Wikipedia:Graphics Lab/Resources/QGIS/Get ready


QGis (full name: Quantum GIS) is a GPL license, cross-platform (Windows, Linux, Mac), and rather friendly cartographic software application. It is a Geographic Information System (GIS) program you can use to create, view, and analyze maps. In a nutshell, a GIS associates with each geographic coordinate (dot) on Earth a specific value from some survey. The best example of this is altitude: a topographic map, like the ones you see on the right, can be created from a GIS file in which each pixel also carries information about its altitude. Reversely, objects can be placed on a map and associated with specific coordinates; this is commonly used for features such as roads, lakes, state or province borders, urban areas, etc. As a result, these features are georeferenced on separate layers and their shape and ___location match their actual appearance on the surface of the Earth.
This approach radically changes the process of making maps. Formerly, the mapmaker or graphist had to personally draw each layer of a map, then combine them into an image. The work's reliability and precision were limited by the user's resources and knowledge. Now, the mapmaker can collect precise GIS data from reliable sources and simply load them into QGis. Objects will be automatically placed in their exact coordinates, allowing the user to apply custom styles and output an accurate basemap, which may be the end product, or a background to host additional custom layers (icons, labels, a legend, etc.). For Wikipedia, the advantages of GIS maps are precision, reliability, consistency, and an upgrade in visual elegance of the final images. Using QGis will be mainly helpful in generating topographic backgrounds (png, svg), shaded reliefs (png), and administrative regions or borders (png, svg), and applying various styles to them.
While GRASS GIS still seems to be the most common GIS software, it has a primarily command-line interface and can be difficult to learn and operate. Therefore, beginners will prefer QGis, which is quite powerful and user-friendly. It integrates GRASS GIS and GDAL data, provides an easier to use interface than GRASS GIS, and gives the user an opportunity to improve his or her GIS mapmaking skills.
This tutorial series will teach you how to use QGis to generate reliable maps for Wikipedia. Accordingly, it is Wikipedia centered and focuses on outputting general public encyclopedic maps while following the Wikipedia map conventions.
The tools
- QGis
QGis is the rather friendly GIS mapmaking software we are willing to use.
- Install : Windows (fr; Install video)
- Install : Linux (fr). Ubuntu, in Konsole:
sudo apt-get install add-apt-repository sudo add-apt-repository ppa:ubuntugis/ubuntugis-unstable sudo apt-get update sudo apt-get install qgis
- Files: Allow to open many GIS files, for us mainly .tiff raster topographic GIS files, and .shp (shapefiles) vector GIS files.
- Forum : http://forum.qgis.org (very active, answer in ~ 6 hours)
- Empty folders to create
- /Desktop/ (or other suitable place)
- /QGis/
- /Data ETOPO1
- /Data_SRTM3 v.2
- /Shaded
- /Data_Naturalearth.com
- /Data_...
- /My_tutorials
- /My_mapcolors
- /My_projects
- /My_examples
- /My_outputs
- /[other as you need it !]
- /QGis/
The /Data_[sourcename] folders are need since each data source may have different copyrights status, coverage quality, subjects (topography ? politic ?), and is usually made of dozens of files/tiles, so create separate data folders make sense. /My_tutorials, /My_mapcolors, /My_projects, /My_examples, /My_outputs will likely be useful too. /My_tutorial will host interesting tutorials (webpages, pdf, etc) you will find, you may also edit them, and take your own notes. /My_mapcolors will host the color styles you will find online or create and save there. /My_projects will host your QGis projects. /My_examples will be a collection of maps you saw on wikipedia, love, and want to study (copy engineering). /My_outputs will host the some dozen of intermediate outputs you will generate and frequently look at to improve yourself through your learning process.
- First color style
Copy-paste the following color code in an empty text document, then save in ./QGis/My_mapcolors/ as Wikicarto_2.0.qml. We will frequently use it later.
