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========
GEOS API
========
.. module:: django.contrib.gis.geos
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:synopsis: GeoDjango's high-level interface to the GEOS library.
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Background
==========
What is GEOS?
-------------
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`GEOS`__ stands for **Geometry Engine - Open Source**,
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and is a C++ library, ported from the `Java Topology Suite`__. GEOS
implements the OpenGIS `Simple Features for SQL`__ spatial predicate functions
and spatial operators. GEOS, now an OSGeo project, was initially developed and
maintained by `Refractions Research`__ of Victoria, Canada.
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__ https://libgeos.org/
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__ https://sourceforge.net/projects/jts-topo-suite/
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__ https://www.ogc.org/standards/sfs
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__ http://www.refractions.net/
Features
--------
GeoDjango implements a high-level Python wrapper for the GEOS library, its
features include:
* A BSD-licensed interface to the GEOS geometry routines, implemented purely
in Python using ``ctypes``.
* Loosely-coupled to GeoDjango. For example, :class:`GEOSGeometry` objects
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may be used outside of a Django project/application. In other words,
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no need to have :envvar:`DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE` set or use a database, etc.
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* Mutability: :class:`GEOSGeometry` objects may be modified.
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* Cross-platform and tested; compatible with Windows, Linux, Solaris, and
macOS platforms.
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.. _geos-tutorial:
Tutorial
========
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This section contains a brief introduction and tutorial to using
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:class:`GEOSGeometry` objects.
Creating a Geometry
-------------------
:class:`GEOSGeometry` objects may be created in a few ways. The first is
to simply instantiate the object on some spatial input -- the following
are examples of creating the same geometry from WKT, HEX, WKB, and GeoJSON::
>>> from django.contrib.gis.geos import GEOSGeometry
>>> pnt = GEOSGeometry('POINT(5 23)') # WKT
>>> pnt = GEOSGeometry('010100000000000000000014400000000000003740') # HEX
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>>> pnt = GEOSGeometry(memoryview(b'\x01\x01\x00\x00\x00\x00\x00\x00\x00\x00\x00\x14@\x00\x00\x00\x00\x00\x007@')) # WKB
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>>> pnt = GEOSGeometry('{ "type": "Point", "coordinates": [ 5.000000, 23.000000 ] }') # GeoJSON
Another option is to use the constructor for the specific geometry type
that you wish to create. For example, a :class:`Point` object may be
created by passing in the X and Y coordinates into its constructor::
>>> from django.contrib.gis.geos import Point
>>> pnt = Point(5, 23)
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All these constructors take the keyword argument ``srid``. For example::
>>> from django.contrib.gis.geos import GEOSGeometry, LineString, Point
>>> print(GEOSGeometry('POINT (0 0)', srid=4326))
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SRID=4326;POINT (0 0)
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>>> print(LineString((0, 0), (1, 1), srid=4326))
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SRID=4326;LINESTRING (0 0, 1 1)
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>>> print(Point(0, 0, srid=32140))
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SRID=32140;POINT (0 0)
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Finally, there is the :func:`fromfile` factory method which returns a
:class:`GEOSGeometry` object from a file::
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>>> from django.contrib.gis.geos import fromfile
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>>> pnt = fromfile('/path/to/pnt.wkt')
>>> pnt = fromfile(open('/path/to/pnt.wkt'))
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.. _geos-exceptions-in-logfile:
.. admonition:: My logs are filled with GEOS-related errors
You find many ``TypeError`` or ``AttributeError`` exceptions filling your
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web server's log files. This generally means that you are creating GEOS
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objects at the top level of some of your Python modules. Then, due to a race
condition in the garbage collector, your module is garbage collected before
the GEOS object. To prevent this, create :class:`GEOSGeometry` objects
inside the local scope of your functions/methods.
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Geometries are Pythonic
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-----------------------
:class:`GEOSGeometry` objects are 'Pythonic', in other words components may
be accessed, modified, and iterated over using standard Python conventions.
