[postgis-devel] st_dwithin, st_within, st_dcompletlywithin

Paragon Corporation lr at pcorp.us
Wed Jul 8 15:39:26 PDT 2009


Paul,

I'm sorry.  I see it now :(

http://postgis.refractions.net/documentation/manual-svn/ST_HausdorffDistance
.html

Okay I guess its because it didn't have the big flashing Availability 1.5  I
missed it.

I apologize for my griping.  I guess I should write up some documentation on
how to document :) 

-----Original Message-----
From: postgis-devel-bounces at postgis.refractions.net
[mailto:postgis-devel-bounces at postgis.refractions.net] On Behalf Of Paul
Ramsey
Sent: Wednesday, July 08, 2009 6:31 PM
To: PostGIS Development Discussion
Subject: Re: [postgis-devel] st_dwithin, st_within, st_dcompletlywithin

The patch included a docs patch.

On Wed, Jul 8, 2009 at 3:22 PM, Paragon Corporation<lr at pcorp.us> wrote:
> Oh that's what that is.  Hmm and I think its already ported to 
> PostGIS, though would be interesting to compare the speeds and 
> results.  Since the current one in trunk is a GEOS call and Nicklas' would
be a native PostGIS.
>
> http://trac.osgeo.org/postgis/ticket/209
>
> Paul are you hmm planning add this to the manual -- I see you closed 
> it?  I don't recall seeing it in the 1.5 docs or were we waiting for 
> GEOS to be patched first?
>
> Thanks,
> Regina
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: postgis-devel-bounces at postgis.refractions.net
> [mailto:postgis-devel-bounces at postgis.refractions.net] On Behalf Of 
> Martin Davis
> Sent: Wednesday, July 08, 2009 6:14 PM
> To: PostGIS Development Discussion
> Subject: Re: [postgis-devel] st_dwithin, st_within, 
> st_dcompletlywithin
>
> That distance metric is known as the Hausdorff Distance.  It's 
> implemented in JTS, and probably in GEOS as well.
>
> nicklas.aven at jordogskog.no wrote:
>>
>>
>> A function that gives the answer to for example:
>> "How far away from France can you get in Belgia"
>> To answer that we have to store compare the shortest distance to
>> geometry2 from each vertex in geometry1 and finaly find wich vertex 
>> in
>> geometry1 that has the highest "mindistance" to geometry2.
>> Hope the idee is possible to understand. Is it of any use?
>
> --
> Martin Davis
> Senior Technical Architect
> Refractions Research, Inc.
> (250) 383-3022
>
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