </figure>
1072 </para>
1073 <para>
1074 Thuban is distributed with a sample collection of projections and the
1075 set of coordinate systems as used by the EPSG
1076 (European Petroleum Survey Group). This quite large set is only displayed
1077 if activated by the according checkbox. The set falls into two parts:
1078 deprecated lists all projections which are no longer part of the
1079 EPSG data base.
1080 </para>
1081 <para>
1082 The
1083 user can create new projections and make them available to all
1084 future Thuban sessions. They may also be exported and imported so
1085 that custom projections can be distributed.
1086 </para>
1087 <section><title>Selecting a Projection</title>
1088 <para>
1089 The available projections are listed on the left. If the layer
1090 or map already has a projection it will initially be highlighted
1091 and will end with <varname>(current)</varname>. Selecting
1092 <varname>&lt;None&gt;</varname> will cause Thuban to use the data as
1093 it appears in the source file and will not use a projection.
1094 </para>
1095 </section>
1096 <section><title>Editing a Projection</title>
1097 <para>
1098 Whenever a projection is selected from the list its properties
1099 are displayed on the right. These properties can be changed
1100 and the changes saved to the selected projection using
1101 <guibutton>Update</guibutton>. Only a projection that comes
1102 from a file can be updated, so if the current layer's projection
1103 is selected, <guibutton>Update</guibutton> will be disabled.
1104 <guibutton>Add to List</guibutton> adds the projection to the
1105 list of available projections as a new entry, and thus makes it
1106 available to future Thuban sessions. Clicking <guibutton>New</guibutton>
1107 will create an entirely new, empty projection. The
1108 <guibutton>Remove</guibutton> button will permanently remove a
1109 projection from the list of available projections.
1110 </para>
1111 <para>
1112 To apply the selected projection to the map the user can click
1113 either <guibutton>Try</guibutton> or <guibutton>OK</guibutton>.
1114 <guibutton>Try</guibutton> will not close the dialog box, allowing
1115 the user to see how the projeciton changes the map.
1116 <guibutton>Revert</guibutton> will undo the last projection applied
1117 to the map. <guibutton>OK</guibutton> will commit the changes and
1118 close the dialog. The user will be unable to undo the changes.
1119 <guibutton>Close</guibutton> simply closes the dialog box. If no
1120 selection has been applied with <guibutton>Try</guibutton> the
1121 selection will not be applied to the map.
1122 </para>
1123 </section>
1124 <section><title>Importing/Exporting Projections</title>
1125 <para>
1126 The projections that appear in the list of available projections
1127 can be exported to another file that the user chooses. By selecting
1128 one or more projections and clicking <guibutton>Export</guibutton>
1129 the user will be able to select a file in which to store those
1130 projections.
1131 The file can then be distributed to other Thuban users. To import
1132 a projection file the user can click <guibutton>Import</guibutton>.
1133 The imported projections are added to the list and are then available
1134 to the current session and any future Thuban sessions.
1135 </para>
1136 </section>
1137 </chapter>
1138
1139 <chapter><title>Table Management</title>
1140 <para>
1141 Thuban distinguishes two different types of tables: Attribute tables
1142 (which belong to a layer) and normal data tables. Both provide
1143 the same general functionality with the difference that actions on an
1144 attribute table might also effect the map display.
1145 </para>
1146
1147 <section><title>Table View</title>
1148 <para>
1149 <figure>
1150 <title>Table View</title>
1151 <mediaobject>
1152 <imageobject><imagedata fileref="../images/7_1_table_view.png" format="PNG" scale="&imgscale;"/></imageobject>
1153 <imageobject><imagedata fileref="./images/7_1_table_view.eps" format="EPS" scale="&imgscale;"/></imageobject>
1154 </mediaobject>
1155 </figure>
1156 </para>
1157 <para>
1158 Thuban provides a standard dialog to display table contents, the
1159 Table View. The view has five sections: The title, selections,
1160 the table grid, export functions, and the status bar.
1161 </para>
1162 <para>
1163 The title bar identifies the table with its name.
1164 </para>
1165 <para>
1166 The selections box let the user perform simple analysis on the data
1167 based on comparisons: The first choice must be a field identifier of
1168 the table, the second choice determines the type of comparison. The
1169 third choice can be either a specific value (interpreted as numerical
1170 or string depending on the type of the first field) or a second field
1171 identifier. Thus you can perform analysis like selecting all
1172 records where <literal>population > 10000</literal> or
1173 <literal>cars_per_inhabitant < bikes_per_inhabitant</literal>
1174 (note that the field names are only explanatory, the dBase files
1175 allow only 11 character field names).
