Modeling Our World: The Esri Guide to Geodatabase Design
Michael Zeiler
- 出版商: ESRI Press
- 出版日期: 2000-01-01
- 售價: $480
- 語言: 英文
- 頁數: 200
- 裝訂: Paperback
- ISBN: 1879102625
- ISBN-13: 9781879102620
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商品描述
Description:
Unleash the full modeling power of your geographic information system software
Geographic data models are digital frameworks that describe the location and characteristics of things in the world around us. With a geographic information system, we can use these models as lenses to see, interpret, and analyze the infinite complexity of our natural and man-made environments. With the geodatabase, a new geographic data model introduced with ArcInfo 8, you can extend significantly the level of detail and range of accuracy with which you can model geographic reality in a database environment.
Modeling Our World is the comprehensive guide and reference to GIS data modeling in general, and to the geodatabase model in particular. It shows how to make the right decisions about modeling data—decisions that will inform each aspect of a GIS project, from database design and data capture to spatial analysis and visual presentation.
You will learn to:
- Design a geographic database that fits the project
- Customize the database without writing code
- Manage work flows in complex projects
- Model diverse linear systems such as streams, freeways, or electrical grids
- Incorporate satellite images for geographic analysis and display
- Create three-dimensional GIS data models
Illustrated with hundreds of full-color maps and figures, Modeling Our World will be essential reading for a wide audience. Seasoned ArcGIS users and serious new users of the software will find that Modeling Our World is required reading on the path to GIS success.
For the GIS specialist, this provides a good introduction to the broader database world. For the database specialist, this book serves as a good answer to the question "what is so special about spatial?"
—Scott Morehouse, Director of Software Development, ESRI
Table of Contents:
- Object modeling and geodatabases
- Modeling objects with GIS
- The progress of geographic data models
- The geodatabase, store of geographic data
- Features in an object-oriented data model
- Serving geographic data
- Accessing geographic data
- Building data models
- Guide to reading UML object diagrams
- Technology trends
- How maps inform
- The utility of maps
- How maps present information
- The parts of a map
- Presenting geography with layers
- Drawing features with symbols
- Drawing feature layers
- Classifying attribute values
- Displaying thematic, spectral, and picture data
- Visualizing surfaces with TIN layers
- GIS data representations
- The fundamentals of a GIS
- The diverse applications of GIS
- Three representations of the world
- Modeling surfaces
- Modeling imaged or sampled data
- Modeling discrete features
- Comparing spatial data representations
- The structure of geographic data
- The catalog and connections to data
- The geodatabase, datasets, and feature classes
- ArcInfo workspaces and coverages
- Shapefiles and CAD files
- Maps and layers
- Comparing the structure of vector datasets
- Comparing feature geometry in vector datasets
- Smart features
- The qualities of features
- Steps to making features smart
- Designing the geodatabase
- Storing data in tables
- The shape and extent of features
- Attributes: qualities of an object
- Adding simple behavior with subtypes
- Validating attributes
- Relationships among objects
- Extending object classes
- The geodatabase object model
- The shape of features
- Geometry and features
- Constructing geometry
- Testing spatial relationships
- Applying topological operators
- Geometry object model
- Managing work flow with versions
- Using versions
- Long transactions and the geodatabase
- The fundamentals of versions
- Editing versioned geodatabases
- Types of work flows
- Linear modeling with networks
- Modeling infrastructure
- The network model
- How features connect
- Network features
- Network flow
- Analysis on a network
- Network object model
- Cell-based modeling with rasters
- Representing geography with rasters
- Using raster data
- Raster data model
- Raster display and analysis
- The spatial context of rasters
- Raster formats
- Raster object model
- Surface modeling with TINs
- Representing surfaces
- Structure of a TIN
- Modeling surface features
- Finding locations
- Using locations
- Converting locations to map features
- Converting x,y locations
- Converting addresses
- Converting place names
- Converting postal zones
- Converting route locations
- Geodatabase design guide
- Purpose and goals of design
- Overview of design steps
- Step 1: Model the user's view
- Step 2: Define entities and relationships
- Step 3: Identify representation of entities
- Step 4: Match to geodatabase data model
- Step 5: Organize into geographic data sets
- Index