For example, you can iterate over the coordinates in a :class:`Point`::
>>> pnt = Point(5, 23)
>>> [coord for coord in pnt]
[5.0, 23.0]
With any geometry object, the :attr:`GEOSGeometry.coords` property
may be used to get the geometry coordinates as a Python tuple::
>>> pnt.coords
(5.0, 23.0)
You can get/set geometry components using standard Python indexing
techniques. However, what is returned depends on the geometry type
of the object. For example, indexing on a :class:`LineString`
returns a coordinate tuple::
>>> from django.contrib.gis.geos import LineString
>>> line = LineString((0, 0), (0, 50), (50, 50), (50, 0), (0, 0))
>>> line[0]
(0.0, 0.0)
>>> line[-2]
(50.0, 0.0)
Whereas indexing on a :class:`Polygon` will return the ring
(a :class:`LinearRing` object) corresponding to the index::
>>> from django.contrib.gis.geos import Polygon
>>> poly = Polygon( ((0.0, 0.0), (0.0, 50.0), (50.0, 50.0), (50.0, 0.0), (0.0, 0.0)) )
>>> poly[0]
<LinearRing object at 0x1044395b0>
>>> poly[0][-2] # second-to-last coordinate of external ring
(50.0, 0.0)
In addition, coordinates/components of the geometry may added or modified,
just like a Python list::
>>> line[0] = (1.0, 1.0)
>>> line.pop()
(0.0, 0.0)
>>> line.append((1.0, 1.0))
>>> line.coords
((1.0, 1.0), (0.0, 50.0), (50.0, 50.0), (50.0, 0.0), (1.0, 1.0))
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Geometries support set-like operators::
>>> from django.contrib.gis.geos import LineString
>>> ls1 = LineString((0, 0), (2, 2))
>>> ls2 = LineString((1, 1), (3, 3))
>>> print(ls1 | ls2) # equivalent to `ls1.union(ls2)`
MULTILINESTRING ((0 0, 1 1), (1 1, 2 2), (2 2, 3 3))
>>> print(ls1 & ls2) # equivalent to `ls1.intersection(ls2)`
LINESTRING (1 1, 2 2)
>>> print(ls1 - ls2) # equivalent to `ls1.difference(ls2)`
LINESTRING(0 0, 1 1)
>>> print(ls1 ^ ls2) # equivalent to `ls1.sym_difference(ls2)`
MULTILINESTRING ((0 0, 1 1), (2 2, 3 3))
.. admonition:: Equality operator doesn't check spatial equality
The :class:`~GEOSGeometry` equality operator uses
:meth:`~GEOSGeometry.equals_exact`, not :meth:`~GEOSGeometry.equals`, i.e.
it requires the compared geometries to have the same coordinates in the
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same positions with the same SRIDs::
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>>> from django.contrib.gis.geos import LineString
>>> ls1 = LineString((0, 0), (1, 1))
>>> ls2 = LineString((1, 1), (0, 0))
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>>> ls3 = LineString((1, 1), (0, 0), srid=4326)
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>>> ls1.equals(ls2)
True
>>> ls1 == ls2
False
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>>> ls3 == ls2 # different SRIDs
False
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Geometry Objects
================
``GEOSGeometry``
----------------
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.. class:: GEOSGeometry(geo_input, srid=None)
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:param geo_input: Geometry input value (string or :class:`memoryview`)
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:param srid: spatial reference identifier
:type srid: int
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This is the base class for all GEOS geometry objects. It initializes on the
given ``geo_input`` argument, and then assumes the proper geometry subclass
(e.g., ``GEOSGeometry('POINT(1 1)')`` will create a :class:`Point` object).
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The ``srid`` parameter, if given, is set as the SRID of the created geometry if
``geo_input`` doesn't have an SRID. If different SRIDs are provided through the
``geo_input`` and ``srid`` parameters, ``ValueError`` is raised::
>>> from django.contrib.gis.geos import GEOSGeometry
>>> GEOSGeometry('POINT EMPTY', srid=4326).ewkt
'SRID=4326;POINT EMPTY'
>>> GEOSGeometry('SRID=4326;POINT EMPTY', srid=4326).ewkt
'SRID=4326;POINT EMPTY'
>>> GEOSGeometry('SRID=1;POINT EMPTY', srid=4326)
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
ValueError: Input geometry already has SRID: 1.
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The following input formats, along with their corresponding Python types,
are accepted:
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======================= ==============
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Format Input Type
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======================= ==============
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WKT / EWKT ``str``
HEX / HEXEWKB ``str``
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WKB / EWKB ``memoryview``
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:rfc:`GeoJSON <7946>` ``str``
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======================= ==============
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For the GeoJSON format, the SRID is set based on the ``crs`` member. If ``crs``
isn't provided, the SRID defaults to 4326.
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.. classmethod:: GEOSGeometry.from_gml(gml_string)
Constructs a :class:`GEOSGeometry` from the given GML string.
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Properties
~~~~~~~~~~
.. attribute:: GEOSGeometry.coords
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Returns the coordinates of the geometry as a tuple.
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.. attribute:: GEOSGeometry.dims
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Returns the dimension of the geometry:
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* ``0`` for :class:`Point`\s and :class:`MultiPoint`\s
* ``1`` for :class:`LineString`\s and :class:`MultiLineString`\s
* ``2`` for :class:`Polygon`\s and :class:`MultiPolygon`\s
* ``-1`` for empty :class:`GeometryCollection`\s
* the maximum dimension of its elements for non-empty
:class:`GeometryCollection`\s
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.. attribute:: GEOSGeometry.empty
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Returns whether or not the set of points in the geometry is empty.