1176
1177 Selections can be combined either by applying a selection only on
1178 a previously selected set of records or by adding the results of a
1179 selection to a previous set. The default is that a selection replaces
1180 earlier results.
1181 </para>
1182 <para>
1183 The table grid shows the contents of the table (one record per row),
1184 with highlighted selection results. Columns and rows can be resized.
1185 </para>
1186 <para>
1187 The contents of a table can be exported into a file, either dBase
1188 format (DBF) or comma separated values (CSV). The
1189 <guibutton>Export</guibutton> button
1190 raises a file dialog to specify a path and file name, the export type
1191 is determined by the file extension (either .dbf or .csv).
1192
1193 The <guibutton>Export Selection</guibutton> button works similarly
1194 but exports only the selected records.
1195
1196 The <guibutton>Close</guibutton> button closes the table view window.
1197 This is different from the menu item
1198 <menuchoice>
1199 <guimenu>Table</guimenu>
1200 <guimenuitem>Close</guimenuitem>
1201 </menuchoice> which unloads the table from Thuban.
1202 </para>
1203 <para>
1204 The status bar displays some statistics about the table and optional
1205 selection results.
1206 </para>
1207 </section>
1208
1209 <section><title>General Functionality (Menu Table)</title>
1210 <para>
1211 The general functions affect all tables open in Thuban. Attribute
1212 tables are considered here as normal data tables (with the exception
1213 that they cannot be closed).
1214 </para>
1215 <section><title>Open</title>
1216 <para>
1217 The
1218 <menuchoice>
1219 <guimenu>Table</guimenu>
1220 <guimenuitem>Open</guimenuitem>
1221 </menuchoice>
1222 item raises a file dialog to let you select a
1223 dBase file from the file system to be loaded into Thuban read-only.
1224 On <guibutton>OK</guibutton> the selected file is loaded and a
1225 table view is opened.
1226 </para>
1227 </section>
1228
1229 <section><title>Close</title>
1230 <para>
1231 The
1232 <menuchoice>
1233 <guimenu>Table</guimenu>
1234 <guimenuitem>Close</guimenuitem>
1235 </menuchoice>
1236 item raises a dialog listing the currently open
1237 data tables
1238 (loaded via
1239 <menuchoice>
1240 <guimenu>Table</guimenu>
1241 <guimenuitem>Open</guimenuitem>
1242 </menuchoice>). Selected tables are dereferenced on confirmation.
1243 Since tables are opened read-only the contents of the tables are
1244 not affected.
1245
1246 Any open views of the tables are closed as well.
1247
1248 Tables used in a join cannot be closed.
1249 </para>
1250 </section>
1251
1252 <section><title>Rename</title>
1253 <para>
1254 <menuchoice>
1255 <guimenu>Table</guimenu>
1256 <guimenuitem>Rename</guimenuitem>
1257 </menuchoice> changes the table title.
1258 </para>
1259 </section>
1260
1261 <section><title>Show</title>
1262 <para>
1263 The
1264 <menuchoice>
1265 <guimenu>Table</guimenu>
1266 <guimenuitem>Show</guimenuitem>
1267 </menuchoice>
1268 item raises a list of available tables (explicitly
1269 loaded, attribute tables, results of a join). Selected tables are
1270 show in tables views on <guibutton>OK</guibutton>.
1271 </para>
1272 </section>
1273
1274 <section><title>Join</title>
1275 <para>
1276 <figure>
1277 <title>Join Tables</title>
1278 <mediaobject>
1279 <imageobject><imagedata fileref="../images/7_2_5_join.png" format="PNG" scale="&imgscale;"/></imageobject>
1280 <imageobject><imagedata fileref="./images/7_2_5_join.eps" format="EPS" scale="&imgscale;"/></imageobject>
1281 </mediaobject>
1282 </figure>
1283 </para>
1284 <para>
1285 The
1286 <menuchoice>
1287 <guimenu>Table</guimenu>
1288 <guimenuitem>Join</guimenuitem>
1289 </menuchoice>
1290 item raises a dialog to specify the two tables to be
1291 joined. The join results in a new table named 'Join of "left table"
1292 and "right table"'.
1293
1294 The dialog lets you select the two tables to be joined and the two
1295 fields the join has to be performed on. By default, the new
1296 table contains only those records which are matched by the join.
