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Rasterio Alternatives
Similar projects and alternatives to rasterio
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QGIS
QGIS is a free, open source, cross platform (lin/win/mac) geographical information system (GIS)
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WorkOS
The modern identity platform for B2B SaaS. The APIs are flexible and easy-to-use, supporting authentication, user identity, and complex enterprise features like SSO and SCIM provisioning.
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gdal
GDAL is an open source MIT licensed translator library for raster and vector geospatial data formats.
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InfluxDB
Power Real-Time Data Analytics at Scale. Get real-time insights from all types of time series data with InfluxDB. Ingest, query, and analyze billions of data points in real-time with unbounded cardinality.
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awesome-spectral-indices
A ready-to-use curated list of Spectral Indices for Remote Sensing applications.
rasterio reviews and mentions
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Building a Dynamic Tile Server Using Cloud Optimized GeoTIFF(COG) with TiTiler
TiTiler is a dynamic tile server built on FastAPI and Rasterio/GDAL. Its main features include support for Cloud Optimized GeoTIFF(COG), multiple projection methods, various output formats (JPEG, JP2, PNG, WEBP, GTIFF, NumpyTile), WMTS, and virtual mosaic. It also provides Lambda and ECS deployment environments using AWS CDK.
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Python: How to save NumPy 2d-array to an asc-file so that it can be opened in ArcGIS Pro?
You're missing transform headers etc, you can write it out with GDAL but rasterio is generally easier to use than the Python GDAL bindings, here's an example.
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How to convert (geo?)tifs into something I can query with geocoordinates (PostgreSQL?) ?
Out of curiosity, what's stopping you from keeping the data in GTiff and just sampling from them with coordinates? Lots of free software lets you do that easily (e.g. QGIS, rasterio if you use Python etc). Am I not seeing something here?
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Library Writing Realizations
> X. People will not read the docs.
> Docs are almost useless. Nobody reads them.
> They'll read a one page quick start, and then they want to just start digging in writing code.
> Keep the intros very minimal and very focused on getting things working.
I, for one, read the docs. May fortune smile on those who put effort into https://rasterio.readthedocs.io/
They are terse, but enough breadcrumbs to fumble my way to a working input for gdal_proximity.py
Possibly I'm not a representative sample, but one of my mantras at the office is "If you ain't doc'in', you ain't rockin'."
(Though we are only doing ransom note wiki pages, not library documentation.)
If the package doesn't have shiny Sphynx docs, at least afford us a few cryptic utterances in the source code.
- How do I open .vrt file to see content of the file in python?
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Better alternative to gdal_translate [cross posted with r/QGIS]
Looks like rio (Rasterio CLI) also uses gdal libraries. https://github.com/rasterio/rasterio/blob/master/rasterio/rio/clip.py
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A note from our sponsor - InfluxDB
www.influxdata.com | 24 Apr 2024
Stats
rasterio/rasterio is an open source project licensed under GNU General Public License v3.0 or later which is an OSI approved license.
The primary programming language of rasterio is Python.
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