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.. attribute:: GEOSGeometry.geom_type
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Returns a string corresponding to the type of geometry. For example::
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>>> pnt = GEOSGeometry('POINT(5 23)')
>>> pnt.geom_type
'Point'
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.. attribute:: GEOSGeometry.geom_typeid
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Returns the GEOS geometry type identification number. The following table
shows the value for each geometry type:
=========================== ========
Geometry ID
=========================== ========
:class:`Point` 0
:class:`LineString` 1
:class:`LinearRing` 2
:class:`Polygon` 3
:class:`MultiPoint` 4
:class:`MultiLineString` 5
:class:`MultiPolygon` 6
:class:`GeometryCollection` 7
=========================== ========
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.. attribute:: GEOSGeometry.num_coords
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Returns the number of coordinates in the geometry.
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.. attribute:: GEOSGeometry.num_geom
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Returns the number of geometries in this geometry. In other words, will
return 1 on anything but geometry collections.
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.. attribute:: GEOSGeometry.hasz
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Returns a boolean indicating whether the geometry is three-dimensional.
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.. attribute:: GEOSGeometry.ring
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Returns a boolean indicating whether the geometry is a ``LinearRing``.
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.. attribute:: GEOSGeometry.simple
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Returns a boolean indicating whether the geometry is 'simple'. A geometry
is simple if and only if it does not intersect itself (except at boundary
points). For example, a :class:`LineString` object is not simple if it
intersects itself. Thus, :class:`LinearRing` and :class:`Polygon` objects
are always simple because they do cannot intersect themselves, by
definition.
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.. attribute:: GEOSGeometry.valid
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Returns a boolean indicating whether the geometry is valid.
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.. attribute:: GEOSGeometry.valid_reason
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Returns a string describing the reason why a geometry is invalid.
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.. attribute:: GEOSGeometry.srid
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Property that may be used to retrieve or set the SRID associated with the
geometry. For example::
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>>> pnt = Point(5, 23)
>>> print(pnt.srid)
None
>>> pnt.srid = 4326
>>> pnt.srid
4326
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Output Properties
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The properties in this section export the :class:`GEOSGeometry` object into
a different. This output may be in the form of a string, buffer, or even
another object.
.. attribute:: GEOSGeometry.ewkt
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Returns the "extended" Well-Known Text of the geometry. This representation
is specific to PostGIS and is a superset of the OGC WKT standard. [#fnogc]_
Essentially the SRID is prepended to the WKT representation, for example
``SRID=4326;POINT(5 23)``.
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.. note::
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The output from this property does not include the 3dm, 3dz, and 4d
information that PostGIS supports in its EWKT representations.
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.. attribute:: GEOSGeometry.hex
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Returns the WKB of this Geometry in hexadecimal form. Please note
that the SRID value is not included in this representation
because it is not a part of the OGC specification (use the
:attr:`GEOSGeometry.hexewkb` property instead).
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.. attribute:: GEOSGeometry.hexewkb
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Returns the EWKB of this Geometry in hexadecimal form. This is an
extension of the WKB specification that includes the SRID value
that are a part of this geometry.
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.. attribute:: GEOSGeometry.json
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Returns the GeoJSON representation of the geometry. Note that the result is
not a complete GeoJSON structure but only the ``geometry`` key content of a
GeoJSON structure. See also :doc:`/ref/contrib/gis/serializers`.
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.. attribute:: GEOSGeometry.geojson
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Alias for :attr:`GEOSGeometry.json`.
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.. attribute:: GEOSGeometry.kml
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Returns a `KML`__ (Keyhole Markup Language) representation of the
geometry. This should only be used for geometries with an SRID of
4326 (WGS84), but this restriction is not enforced.
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.. attribute:: GEOSGeometry.ogr
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Returns an :class:`~django.contrib.gis.gdal.OGRGeometry` object
corresponding to the GEOS geometry.
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.. _wkb:
.. attribute:: GEOSGeometry.wkb
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Returns the WKB (Well-Known Binary) representation of this Geometry
as a Python buffer. SRID value is not included, use the
:attr:`GEOSGeometry.ewkb` property instead.
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.. _ewkb:
.. attribute:: GEOSGeometry.ewkb
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Return the EWKB representation of this Geometry as a Python buffer.
This is an extension of the WKB specification that includes any SRID
value that are a part of this geometry.
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.. attribute:: GEOSGeometry.wkt
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Returns the Well-Known Text of the geometry (an OGC standard).
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__ https://developers.google.com/kml/documentation/
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Spatial Predicate Methods
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
All of the following spatial predicate methods take another
:class:`GEOSGeometry` instance (``other``) as a parameter, and
return a boolean.
.. method:: GEOSGeometry.contains(other)
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Returns ``True`` if :meth:`other.within(this) <GEOSGeometry.within>` returns
``True``.
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.. method:: GEOSGeometry.covers(other)
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Returns ``True`` if this geometry covers the specified geometry.
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The ``covers`` predicate has the following equivalent definitions:
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* Every point of the other geometry is a point of this geometry.
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* The `DE-9IM`_ Intersection Matrix for the two geometries is
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``T*****FF*``, ``*T****FF*``, ``***T**FF*``, or ``****T*FF*``.