1297
1298 If you want to preserve the records of the left table you can
1299 perform an outer join. The fields from the right table for records
1300 not matched by the join are filled with <varname>None</varname> in
1301 this case.
1302 </para>
1303 </section>
1304
1305 </section>
1306 <section><title>Attribute Tables</title>
1307 <para>
1308 To clearly separate between both types of tables (data and
1309 attribute), Thuban provides functionality regarding the attribute
1310 tables under the <menuchoice><guimenu>Layer</guimenu></menuchoice> menu.
1311 </para>
1312
1313 <section><title>Show Table</title>
1314 <para>
1315 <menuchoice>
1316 <guimenu>Layer</guimenu>
1317 <guimenuitem>Show Table</guimenuitem>
1318 </menuchoice>
1319 opens the attribute table of the currently active layer in a table
1320 view.
1321
1322 In addition to the functionality described above selections
1323 affect also the map display: objects related to selected records
1324 are highlighted.
1325 </para>
1326 </section>
1327
1328 <section><title>Join Table</title>
1329 <para>
1330 Unlike the join described above, the join does not result in a
1331 new table. The attribute table of the currently active layer is the
1332 left table and other tables are joined to this table. The results of
1333 the join are available for classification.
1334
1335 As a consequence, the join cannot result in fewer
1336 records than the source attribute table. The user is warned if the
1337 right table does not fulfill this constraint. An outer join must be
1338 used in such cases.
1339 </para>
1340 </section>
1341
1342 <section><title>Unjoin Table</title>
1343 <para>
1344 As said above, a normal table cannot be closed while it is still
1345 used in a join. While the joined table resulting from a join of
1346 normal tables can be simply closed (and thereby dereferencing
1347 the source tables), this is not possible for attribute tables.
1348
1349 Hence joins on attribute tables must be solved explicitly. This is
1350 what the
1351 <menuchoice>
1352 <guimenu>Layer</guimenu>
1353 <guimenuitem>Unjoin Table</guimenuitem>
1354 </menuchoice>
1355 item is used for: The last join for the currently
1356 active layer is solved.
1357 </para>
1358 </section>
1359 </section>
1360 </chapter>
1361
1362 <chapter><title>Extensions</title>
1363 <para>
1364 Thuban is designed to be extensible. The term Extension is used as a
1365 general term for anything that extends Thuban.
1366 This chapter introduces into some oppportunities how to add and
1367 handle extra functionality developed by your own or third parties.
1368 </para>
1369
1370 <section><title>Add personal extensions via thubanstart.py</title>
1371 <para>
1372 After Thuban has been started for the first time, a directory
1373 .thuban is created within your home directory.
1374 There you can add a file thubanstart.py which will be imported
1375 by Thuban at start-up. It is recommended to add only import-statements
1376 to this file to keep the actual code of extensions separate.
1377 </para>
1378 <para>
1379 The modules to import must either be found through the environment
1380 variable PYTHONPATH or directly be placed into the .thuban-directory.
1381 </para>
1382 <para>
1383 As an example, copy the file examples/simple_extensions/hello_world.py
1384 of the Thuban source code into the .thuban-directory of your home
1385 directory. Now add add the statement import hello_world to the
1386 file thubanstart.py and run Thuban. You will notice an additional
1387 menu <menuchoice><guimenu>Extensions</guimenu></menuchoice> where
1388 the new item for the Hello-World extension is placed - select it
1389 to see the Hello-World message.
1390 </para>
1391 </section>
1392
1393 <section><title>Extensions included in Thuban package</title>
1394 <para>
1395 The extensions described in this section are part of the
1396 Thuban package, but not activated by default.
1397 You will find them in the Thuban installation directory
1398 under <literal>Extensions/</literal>. Activate them as personal
1399 extensions via PYTHONPATH as described in the previous section.
1400 Stable extensions will appear under the menu
1401 <menuchoice><guimenu>Extensions</guimenu></menuchoice> and
1402 extensions which are in experimental state and therefore
1403 not fully functional under
1404 <menuchoice><guimenu>Experimental</guimenu></menuchoice>.
1405 </para>
1406
1407 <section><title>Stable extensions</title>
1408 <para>
1409 These extensions provide extra-functionality to Thuban
1410 that has not (yet) been integrated in the main application.
1411 They are considered to be free of bugs, but may be
1412 further polished with helpful user interactions.
