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<P><FONT SIZE=2>Martin,<BR>
<BR>
Just loaded that plugin - unless I put it in the wrong folder. - it just seemed to create an option called aggregation-options under plugins which seems to require two layers and does union, count between the 2 layers. So nope doesn't sound like Cascaded union and didn't seem to change anything with the union function.<BR>
<BR>
If OpenJump union function isn't doing cascaded union, then what is that count down thing for. Doing the 30,000 it displays something like this<BR>
<BR>
Computing Union<BR>
1/8 (32,278)<BR>
2/8 (8070)<BR>
3/8 ... /2018<BR>
86/505<BR>
1/127<BR>
6/8 (2/32)<BR>
8/8 (2/3)<BR>
3/3 (8/8)<BR>
<BR>
I also thought its speed of unioning of Mass towns was pretty impressive.<BR>
<BR>
Thanks,<BR>
Regina<BR>
-----Original Message-----<BR>
From: postgis-devel-bounces@postgis.refractions.net on behalf of Obe, Regina<BR>
Sent: Wed 8/13/2008 5:40 PM<BR>
To: PostGIS Development Discussion<BR>
Subject: RE: [postgis-devel] More Cascade Union Adventures<BR>
<BR>
I assumed it was since it was counting down like in some sort of upside down pyramid<BR>
<BR>
500<BR>
255<BR>
10<BR>
:<BR>
:<BR>
<BR>
So it seemed like it was doing some sort of division of the geometries. I'll give the below<BR>
a try. Maybe I misunderstood what that counting was for.<BR>
<BR>
<BR>
<BR>
-----Original Message-----<BR>
From: postgis-devel-bounces@postgis.refractions.net on behalf of Martin Davis<BR>
Sent: Wed 8/13/2008 4:49 PM<BR>
To: PostGIS Development Discussion<BR>
Subject: Re: [postgis-devel] More Cascade Union Adventures<BR>
<BR>
Yep, I don't Hausdorff distance is available in very many places. Pity,<BR>
because it is a very useful metric for comparing geometry. The full<BR>
Hausdorff distance is quite challenging to implement, but I have made a<BR>
VertexHausdorffDistance approximation which is just as useful in most<BR>
situations, and is a lot simpler to implement (and faster to run).<BR>
<BR>
By the way, are you sure that OpenJUMP is using CascadedUnion? AFAIK it<BR>
didn't in the past... Michael Michaud has just released (today!) an<BR>
extension which I think does use CascadedUnion - so you might want to<BR>
try that.<BR>
<BR>
<A HREF="http://geo.michaelm.free.fr/OpenJUMP/resources/aggregation-0.1.jar">http://geo.michaelm.free.fr/OpenJUMP/resources/aggregation-0.1.jar</A><BR>
<BR>
When I did the original testing with the 30K polygon dataset that you're<BR>
using, I was getting times of around 20 sec using CascadedUnion...<BR>
<BR>
<BR>
<BR>
Obe, Regina wrote:<BR>
><BR>
> Martin,<BR>
> Pardon my ignorance.<BR>
><BR>
> I don't see a Hausdorff distance in OpenJump or maybe it goes by a<BR>
> more verbose name and the descriptions I read about Hausdorff<BR>
> distances are greek to me.<BR>
><BR>
> Well the Mass town test seems to pass my trivial test exercises. It<BR>
> looks like massachusetts with no visually apparent gaps, has the same<BR>
> number points in all cases, similar area<BR>
><BR>
> both num points - 476026<BR>
> both num geometries - 694<BR>
> area (ST_CascadeUnion - 2.094208570266725E10)<BR>
> area (JTS - 2.0942085702666965E10)<BR>
><BR>
><BR>
> -----Original Message-----<BR>
> From: postgis-devel-bounces@postgis.refractions.net on behalf of<BR>
> Martin Davis<BR>
> Sent: Wed 8/13/2008 11:51 AM<BR>
> To: PostGIS Development Discussion<BR>
> Subject: Re: [postgis-devel] More Cascade Union Adventures<BR>
><BR>
> I wouldn't expect to have the results be exactly equal - the union code<BR>
> is likely to be input-order dependent.<BR>
><BR>
> And the difference in areas doesn't seem surprising either - it's way<BR>
> down in the small decimal places, which would occur even with slight<BR>