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If either geometry is empty, returns ``False``.
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This predicate is similar to :meth:`GEOSGeometry.contains`, but is more
inclusive (i.e. returns ``True`` for more cases). In particular, unlike
:meth:`~GEOSGeometry.contains` it does not distinguish between points in the
boundary and in the interior of geometries. For most situations,
``covers()`` should be preferred to :meth:`~GEOSGeometry.contains`. As an
added benefit, ``covers()`` is more amenable to optimization and hence
should outperform :meth:`~GEOSGeometry.contains`.
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.. _DE-9IM: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DE-9IM
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.. method:: GEOSGeometry.crosses(other)
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Returns ``True`` if the DE-9IM intersection matrix for the two Geometries
is ``T*T******`` (for a point and a curve,a point and an area or a line
and an area) ``0********`` (for two curves).
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.. method:: GEOSGeometry.disjoint(other)
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Returns ``True`` if the DE-9IM intersection matrix for the two geometries
is ``FF*FF****``.
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.. method:: GEOSGeometry.equals(other)
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Returns ``True`` if the DE-9IM intersection matrix for the two geometries
is ``T*F**FFF*``.
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.. method:: GEOSGeometry.equals_exact(other, tolerance=0)
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Returns true if the two geometries are exactly equal, up to a
specified tolerance. The ``tolerance`` value should be a floating
point number representing the error tolerance in the comparison, e.g.,
``poly1.equals_exact(poly2, 0.001)`` will compare equality to within
one thousandth of a unit.
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.. method:: GEOSGeometry.intersects(other)
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Returns ``True`` if :meth:`GEOSGeometry.disjoint` is ``False``.
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.. method:: GEOSGeometry.overlaps(other)
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Returns true if the DE-9IM intersection matrix for the two geometries
is ``T*T***T**`` (for two points or two surfaces) ``1*T***T**``
(for two curves).
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.. method:: GEOSGeometry.relate_pattern(other, pattern)
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Returns ``True`` if the elements in the DE-9IM intersection matrix
for this geometry and the other matches the given ``pattern`` --
a string of nine characters from the alphabet: {``T``, ``F``, ``*``, ``0``}.
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.. method:: GEOSGeometry.touches(other)
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Returns ``True`` if the DE-9IM intersection matrix for the two geometries
is ``FT*******``, ``F**T*****`` or ``F***T****``.
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.. method:: GEOSGeometry.within(other)
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Returns ``True`` if the DE-9IM intersection matrix for the two geometries
is ``T*F**F***``.
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Topological Methods
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
.. method:: GEOSGeometry.buffer(width, quadsegs=8)
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Returns a :class:`GEOSGeometry` that represents all points whose distance
from this geometry is less than or equal to the given ``width``. The
optional ``quadsegs`` keyword sets the number of segments used to
approximate a quarter circle (defaults is 8).
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.. method:: GEOSGeometry.buffer_with_style(width, quadsegs=8, end_cap_style=1, join_style=1, mitre_limit=5.0)
Same as :meth:`buffer`, but allows customizing the style of the buffer.
* ``end_cap_style`` can be round (``1``), flat (``2``), or square (``3``).
* ``join_style`` can be round (``1``), mitre (``2``), or bevel (``3``).
* Mitre ratio limit (``mitre_limit``) only affects mitered join style.
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.. method:: GEOSGeometry.difference(other)
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Returns a :class:`GEOSGeometry` representing the points making up this
geometry that do not make up other.
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.. method:: GEOSGeometry.interpolate(distance)
.. method:: GEOSGeometry.interpolate_normalized(distance)
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Given a distance (float), returns the point (or closest point) within the
geometry (:class:`LineString` or :class:`MultiLineString`) at that distance.
The normalized version takes the distance as a float between 0 (origin) and
1 (endpoint).
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Reverse of :meth:`GEOSGeometry.project`.
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.. method:: GEOSGeometry.intersection(other)
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Returns a :class:`GEOSGeometry` representing the points shared by this
geometry and other.
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.. method:: GEOSGeometry.project(point)
.. method:: GEOSGeometry.project_normalized(point)
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Returns the distance (float) from the origin of the geometry
(:class:`LineString` or :class:`MultiLineString`) to the point projected on
the geometry (that is to a point of the line the closest to the given
point). The normalized version returns the distance as a float between 0
(origin) and 1 (endpoint).
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Reverse of :meth:`GEOSGeometry.interpolate`.
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.. method:: GEOSGeometry.relate(other)
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Returns the DE-9IM intersection matrix (a string) representing the
topological relationship between this geometry and the other.
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.. method:: GEOSGeometry.simplify(tolerance=0.0, preserve_topology=False)
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Returns a new :class:`GEOSGeometry`, simplified to the specified tolerance
using the Douglas-Peucker algorithm. A higher tolerance value implies
fewer points in the output. If no tolerance is provided, it defaults to 0.