1413 </para>
1414 <section><title>gns2shp</title>
1415 <para>
1416 This tool converts data of the Geospatial Names Server
1417 (GNS, see <ulink url="http://www.nima.mil/gns"/>)
1418 into Shapefile format.
1419 The above web-site offer to download named places
1420 information grouped by countries for all of the world
1421 except USA for which other data are provided.
1422 </para>
1423 <para>
1424 If you download and unpack a package, you will have
1425 a text-file with suffix .txt.
1426 Selecting such a file via gns2shp will create the
1427 corresponding Shapefile with the same basename and
1428 place it in the same direcory. Afterwards it
1429 is automatically loaded into Thuban.
1430 The Shapefile will not automatically be delete afterwards.
1431 </para>
1432 <para>
1433 The gns2shp.py module can also be executed on the
1434 command line for batch processing purposes.
1435 </para>
1436 <para>
1437 A sample (<literal>ls.txt</literal> for Liechtenstein)
1438 is included in the directory
1439 <literal>Extensions/gns2shp/test</literal>.
1440 </para>
1441 </section>
1442 <section><title>SVG Export</title>
1443 <para>
1444 Map and legend can be exported separately in the
1445 Thuban-Map-SVG format.
1446 You get files that comply with
1447 the Scalable Vector Graphics (SVG) 1.1 Specification
1448 and can be read by many vector drawing applications.
1449 </para>
1450 <para>
1451 Goal of svgexport is to provide
1452 the start of a printing pipeline for Thuban.
1453 For this purpose the written Thuban-Map-SVG files
1454 contain information that can be used in postprocessing.
1455 Typically a general vector drawing application is
1456 more powerful then a geographic information viewer;
1457 e.g. having much fancier symbols and fonts.
1458 Also users benefit much more when learning to use a
1459 more general application they can also use for other
1460 tasks. So the charming idea is to enable
1461 the drawing application to postprocess a Thuban maps.
1462 So thee xtra information in the format will make it
1463 possible to export from Thuban and if a few geoobjects
1464 change, and keep the general layout and style
1465 of the full map in the vector drawing appplication.
1466 </para>
1467 <para>
1468 Markus Rechtien has developed a prototype of this
1469 printing pipline as his Diplom thetis, showing
1470 the feasability of Bernhard Reiter's concept.
1471 Scripts exist for the drawing application Skencil
1472 (<ulink url="http://www.skencil.org"/>).
1473 </para>
1474 <para>
1475 Technical notes: the names of the layers are used
1476 as base for ids within the SVG format.
1477 If you try to export with two layers having
1478 the same name, you will get a name clash error.
1479 Just change one of the layer names and try again.
1480 </para>
1481 </section>
1482 </section>
1483 <section><title>Experimental extensions</title>
1484 <para>
1485 All all of these functions have to be handled with care,
1486 since they are neither complete nor well tested.
1487 They are to be seen as a proof-of-concept and may
1488 additionally in some cases of practical help.
1489 </para>
1490 <para>
1491 Any interest on further improvement of these extensions
1492 should be communicated towards the developer and user
1493 community.
1494 </para>
1495
1496 <section><title>importAPR</title>
1497 <para>
1498 This command offer to load an ESRI® ArcView® project
1499 file (suffix .apr) and convert it for use within Thuban.
1500 After selecting a apr-file to load, a list
1501 will be presented that offers to select one of the views
1502 of the apr-file, provided there is more than one.
1503 Furthermore, the Session Info-Tree is extended with
1504 a complete representation of the parsed apr-file.
1505 </para>
1506 <para>
1507 The legend of Thuban does not yet cover all of the elements as
1508 supported by the legend of ArcView®. Therefore, the Thuban
1509 map will look different. Furthermore, the apr-format is
1510 a proprietary format, not openly documented.
1511 Therefore, the interpretation is
1512 partly based on reverse engeneering and good guessing.
1513 </para>
1514 <para>
1515 The file-paths within the apr-file may not fit and potentially
1516 are subject to fix in the apr-file. You can do this
1517 applying any text editor. The paths are either absolute
1518 or relative from where Thuban has been started.
1519 </para>
1520 <para>
1521 A sample for the Iceland data is included as
1522 <literal>Extensions/importAPR/samples/iceland.apr</literal>.
