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polygonizer <- function(x, outshape=NULL, gdalformat = 'ESRI Shapefile', | |
pypath=NULL, readpoly=TRUE, quietish=TRUE) { | |
# x: an R Raster layer, or the file path to a raster file recognised by GDAL | |
# outshape: the path to the output shapefile (if NULL, a temporary file will be created) | |
# gdalformat: the desired OGR vector format | |
# pypath: the path to gdal_polygonize.py (if NULL, an attempt will be made to determine the location | |
# readpoly: should the polygon shapefile be read back into R, and returned by this function? (logical) | |
# quietish: should (some) messages be suppressed? (logical) | |
if (isTRUE(readpoly)) require(rgdal) | |
if (is.null(pypath)) { |
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##' Rasterize \code{Spatial*} objects using gdal_rasterize. | |
##' | |
##' For a 1000-by-1000 raster, \code{gRasterize} is more than 6 times | |
##' faster than \code{raster::rasterize}. For a 2000-by-2000 raster, | |
##' it is almost 12 times faster (6 seconds vs. 70 seconds on my | |
##' Windows laptop). | |
##' | |
##' I've modeled \code{gRasterize} arguments and behavior on that of | |
##' \code{\link[raster]{rasterize}}. Like\code{rasterize},it takes a | |
##' \code{filename=} argument which defaults to \code{""} in which |