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By default, this function does not preserve topology. For example,
:class:`Polygon` objects can be split, be collapsed into lines, or
disappear. :class:`Polygon` holes can be created or disappear, and lines may
cross. By specifying ``preserve_topology=True``, the result will have the
same dimension and number of components as the input; this is significantly
slower, however.
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.. method:: GEOSGeometry.sym_difference(other)
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Returns a :class:`GEOSGeometry` combining the points in this geometry
not in other, and the points in other not in this geometry.
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.. method:: GEOSGeometry.union(other)
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Returns a :class:`GEOSGeometry` representing all the points in this
geometry and the other.
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Topological Properties
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
.. attribute:: GEOSGeometry.boundary
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Returns the boundary as a newly allocated Geometry object.
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.. attribute:: GEOSGeometry.centroid
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Returns a :class:`Point` object representing the geometric center of
the geometry. The point is not guaranteed to be on the interior
of the geometry.
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.. attribute:: GEOSGeometry.convex_hull
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Returns the smallest :class:`Polygon` that contains all the points in
the geometry.
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.. attribute:: GEOSGeometry.envelope
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Returns a :class:`Polygon` that represents the bounding envelope of
this geometry. Note that it can also return a :class:`Point` if the input
geometry is a point.
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.. attribute:: GEOSGeometry.point_on_surface
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Computes and returns a :class:`Point` guaranteed to be on the interior
of this geometry.
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.. attribute:: GEOSGeometry.unary_union
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Computes the union of all the elements of this geometry.
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The result obeys the following contract:
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* Unioning a set of :class:`LineString`\s has the effect of fully noding and
dissolving the linework.
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* Unioning a set of :class:`Polygon`\s will always return a :class:`Polygon`
or :class:`MultiPolygon` geometry (unlike :meth:`GEOSGeometry.union`,
which may return geometries of lower dimension if a topology collapse
occurs).
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Other Properties & Methods
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
.. attribute:: GEOSGeometry.area
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This property returns the area of the Geometry.
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.. attribute:: GEOSGeometry.extent
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This property returns the extent of this geometry as a 4-tuple,
consisting of ``(xmin, ymin, xmax, ymax)``.
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.. method:: GEOSGeometry.clone()
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This method returns a :class:`GEOSGeometry` that is a clone of the original.
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.. method:: GEOSGeometry.distance(geom)
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Returns the distance between the closest points on this geometry and the
given ``geom`` (another :class:`GEOSGeometry` object).
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.. note::
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GEOS distance calculations are linear -- in other words, GEOS does not
perform a spherical calculation even if the SRID specifies a geographic
coordinate system.
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.. attribute:: GEOSGeometry.length
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Returns the length of this geometry (e.g., 0 for a :class:`Point`,
the length of a :class:`LineString`, or the circumference of
a :class:`Polygon`).
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.. attribute:: GEOSGeometry.prepared
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Returns a GEOS ``PreparedGeometry`` for the contents of this geometry.
``PreparedGeometry`` objects are optimized for the contains, intersects,
covers, crosses, disjoint, overlaps, touches and within operations. Refer to
the :ref:`prepared-geometries` documentation for more information.
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.. attribute:: GEOSGeometry.srs
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Returns a :class:`~django.contrib.gis.gdal.SpatialReference` object
corresponding to the SRID of the geometry or ``None``.
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.. method:: GEOSGeometry.transform(ct, clone=False)
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Transforms the geometry according to the given coordinate transformation
parameter (``ct``), which may be an integer SRID, spatial reference WKT
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string, a PROJ string, a :class:`~django.contrib.gis.gdal.SpatialReference`
object, or a :class:`~django.contrib.gis.gdal.CoordTransform` object. By
default, the geometry is transformed in-place and nothing is returned.
However if the ``clone`` keyword is set, then the geometry is not modified
and a transformed clone of the geometry is returned instead.
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.. note::
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Raises :class:`~django.contrib.gis.geos.GEOSException` if GDAL is not
available or if the geometry's SRID is ``None`` or less than 0. It
doesn't impose any constraints on the geometry's SRID if called with a
:class:`~django.contrib.gis.gdal.CoordTransform` object.
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.. method:: GEOSGeometry.make_valid()
Returns a valid :class:`GEOSGeometry` equivalent, trying not to lose any of
the input vertices. If the geometry is already valid, it is returned
untouched. This is similar to the
:class:`~django.contrib.gis.db.models.functions.MakeValid` database
function. Requires GEOS 3.8.
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.. method:: GEOSGeometry.normalize(clone=False)
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Converts this geometry to canonical form. If the ``clone`` keyword is set,
then the geometry is not modified and a normalized clone of the geometry is
returned instead::
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>>> g = MultiPoint(Point(0, 0), Point(2, 2), Point(1, 1))
>>> print(g)
MULTIPOINT (0 0, 2 2, 1 1)
>>> g.normalize()
>>> print(g)
MULTIPOINT (2 2, 1 1, 0 0)
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``Point``
---------
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.. class:: Point(x=None, y=None, z=None, srid=None)
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``Point`` objects are instantiated using arguments that represent the
component coordinates of the point or with a single sequence coordinates.