1523 The file-paths are relative from the Thuban main directory.
1524 </para>
1525 </section>
1526 </section>
1527 </section>
1528
1529 <section><title>Writing simple extensions</title>
1530 <para>
1531 Writing an extension for Thuban basically means to
1532 implement the extra functionality in Python with all of the
1533 Thuban classes, methods and variables available.
1534 </para>
1535 <para>
1536 All classes and their methods are documented in the source code
1537 (see their doc-strings). Here is an example from
1538 Thuban/Model/layer.py that describes some of the methods
1539 of a Layer object:
1540 </para>
1541 <programlisting>
1542 <![CDATA[
1543 class BaseLayer(TitledObject, Modifiable):
1544
1545 """Base class for the layers."""
1546
1547 def __init__(self, title, visible = True, projection = None):
1548 """Initialize the layer.
1549
1550 title -- the title
1551 visible -- boolean. If true the layer is visible.
1552 """
1553 TitledObject.__init__(self, title)
1554 Modifiable.__init__(self)
1555 self.visible = visible
1556 self.projection = projection
1557
1558 def Visible(self):
1559 """Return true if layer is visible"""
1560 return self.visible
1561
1562 def SetVisible(self, visible):
1563 """Set the layer's visibility."""
1564 self.visible = visible
1565 self.issue(LAYER_VISIBILITY_CHANGED, self)
1566
1567 def HasClassification(self):
1568 """Determine if this layer support classifications."""
1569 ...
1570 ]]>
1571 </programlisting>
1572 <para>
1573 This example intends to give you an impression of the
1574 source-code-level documentation.
1575 You have to make yourself familiar with
1576 the Python programming language to understand some special
1577 code elements.
1578 </para>
1579 <section><title>hello_world.py</title>
1580 <para>
1581 Traditionally, the first example should welcome the world.
1582 Most of the code handles the frame for integrating a menu
1583 item into Thuban while the actual raising of a message
1584 is done in a single line.
1585 </para>
1586 <programlisting>
1587 <![CDATA[
1588 # Copyright (C) 2003 by Intevation GmbH
1589 # Authors:
1590 # Jan-Oliver Wagner <[email protected]>
1591 #
1592 # This program is free software under the GPL (>=v2)
1593 # Read the file COPYING coming with Thuban for details.
1594
1595 """
1596 Extend Thuban with a sample Hello World to demonstrate simple
1597 extensions.
1598 """
1599
1600 __version__ = '$Revision$'
1601
1602 # use _() already now for all strings that may later be translated
1603 from Thuban import _
1604
1605 # Thuban has named commands which can be registered in the central
1606 # instance registry.
1607 from Thuban.UI.command import registry, Command
1608
1609 # The instance of the main menu of the Thuban application
1610 # See Thuban/UI/menu.py for the API of the Menu class
1611 from Thuban.UI.mainwindow import main_menu
1612
1613 def hello_world_dialog(context):
1614 """Just raise a simple dialog to greet the world.
1615
1616 context -- The Thuban context.
1617 """
1618 context.mainwindow.RunMessageBox(_('Hello World'), _('Hello World!'))
1619
1620
1621 # create a new command and register it
1622 registry.Add(Command('hello_world', _('Hello World'), hello_world_dialog,
1623 helptext = _('Welcome everyone on this planet')))
1624
1625 # find the extensions menu (create it anew if not found)
1626 extensions_menu = main_menu.FindOrInsertMenu('extensions', _('E&xtensions'))
1627
1628 # finally bind the new command with an entry in the extensions menu
1629 extensions_menu.InsertItem('hello_world')
1630 ]]>
1631 </programlisting>
1632 </section>
1633 <section><title>Registering a Command</title>
1634 <para>
1635 Mainly, our new function has to be registered to the Thuban
1636 framework in order to connect it to the menu. A registered
1637 command can also be connected to e.g. a toolbar button.
1638 </para>
1639 <para>
1640 The instances and classes for this are imported at the beginning.
1641 Any code not inside a method or class is directly executed when
1642 the source-code module is imported. Therefore, the second
1643 part of this example consist of the plain statements to create a new
1644 Command and to add it to the menu.
1645 </para>
1646 <para>
1647 By convention, it looks for a menu registered as ``extensions'' to
1648 insert the new command. If it does not exist yet, it gets created.
1649 It is advisable to copy this code for any of your extensions.
1650 </para>
1651 </section>
1652 <section><title>The Thuban context</title>
1653 <para>
1654 A registered command that is called, always receives the
1655 Thuban context. This instance provides our method with
1656 hook references to all important components of the Thuban
1657 application.