> differences in the geometry.<BR>
><BR>
> A more revealing test would be to compute the Hausdorff distance between<BR>
> the union boundaries - that would show if they differed by very much,<BR>
> and where. PostGIS doesn't have this - I can't remember whether<BR>
> OpenJUMP does or not. JEQL has this operation, too.<BR>
><BR>
> Obe, Regina wrote:<BR>
> > Now testing all including JTS 1.9.0 (OpenJump) on a Win XP runing<BR>
> > PostgreSQL 8.3.1, PostGIS 1.3.3, Geos 3.0.0. It appears using array<BR>
> > trumps all, Cascade aggregate union is a vast improvement over ST_Union<BR>
> > (ST_Union I didn't bother testing of course because it owuld never<BR>
> > finish on this test), but evidentally the array accum calls give a major<BR>
> > penalty.<BR>
> ><BR>
> > I found some things I found a bit possibly disturbing. Maybe its just<BR>
> > the nature of unioning in different orders. I compared all 3 outputs<BR>
> > and none of them are binary equal or even ST_Equals for that matter.<BR>
> ><BR>
> > However all 3 give same basic stats using OpenJump - e.g<BR>
> > All result in = 32972 pts <BR>
> > components = 10<BR>
> > lengths and areas are off by a bit<BR>
> > length = agg cascade union = 17.262684721407624, k nested union =<BR>
> > 17.262684721407688,<BR>
> > jts = 17.262684721406348<BR>
> ><BR>
> > Should I be bothered by any of these or are they just rounding errors?<BR>
> ><BR>
> > --Other odd thing is that the array approach is not as good as it was on<BR>
> > my other machine bu the aggregate union performs better. I'll just<BR>
> > chuck this off to different postgresql version, and memory settings.<BR>
> ><BR>
> > Thanks,<BR>
> > Regina<BR>
> ><BR>
> ><BR>
> > -- 209,563 | 198,391 ms - SELECT 198391/1000.00/60 = 3.31 minutes<BR>
> ><BR>
> > SELECT ST_CascadeUnion(the_geom)<BR>
> > FROM (SELECT the_geom FROM sample_poly) As foo;<BR>
> ><BR>
> > -- 48,594 ms | 47,688 ms = 48 secs<BR>
> > SELECT st_unitecascade_garray_sort(ARRAY(SELECT the_geom FROM<BR>
> > sample_poly));<BR>
> ><BR>
> > -- 74,515 ms | 74,922 ms = SELECT 74515/1000.00/60 = 1.24 minutes<BR>
> > SELECT ST_Union(the_geom) AS the_geom, 'nested union'<BR>
> > FROM (<BR>
> > SELECT min(id) AS id, ST_Union(the_geom) AS the_geom<BR>
> > FROM (<BR>
> > SELECT min(id) AS id, ST_Union(the_geom) AS the_geom<BR>
> > FROM (<BR>
> > SELECT min(id) AS id, ST_Union(the_geom) AS the_geom<BR>
> > FROM (<BR>
> > SELECT min(id) AS id, ST_Union(the_geom) AS the_geom<BR>
> > FROM (SELECT the_geom, id FROM sample_poly) As foo<BR>
> > GROUP BY round(id/10)<BR>
> > ORDER BY id) AS tmp1<BR>
> > GROUP BY round(id/100)<BR>
> > ORDER BY id) AS tmp2<BR>
> > GROUP BY round(id/1000)<BR>
> > ORDER BY id) AS tmp3<BR>
> > GROUP BY round(id/10000)<BR>
> > ORDER BY id) AS tmp4<BR>
> > GROUP BY round(id/100000);<BR>
> ><BR>
> ><BR>
> > -- Open Jump JTS 1.9.0 Win XP<BR>
> > --After loading running union across the whole set<BR>
> > --1.14 minutes<BR>
> > --Loading database query<BR>
> > SELECT ST_AsBinary(the_geom)<BR>
> > FROM sample_poly;<BR>
> ><BR>
> > -----------------------------------------<BR>
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> > _______________________________________________<BR>
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> ><BR>
> > <BR>
><BR>
> --<BR>
> Martin Davis<BR>
> Senior Technical Architect<BR>
> Refractions Research, Inc.<BR>
> (250) 383-3022<BR>
><BR>
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><BR>
><BR>
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<BR>
--<BR>
Martin Davis<BR>
Senior Technical Architect<BR>
Refractions Research, Inc.<BR>
(250) 383-3022<BR>
<BR>
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