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LucasBrown (talk | contribs) Changing short description from "Encoding scheme developed by the US Bureau of the Census for efficiently storing geographical data" to "Encoding scheme for storing geographical data" |
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{{Short description|Encoding scheme for storing geographical data}}
'''Dual Independent Map Encoding''' ('''DIME''') is an [[encoding]] scheme developed by the [[United States Census Bureau|US Bureau of the Census]] for efficiently storing [[geography|geographical]] data. The committee behind the case study that eventually resulted in DIME was established in [[1965]], although the term ''DIME'' itself was first coined by George Farnsworth in August of [[1967]]. The [[file format]] developed for storing the DIME-encoded data was known as [[Geographic Base Files]] (GBF). The Census Bureau replaced the data format with [[Topologically Integrated Geocoding and Referencing]] (TIGER) in [[1990]].▼
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{{Use dmy dates|date=August 2025}}
▲'''Dual Independent Map Encoding''' ('''DIME''') is an [[code|encoding]] scheme developed by the [[United States Census Bureau|US Bureau of the Census]] for efficiently storing [[geography|geographical]] data. The committee behind the case study that eventually resulted in DIME was established in
== See also ==
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== External links ==
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20120722014135/http://www.
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[[Category:GIS file formats]]
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