1658 </para>
1659 <para>
1660 In the example hello_world.py, our function uses the
1661 mainwindow component which offers a method to raise a
1662 message dialog. In total there are three hooks:
1663 <itemizedlist>
1664 <listitem>
1665 <para>application:
1666 This object is the instance of the Thuban Application class.
1667 Except maybe for loading or savinf sessions, you will not
1668 need this object for a simple extension.
1669 See Thuban/UI/application.py for the API.
1670 </para>
1671 </listitem>
1672 <listitem>
1673 <para>session:
1674 The instance of the current session. It manages the sessions'
1675 map and tables. You can set and remove the map or tables.
1676 In may also get the map object. However, you should know that
1677 internally it is already prepared to handle many maps.
1678 Therfore, currently you would always receive a list with exactlty
1679 one element. In the future, if there are more than one map,
1680 you will not know which one is the currently display one and
1681 therefore you should use the mainwindow as hook to find
1682 the currently displayed map.
1683 See Thuban/Model/session.py for the API.
1684 </para>
1685 </listitem>
1686 <listitem>
1687 <para>
1688 mainwindow: The mainwindow object is central to manage various
1689 GUI things such as the Legend sub-window. Most notably,
1690 you get access to the canvas which is the window part where
1691 the map is drawn. The canvas knows, which map it currently
1692 draws and therefore you get the current map via
1693 context.mainwindow.canvas.Map().
1694 See Thuban/UI/mainwindow.py for the API.
1695 </para>
1696 </listitem>
1697 </itemizedlist>
1698 </para>
1699 </section>
1700 </section>
1701 </chapter>
1702
1703 <chapter><title>Trouble Shooting</title>
1704 <para>
1705 Here are a few problems that users have encountered when first using Thuban.
1706 </para>
1707 <para>
1708
1709 <itemizedlist>
1710 <listitem>
1711 <para>After adding two or more layers nothing is drawn in the map window.
1712 </para>
1713 <para>
1714 This is probably because the layers have different projections. Projections
1715 must be set on all layers and on the map itself if the layers' projections
1716 are different.
1717 </para>
1718 </listitem>
1719
1720 <listitem>
1721 <para>Thuban crashes on startup with the error
1722 <literal>NameError: global name 'False' is not defined</literal>.
1723 </para>
1724 <para>
1725 <varname>True</varname> and <varname>False</varname> were only introduced
1726 in Python 2.2.1. Thuban depends on at least Python 2.2.1.
1727 </para>
1728 </listitem>
1729
1730 <listitem>
1731 <para>After compiling Thuban, Thuban crashes with an error similar to
1732 <literal>
1733 ImportError: /usr/local//lib/thuban/Thuban/../Lib/wxproj.so: undefined symbol: __gxx_personality_v0
1734 </literal>
1735 </para>
1736 <para>
1737 Thuban depends on the wxWindows library. If Thuban is compiled with an
1738 incompatible version of the compiler than wxWindows was compiled with
1739 this error may occur. Try compiling with a different version of the
1740 compiler.
1741 </para>
1742 </listitem>
1743 </itemizedlist>
1744 </para>
1745 <para>
1746 If an error occurs Thuban will display a dialog indicating the error
1747 before closing. The text should be copied and reported to the
1748 <ulink url="http://thuban.intevation.org/bugtracker.html">
1749 Intevation bugtracker
1750 </ulink>.
1751 More information about the system is available from
1752 <menuchoice><guimenu>Help</guimenu><guimenuitem>About</guimenuitem></menuchoice> box.
1753 This should also be included in the bug report.
1754 <figure>
1755 <title>Error Dialog</title>
1756 <mediaobject>
1757 <imageobject><imagedata fileref="../images/8_int_error.png" format="PNG" scale="&imgscale;"/></imageobject>
1758 <imageobject><imagedata fileref="./images/8_int_error.eps" format="EPS" scale="&imgscale;"/></imageobject>
1759 </mediaobject>
1760 </figure>
1761 </para>
1762
1763 </chapter>
1764
1765 <appendix><title>Supported Data Sources</title>
1766 <para>
1767 </para>
1768 <variablelist>
1769 <varlistentry>
1770 <term>Shapefile</term>
1771 <listitem>
1772 <para>
1773 The Shapefile format has become a standard format for saving
1774 geographic vector information. It supports polygons, lines, and
1775 points.