For example, the following are equivalent::
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>>> pnt = Point(5, 23)
>>> pnt = Point([5, 23])
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Empty ``Point`` objects may be instantiated by passing no arguments or an
empty sequence. The following are equivalent::
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>>> pnt = Point()
>>> pnt = Point([])
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``LineString``
--------------
.. class:: LineString(*args, **kwargs)
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``LineString`` objects are instantiated using arguments that are either a
sequence of coordinates or :class:`Point` objects. For example, the
following are equivalent::
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>>> ls = LineString((0, 0), (1, 1))
>>> ls = LineString(Point(0, 0), Point(1, 1))
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In addition, ``LineString`` objects may also be created by passing in a
single sequence of coordinate or :class:`Point` objects::
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>>> ls = LineString( ((0, 0), (1, 1)) )
>>> ls = LineString( [Point(0, 0), Point(1, 1)] )
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Empty ``LineString`` objects may be instantiated by passing no arguments
or an empty sequence. The following are equivalent::
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>>> ls = LineString()
>>> ls = LineString([])
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.. attribute:: closed
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Returns whether or not this ``LineString`` is closed.
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``LinearRing``
--------------
.. class:: LinearRing(*args, **kwargs)
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``LinearRing`` objects are constructed in the exact same way as
:class:`LineString` objects, however the coordinates must be *closed*, in
other words, the first coordinates must be the same as the last
coordinates. For example::
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>>> ls = LinearRing((0, 0), (0, 1), (1, 1), (0, 0))
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Notice that ``(0, 0)`` is the first and last coordinate -- if they were not
equal, an error would be raised.
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.. attribute:: is_counterclockwise
Returns whether this ``LinearRing`` is counterclockwise.
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``Polygon``
-----------
.. class:: Polygon(*args, **kwargs)
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``Polygon`` objects may be instantiated by passing in parameters that
represent the rings of the polygon. The parameters must either be
:class:`LinearRing` instances, or a sequence that may be used to construct a
:class:`LinearRing`::
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>>> ext_coords = ((0, 0), (0, 1), (1, 1), (1, 0), (0, 0))
>>> int_coords = ((0.4, 0.4), (0.4, 0.6), (0.6, 0.6), (0.6, 0.4), (0.4, 0.4))
>>> poly = Polygon(ext_coords, int_coords)
>>> poly = Polygon(LinearRing(ext_coords), LinearRing(int_coords))
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.. classmethod:: from_bbox(bbox)
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Returns a polygon object from the given bounding-box, a 4-tuple
comprising ``(xmin, ymin, xmax, ymax)``.
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.. attribute:: num_interior_rings
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Returns the number of interior rings in this geometry.
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.. admonition:: Comparing Polygons
Note that it is possible to compare ``Polygon`` objects directly with ``<``
or ``>``, but as the comparison is made through Polygon's
:class:`LineString`, it does not mean much (but is consistent and quick).
You can always force the comparison with the :attr:`~GEOSGeometry.area`
property::
>>> if poly_1.area > poly_2.area:
>>> pass
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.. _geos-geometry-collections:
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Geometry Collections
====================
``MultiPoint``
--------------
.. class:: MultiPoint(*args, **kwargs)
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``MultiPoint`` objects may be instantiated by passing in :class:`Point`
objects as arguments, or a single sequence of :class:`Point` objects::
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>>> mp = MultiPoint(Point(0, 0), Point(1, 1))
>>> mp = MultiPoint( (Point(0, 0), Point(1, 1)) )
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``MultiLineString``
-------------------
.. class:: MultiLineString(*args, **kwargs)
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``MultiLineString`` objects may be instantiated by passing in
:class:`LineString` objects as arguments, or a single sequence of
:class:`LineString` objects::
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>>> ls1 = LineString((0, 0), (1, 1))
>>> ls2 = LineString((2, 2), (3, 3))
>>> mls = MultiLineString(ls1, ls2)
>>> mls = MultiLineString([ls1, ls2])
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.. attribute:: merged
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Returns a :class:`LineString` representing the line merge of
all the components in this ``MultiLineString``.
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.. attribute:: closed
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Returns ``True`` if and only if all elements are closed.
