<div dir="ltr"><div>Hello list.<br><br>My name is Rui Cavaco, a supporter for OSGeo
Portugal, and I see the need for some future major changes in desktop
GIS user interfaces in order to facilitate complex features editing and
querying. <br><br>GML and INSPIRE are about complex features but so are
fiber optic networks. Complex features could be also very productive in
simpler cases like the management of city road signs and indications and
other municipality themes. <br>In order to properly support complex
features I think we need to go further than the simple and old
three-part GUI comprising TOC, map and attribute table. For example,
attribute and form views must have "drill down" capabilities. As for the
TOC, subdivding layers, as the GMLAS (<a href="https://github.com/BRGM/gml_application_schema_toolbox">https://github.com/BRGM/gml_application_schema_toolbox</a>) extension does, is not enough.
Something like tree-view windows showing object hierarchies and complex
objects' internal contents must exist. This is the exact same as
schematics / synoptic views provided by specialized "closed source" GIS
tools provided for telecom and other utilities management. Also I think
the TOC should be very interactive and adaptive, in order to make
possible to expose the intrincacies of sublayers without cluttering the
whole layer tree with details uneeded for the current user context.<br><br>Me
and others discussing this subject in OSGeo-PT chat, we are convinced
that without a largely available and intuitive editing support for
complex features INSPIRE will soon be (some say already is) dead,
despite all the the EU legal obligations.<br><br>I suppose this is not a
job for a single developer or a small team. I imagine this might
require some profound changes in QGIS. I don't think that all these GUI
changes mentioned could be "compacted" in just an extension.<br><br>Funding
for this effort could be raised from INSPIRE-interested EU
organizations and member state government agencies. Also telecom
companies and other utilities managers can be interested. Dedicated
"closed source" GIS solutions for utilities are so absurdly expensive
that this can open an opportunity window for Open Source based
solutions.<br><br>I would like to join efforts with others sharing this vision in order to help make it happen in future releases of QGIS.<br><br></div>Rui Cavaco<br></div>