1776
1777 <ulink url="http://www.esri.com/library/whitepapers/pdfs/shapefile.pdf">
1778 Technical Specification.
1779 </ulink>
1780 </para>
1781 </listitem>
1782 </varlistentry>
1783
1784 <varlistentry>
1785 <term>dBase file</term>
1786 <listitem>
1787 <para>
1788 dBase files are used to store the attributes for each layer. This
1789 is closely associated with the Shapefile format. For detailed
1790 specifications on the correct format of a dBase file used with
1791 Thuban please see the Technical Specification for the Shapefile
1792 format above.
1793 </para>
1794 </listitem>
1795 </varlistentry>
1796
1797 <varlistentry>
1798 <term>PostGIS</term>
1799 <listitem>
1800 <para>
1801 PostGIS adds support for geographic objects to the PostgreSQL
1802 object-relational database. Different layer types (as for Shapefiles)
1803 are supported. <ulink url="http://postgis.refractions.net">PostGIS
1804 Homepage</ulink>
1805 </para>
1806 </listitem>
1807 </varlistentry>
1808
1809 <varlistentry>
1810 <term>Raster files</term>
1811 <listitem>
1812 <para>
1813 Binding the GDAL library Thuban supports numerous raster file formats,
1814 see <ulink url="http://www.remotesensing.org/gdal/formats_list.html">
1815 GDAL format list</ulink> for details.</para>
1816
1817 <para>Most commonly used is the <emphasis>TIFF/GeoTIFF</emphasis>
1818 format: Raster maps are provided as TIFF images, with an additional
1819 "world file" storing the geographic reference (usually with an
1820 extension ".tfw").
1821 </para>
1822 </listitem>
1823 </varlistentry>
1824
1825 </variablelist>
1826 </appendix>
1827
1828 <appendix><title>Working with PostGIS</title>
1829 <para>
1830 This section focusses on the use of PostGIS in the Thuban framework. For
1831 installation and maintenance of spatial databases we refer to the
1832 <ulink url="http://postgis.refractions.net">PostGIS Homepage</ulink>.
1833 The Thuban PostGIS support requires the
1834 <ulink url="http://initd.org/software/psycopg">psycopg module</ulink>.
1835 </para>
1836
1837 <para>
1838 Working with PostGIS Databases is seperated into two steps:
1839 <itemizedlist>
1840 <listitem><para>Opening a Database Connection</para></listitem>
1841 <listitem><para>Loading a Data Layer</para></listitem>
1842 </itemizedlist>
1843 </para>
1844 <section><title>Opening a Database Connection</title>
1845 <para>
1846 Before a data layer can be loaded from a PostGIS database a
1847 connection with the database has to be established.
1848 <menuchoice>
1849 <guimenu>Session</guimenu>
1850 <guimenuitem>Database Connections ...</guimenuitem>
1851 </menuchoice> opens a dialog for database connection
1852 management. In the dialog new connections can be added
1853 and existing ones can be removed. Removing a database
1854 connection is not possible if the map still displays a
1855 layer provided by this database connection.
1856 </para>
1857 <figure>
1858 <title>Database Management Dialog</title>
1859 <mediaobject>
1860 <imageobject><imagedata fileref="../images/app_postgis_db_management.png" format="PNG" scale="&imgscale;"/></imageobject>
1861 <imageobject><imagedata fileref="./images/app_postgis_db_management.eps" format="EPS" scale="&imgscale;"/></imageobject>
1862 </mediaobject>
1863 </figure>
1864
1865 <para>
1866 To add a new database connection to the session a dialog is
1867 opened to specify the relevant connection data. Enter all
1868 data relevant for your connection. If the connection fails
1869 the dialog remains open and provides some hints on the failure.
1870 </para>
1871 <figure>
1872 <title>Add Database Dialog</title>
1873 <mediaobject>
1874 <imageobject><imagedata fileref="../images/app_postgis_db_add.png" format="PNG" scale="&imgscale;"/></imageobject>
1875 <imageobject><imagedata fileref="./images/app_postgis_db_add.eps" format="EPS" scale="&imgscale;"/></imageobject>
1876 </mediaobject>
1877 </figure>
1878
1879 <para>
1880 It is important to note that information on database connections are
1881 also stored with the session. Passwords are NOT stored. If you load a
1882 session with database connections you are asked to enter these
1883 passwords again where required.
1884 </para>
1885
1886 </section>
1887
1888 <section><title>Loading a Data Layer</title>
1889 <para>
1890 Data layers as part of a map are loaded with the
1891 <menuchoice>
1892 <guimenu>Map</guimenu>
1893 <guimenuitem>Add Database Layer ...</guimenuitem>
1894 </menuchoice> menu item. A dialog is raised displaying two choice
1895 lists. In the left list all connected databases are shown.