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``MultiPolygon``
----------------
.. class:: MultiPolygon(*args, **kwargs)
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``MultiPolygon`` objects may be instantiated by passing :class:`Polygon`
objects as arguments, or a single sequence of :class:`Polygon` objects::
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>>> p1 = Polygon( ((0, 0), (0, 1), (1, 1), (0, 0)) )
>>> p2 = Polygon( ((1, 1), (1, 2), (2, 2), (1, 1)) )
>>> mp = MultiPolygon(p1, p2)
>>> mp = MultiPolygon([p1, p2])
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``GeometryCollection``
----------------------
.. class:: GeometryCollection(*args, **kwargs)
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``GeometryCollection`` objects may be instantiated by passing in other
:class:`GEOSGeometry` as arguments, or a single sequence of
:class:`GEOSGeometry` objects::
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>>> poly = Polygon( ((0, 0), (0, 1), (1, 1), (0, 0)) )
>>> gc = GeometryCollection(Point(0, 0), MultiPoint(Point(0, 0), Point(1, 1)), poly)
>>> gc = GeometryCollection((Point(0, 0), MultiPoint(Point(0, 0), Point(1, 1)), poly))
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.. _prepared-geometries:
Prepared Geometries
===================
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In order to obtain a prepared geometry, access the
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:attr:`GEOSGeometry.prepared` property. Once you have a
``PreparedGeometry`` instance its spatial predicate methods, listed below,
may be used with other ``GEOSGeometry`` objects. An operation with a prepared
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geometry can be orders of magnitude faster -- the more complex the geometry
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that is prepared, the larger the speedup in the operation. For more information,
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please consult the `GEOS wiki page on prepared geometries <https://trac.osgeo.org/geos/wiki/PreparedGeometry>`_.
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For example::
>>> from django.contrib.gis.geos import Point, Polygon
>>> poly = Polygon.from_bbox((0, 0, 5, 5))
>>> prep_poly = poly.prepared
>>> prep_poly.contains(Point(2.5, 2.5))
True
``PreparedGeometry``
--------------------
.. class:: PreparedGeometry
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All methods on ``PreparedGeometry`` take an ``other`` argument, which
must be a :class:`GEOSGeometry` instance.
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.. method:: contains(other)
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.. method:: contains_properly(other)
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.. method:: covers(other)
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.. method:: crosses(other)
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.. method:: disjoint(other)
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.. method:: intersects(other)
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.. method:: overlaps(other)
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.. method:: touches(other)
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.. method:: within(other)
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Geometry Factories
==================
.. function:: fromfile(file_h)
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:param file_h: input file that contains spatial data
:type file_h: a Python ``file`` object or a string path to the file
:rtype: a :class:`GEOSGeometry` corresponding to the spatial data in the file
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Example::
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>>> from django.contrib.gis.geos import fromfile
>>> g = fromfile('/home/bob/geom.wkt')
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.. function:: fromstr(string, srid=None)
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:param string: string that contains spatial data
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:type string: str
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:param srid: spatial reference identifier
:type srid: int
:rtype: a :class:`GEOSGeometry` corresponding to the spatial data in the string
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``fromstr(string, srid)`` is equivalent to
:class:`GEOSGeometry(string, srid) <GEOSGeometry>`.
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Example::
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>>> from django.contrib.gis.geos import fromstr
>>> pnt = fromstr('POINT(-90.5 29.5)', srid=4326)
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I/O Objects
===========
Reader Objects
--------------
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The reader I/O classes return a :class:`GEOSGeometry` instance from the WKB
and/or WKT input given to their ``read(geom)`` method.
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.. class:: WKBReader
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Example::
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>>> from django.contrib.gis.geos import WKBReader
>>> wkb_r = WKBReader()
>>> wkb_r.read('0101000000000000000000F03F000000000000F03F')
<Point object at 0x103a88910>
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.. class:: WKTReader
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Example::
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>>> from django.contrib.gis.geos import WKTReader
>>> wkt_r = WKTReader()
>>> wkt_r.read('POINT(1 1)')
<Point object at 0x103a88b50>
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Writer Objects
--------------
All writer objects have a ``write(geom)`` method that returns either the
WKB or WKT of the given geometry. In addition, :class:`WKBWriter` objects
also have properties that may be used to change the byte order, and or
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include the SRID value (in other words, EWKB).
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.. class:: WKBWriter(dim=2)
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``WKBWriter`` provides the most control over its output. By default it
returns OGC-compliant WKB when its ``write`` method is called. However,
it has properties that allow for the creation of EWKB, a superset of the
WKB standard that includes additional information. See the
:attr:`WKBWriter.outdim` documentation for more details about the ``dim``
argument.
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.. method:: WKBWriter.write(geom)
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Returns the WKB of the given geometry as a Python ``buffer`` object.
Example::
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>>> from django.contrib.gis.geos import Point, WKBWriter
>>> pnt = Point(1, 1)
>>> wkb_w = WKBWriter()
>>> wkb_w.write(pnt)
<read-only buffer for 0x103a898f0, size -1, offset 0 at 0x103a89930>
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.. method:: WKBWriter.write_hex(geom)
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Returns WKB of the geometry in hexadecimal. Example::
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>>> from django.contrib.gis.geos import Point, WKBWriter
>>> pnt = Point(1, 1)
>>> wkb_w = WKBWriter()
>>> wkb_w.write_hex(pnt)
'0101000000000000000000F03F000000000000F03F'
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.. attribute:: WKBWriter.byteorder
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This property may be set to change the byte-order of the geometry
representation.
