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How a QGIS plugin saved my day: autotrace

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One of my favourite horror exercises for students was the digitization of geological maps. Everyone hated it as you need to take of snapping options, correct attributes, and always needed to check with the background map which was most of the times a bad quality scan of an old never-heard-of-this-country geological map. Today I needed to do this work for myself… what goes around, comes around.

Digitizing polygons or the pain in the arse…

The main problem in my recent case: digitizing “valleys”. One might argue: come on… do the watershed delineation and off you go. This might be one possibility. But touristic valleys does not give a sh… about watersheds. So I started working with the SRTM3 dataset and mentioned that most of my valleys are bordering valleys and need to share some (at least!!!) vertexes. One approach is to enable the snapping options in QGIS and work on. But you need to concentrate very much not to miss a vertex. As you can imagine: this is not for the faint hearted. So I asked my colleague Jakob Hafner and he made me stumble upon the autotrace plugin.

QGIS AutoTrace Plugin

The plugin enables you to use already defined features and their vertices as reference for new vertices and increases therefore your productivity. But let me not spend so many words and show you this beauty in action:

I simply love it!!!

The post How a QGIS plugin saved my day: autotrace appeared first on Digital Geography.


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