View source: R/coords-translate.R
coords_point_translate_wkt | R Documentation |
These functions provide the reverse function of wkt_coords()
and company: they parse vectors of coordinate values into well-known
formats. Polygon rings are automatically closed, as
closed rings are assumed or required by many parsers.
coords_point_translate_wkt(x, y, z = NA, m = NA, precision = 16, trim = TRUE) coords_point_translate_wkb( x, y, z = NA, m = NA, endian = wk::wk_platform_endian(), buffer_size = 2048 ) coords_linestring_translate_wkt( x, y, z = NA, m = NA, feature_id = 1L, precision = 16, trim = TRUE ) coords_linestring_translate_wkb( x, y, z = NA, m = NA, feature_id = 1L, endian = wk::wk_platform_endian(), buffer_size = 2048 ) coords_polygon_translate_wkt( x, y, z = NA, m = NA, feature_id = 1L, ring_id = 1L, precision = 16, trim = TRUE ) coords_polygon_translate_wkb( x, y, z = NA, m = NA, feature_id = 1L, ring_id = 1L, endian = wk::wk_platform_endian(), buffer_size = 2048 )
x, y, z, m |
Vectors of coordinate values |
precision |
The rounding precision to use when writing (number of decimal places). |
trim |
Trim unnecessary zeroes in the output? |
endian |
Force the endian of the resulting WKB. |
buffer_size |
The buffer size to use when converting to WKB. |
feature_id, ring_id |
Vectors for which a change in
sequential values indicates a new feature or ring. Use |
*_translate_wkt()
returns a character vector of
well-known text; *_translate_wkb()
returns a list
of raw vectors.
coords_point_translate_wkt(1:3, 2:4) coords_linestring_translate_wkt(1:5, 2:6, feature_id = c(1, 1, 1, 2, 2)) coords_polygon_translate_wkt(c(0, 10, 0), c(0, 0, 10))
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