1896 Highlighting
1897 one of these and issuing a retrieval results in a list of available
1898 layer tables from that database. After selection of a
1899 layer the dialog is closed.
1900 </para>
1901 <figure>
1902 <title>Add Database Dialog</title>
1903 <mediaobject>
1904 <imageobject><imagedata fileref="../images/app_postgis_add_layer.png" format="PNG" scale="&imgscale;"/></imageobject>
1905 <imageobject><imagedata fileref="./images/app_postgis_add_layer.eps" format="EPS" scale="&imgscale;"/></imageobject>
1906 </mediaobject>
1907 </figure>
1908
1909 </section>
1910
1911 </appendix>
1912
1913 <appendix><title>Supported Projections</title>
1914 <para>
1915 The following types of projections are directly support by
1916 Thuban. The specific values for each are provided by the user
1917 to create custom projections. Thuban comes with predefined
1918 projections which are available through the Projections dialog.
1919 </para>
1920 <itemizedlist>
1921 <listitem>
1922 <para>Geographic</para>
1923 <itemizedlist>
1924 <listitem><para><literal>Ellipsoid</literal></para></listitem>
1925 <listitem><para>
1926 <literal>Source Data</literal>: either Degrees or Radians
1927 </para></listitem>
1928 </itemizedlist>
1929 </listitem>
1930 <listitem>
1931 <para>Lambert Conic Conformal</para>
1932 <itemizedlist>
1933 <listitem><para><literal>Ellipsoid</literal></para></listitem>
1934 <listitem><para><literal>Latitude of 1st standard parallel</literal></para></listitem>
1935 <listitem><para><literal>Latitude of 2nd standard parallel</literal></para></listitem>
1936 <listitem><para><literal>Central Meridian</literal></para></listitem>
1937 <listitem><para><literal>Latitude of Origin</literal></para></listitem>
1938 <listitem><para><literal>False Easting</literal> (meters)</para></listitem>
1939 <listitem><para><literal>False Northing</literal> (meters)</para></listitem>
1940 </itemizedlist>
1941 </listitem>
1942 <listitem>
1943 <para>Transverse Mercator</para>
1944 <itemizedlist>
1945 <listitem><para><literal>Ellipsoid</literal></para></listitem>
1946 <listitem><para><literal>Latitude</literal>of origin</para></listitem>
1947 <listitem><para><literal>Longitude</literal>at central meridian</para></listitem>
1948 <listitem><para><literal>Scale Factor</literal>at central meridian</para></listitem>
1949 <listitem><para><literal>False Easting</literal> (meters)</para></listitem>
1950 <listitem><para><literal>False Northing</literal> (meters)</para></listitem>
1951 </itemizedlist>
1952 </listitem>
1953 <listitem>
1954 <para>Universal Transverse Mercator</para>
1955 <itemizedlist>
1956 <listitem><para><literal>Ellipsoid</literal></para></listitem>
1957 <listitem><para><literal>Zone</literal>
1958 (can be guessed appling the Propose button)</para></listitem>
1959 <listitem><para><literal>Southern Hemisphere</literal> flag</para></listitem>
1960 </itemizedlist>
1961 </listitem>
1962 </itemizedlist>
1963
1964 <para>
1965 Thuban comes with a sample set of map projections for various
1966 European countries. Apart from the basic projection they differ
1967 especially in their parameterization:
1968 </para>
1969 <itemizedlist>
1970 <listitem><para>Belgium Datum 1972 (Lambert Conic Conformal)</para>
1971 </listitem>
1972
1973 <listitem><para>Gauss-Boaga Zone 1 (Italy, Transverse Mercartor)</para>
1974 </listitem>
1975
1976 <listitem><para>Gauss-Krueger Zone 2 (Germany, Transverse Mercartor)
1977 </para>
1978 </listitem>
1979
1980 <listitem><para>Reseau Geodesique Francaise
1981 (France, Lambert Conic Conformal)</para>
1982 </listitem>
1983
1984 <listitem><para>UK National Grid (United Kingdom, Transverse Mercartor)
1985 </para>
1986 </listitem>
1987 </itemizedlist>
1988
1989 <para>
1990 Thuban uses the comprehensive PROJ library for projections. PROJ provides
1991 more than the four commonly used projections described above. If needed
1992 Thuban can be easily extended to a new projection covered by PROJ.
1993 </para>
1994 </appendix>
1995
1996 </book>
1997

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