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=============== =================================================
Byteorder Value Description
=============== =================================================
0 Big Endian (e.g., compatible with RISC systems)
1 Little Endian (e.g., compatible with x86 systems)
=============== =================================================
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Example::
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>>> from django.contrib.gis.geos import Point, WKBWriter
>>> wkb_w = WKBWriter()
>>> pnt = Point(1, 1)
>>> wkb_w.write_hex(pnt)
'0101000000000000000000F03F000000000000F03F'
>>> wkb_w.byteorder = 0
'00000000013FF00000000000003FF0000000000000'
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.. attribute:: WKBWriter.outdim
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This property may be set to change the output dimension of the geometry
representation. In other words, if you have a 3D geometry then set to 3
so that the Z value is included in the WKB.
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============ ===========================
Outdim Value Description
============ ===========================
2 The default, output 2D WKB.
3 Output 3D WKB.
============ ===========================
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Example::
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>>> from django.contrib.gis.geos import Point, WKBWriter
>>> wkb_w = WKBWriter()
>>> wkb_w.outdim
2
>>> pnt = Point(1, 1, 1)
>>> wkb_w.write_hex(pnt) # By default, no Z value included:
'0101000000000000000000F03F000000000000F03F'
>>> wkb_w.outdim = 3 # Tell writer to include Z values
>>> wkb_w.write_hex(pnt)
'0101000080000000000000F03F000000000000F03F000000000000F03F'
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.. attribute:: WKBWriter.srid
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Set this property with a boolean to indicate whether the SRID of the
geometry should be included with the WKB representation. Example::
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>>> from django.contrib.gis.geos import Point, WKBWriter
>>> wkb_w = WKBWriter()
>>> pnt = Point(1, 1, srid=4326)
>>> wkb_w.write_hex(pnt) # By default, no SRID included:
'0101000000000000000000F03F000000000000F03F'
>>> wkb_w.srid = True # Tell writer to include SRID
>>> wkb_w.write_hex(pnt)
'0101000020E6100000000000000000F03F000000000000F03F'
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.. class:: WKTWriter(dim=2, trim=False, precision=None)
This class allows outputting the WKT representation of a geometry. See the
:attr:`WKBWriter.outdim`, :attr:`trim`, and :attr:`precision` attributes for
details about the constructor arguments.
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.. method:: WKTWriter.write(geom)
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Returns the WKT of the given geometry. Example::
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>>> from django.contrib.gis.geos import Point, WKTWriter
>>> pnt = Point(1, 1)
>>> wkt_w = WKTWriter()
>>> wkt_w.write(pnt)
'POINT (1.0000000000000000 1.0000000000000000)'
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.. attribute:: WKTWriter.outdim
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See :attr:`WKBWriter.outdim`.
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.. attribute:: WKTWriter.trim
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This property is used to enable or disable trimming of
unnecessary decimals.
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>>> from django.contrib.gis.geos import Point, WKTWriter
>>> pnt = Point(1, 1)
>>> wkt_w = WKTWriter()
>>> wkt_w.trim
False
>>> wkt_w.write(pnt)
'POINT (1.0000000000000000 1.0000000000000000)'
>>> wkt_w.trim = True
>>> wkt_w.write(pnt)
'POINT (1 1)'
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.. attribute:: WKTWriter.precision
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This property controls the rounding precision of coordinates;
if set to ``None`` rounding is disabled.
>>> from django.contrib.gis.geos import Point, WKTWriter
>>> pnt = Point(1.44, 1.66)
>>> wkt_w = WKTWriter()
>>> print(wkt_w.precision)
None
>>> wkt_w.write(pnt)
'POINT (1.4399999999999999 1.6599999999999999)'
>>> wkt_w.precision = 0
>>> wkt_w.write(pnt)
'POINT (1 2)'
>>> wkt_w.precision = 1
>>> wkt_w.write(pnt)
'POINT (1.4 1.7)'
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.. rubric:: Footnotes
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.. [#fnogc] *See* `PostGIS EWKB, EWKT and Canonical Forms <https://postgis.net/docs/using_postgis_dbmanagement.html#EWKB_EWKT>`_, PostGIS documentation at Ch. 4.1.2.
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Settings
========
.. setting:: GEOS_LIBRARY_PATH
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``GEOS_LIBRARY_PATH``
---------------------
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A string specifying the location of the GEOS C library. Typically,
this setting is only used if the GEOS C library is in a non-standard
location (e.g., ``/home/bob/lib/libgeos_c.so``).
.. note::
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The setting must be the *full* path to the **C** shared library; in
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other words you want to use ``libgeos_c.so``, not ``libgeos.so``.
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Exceptions
==========
.. exception:: GEOSException
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The base GEOS exception, indicates a GEOS-related error.