: Colormap "Wikicarto_2.0.qml"
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<!DOCTYPE qgis PUBLIC 'http://mrcc.com/qgis.dtd' 'SYSTEM'> <qgis version="1.6.0-Copiapo" minimumScale="1" maximumScale="1e+08" hasScaleBasedVisibilityFlag="0"> <transparencyLevelInt>255</transparencyLevelInt> <rasterproperties> <mDrawingStyle>SingleBandPseudoColor</mDrawingStyle> <mColorShadingAlgorithm>ColorRampShader</mColorShadingAlgorithm> <mInvertColor boolean="false"/> <mRedBandName>Not Set</mRedBandName> <mGreenBandName>Not Set</mGreenBandName> <mBlueBandName>Not Set</mBlueBandName> <mGrayBandName>Bande 1</mGrayBandName> <mStandardDeviations>0</mStandardDeviations> <mUserDefinedRGBMinimumMaximum boolean="false"/> <mRGBMinimumMaximumEstimated boolean="true"/> <mUserDefinedGrayMinimumMaximum boolean="false"/> <mGrayMinimumMaximumEstimated boolean="true"/> <mContrastEnhancementAlgorithm>StretchToMinimumMaximum</mContrastEnhancementAlgorithm> <contrastEnhancementMinMaxValues> <minMaxEntry> <min>-10458</min> <max>6741</max> </minMaxEntry> </contrastEnhancementMinMaxValues> <mNoDataValue mValidNoDataValue="false">-9999.000000</mNoDataValue> <customColorRamp> <colorRampType>DISCRETE</colorRampType> <colorRampEntry red="245" value="8000.000000" green="244" blue="242" label="altitude 19 neiges eternelles"/> <colorRampEntry red="224" value="7000.000000" green="222" blue="216" label="altitude 18 neiges eternelles"/> <colorRampEntry red="202" value="6000.000000" green="195" blue="184" label="altitude 17 neiges eternelles"/> <colorRampEntry red="186" value="5000.000000" green="174" blue="154" label="altitude 16 neiges eternelles"/> <colorRampEntry red="172" value="4000.000000" green="154" blue="124" label="altitude 15 neiges eternelles"/> <colorRampEntry red="170" value="3000.000000" green="135" blue="83" label="altitude 14"/> <colorRampEntry red="185" value="2000.000000" green="152" blue="90" label="altitude 13"/> <colorRampEntry red="195" value="1500.000000" green="167" blue="107" label="altitude 12"/> <colorRampEntry red="202" value="1000.000000" green="185" blue="130" label="altitude 11"/> <colorRampEntry red="211" value="800.000000" green="202" blue="157" label="altitude 10"/> <colorRampEntry red="222" value="600.000000" green="214" blue="163" label="altitude 9"/> <colorRampEntry red="232" value="400.000000" green="225" blue="182" label="altitude 8"/> <colorRampEntry red="239" value="300.000000" green="235" blue="192" label="altitude 7"/> <colorRampEntry red="225" value="200.000000" green="228" blue="181" label="altitude 6"/> <colorRampEntry red="209" value="150.000000" green="215" blue="171" label="altitude 5"/> <colorRampEntry red="189" value="100.000000" green="204" blue="150" label="altitude 4"/> <colorRampEntry red="168" value="50.000000" green="198" blue="143" label="altitude 3"/> <colorRampEntry red="148" value="20.000000" green="191" blue="139" label="altitude 2"/> <colorRampEntry red="172" value="1.000000" green="208" blue="165" label="altitude 1"/> <!-- <colorRampEntry red="167" value="0.000000" green="223" blue="210" label="depression"/> --> <colorRampEntry red="216" value="0.000000" green="242" blue="254" label="altitude -1"/> <colorRampEntry red="198" value="-20.000000" green="236" blue="255" label="altitude -2"/> <colorRampEntry red="185" value="-50.000000" green="227" blue="255" label="altitude -3"/> <colorRampEntry red="172" value="-100.000000" green="219" blue="251" label="altitude -4"/> <colorRampEntry red="161" value="-250.000000" green="210" blue="247" label="altitude -5"/> <colorRampEntry red="150" value="-500.000000" green="201" blue="240" label="altitude -6"/> <colorRampEntry red="141" value="-750.000000" green="193" blue="234" label="altitude -7"/> <colorRampEntry red="132" value="-1000.000000" green="185" blue="227" label="altitude -8"/> <colorRampEntry red="121" value="-2000.000000" green="178" blue="222" label="altitude -9"/> <colorRampEntry red="113" value="-4000.000000" green="171" blue="216" label="altitude -10"/> </customColorRamp> </rasterproperties> </qgis> |
GIS data
- Topography/bathymetry
- ETOPO1 (topography/bathymetry): One file for all the Earth (landmass and waters). Low quality (1px = 1000x1000m ; all earth unzipped: 1.1Go), but convenient for large maps.
http://www.ngdc.noaa.gov/mgg/global/global.html - (not working) GLOBE (topography): 16 files/tiles to cover the all the Earth (landmass). Medium quality (landmass unzipped = 1.8Go).
http://www.ngdc.noaa.gov/mgg/topo/gltiles.html - SRTM/SWBD (topography): About 20.000 files/tiles to cover the all Earth (landmass). High quality (1px = 90x90m ; all landmass unzipped = + 60Go !), slow to manage, for confirmed map makers.
http://www2.jpl.nasa.gov/srtm/ - SRTM3 v2
- SRTM3 v4 (topography): About 1.000 files/tiles to cover the all Earth (landmass). High quality (1px = 90x90m ; all landmass unzipped = + 30Go !), slow to manage, for confirmed map makers.
http://srtm.csi.cgiar.org/SELECTION/inputCoord.asp
- Other GIS data
- NaturalEarthData,com (Public Domain) : collection of GIS data, with:
- A. Cultural (human or political including: Countries polygons ; Sub-countries polygons ; Borders lines ; urban areas ) ;
- B. Physical (Coastlines, rivers, lakes, bathymetry ; geographic lines) ;
- C. Raster background (natural earth II, topographic ; ocean bottom ; shaded relief grey)
- http://www.naturalearthdata.com/features/
- Which data for YOU
New users will prefer to simply download ETOPO1 for topography (precision: 1px = 1km x 1km). Don't use ETOPO2 which is actually an oldest version (1px = 2km x 2km).
Confirmed mapmakers will use the SRTM/SWBD for its better quality. The process is more complex :
- Know the coordinates of the area they want to map
- Find online these associated GIS files (also called tiles). Files have names such as "N22E112.hgt.zip", standing for 22⁰ North, 112⁰ East.
- Download them handly. Some for a small ilsland ; about one hundred for Korea ; + 5 thousands for Eurasia.
- Unzip them.
- Load them into QGis.
Load the GIS file (layer) into QGis
QGis tutorial video, watch the first minute. |
- Load data (topography)
Start QGis > in QGis' topbar, click icon "Add a Raster Layer" > Select the unzipped "ETOPO1_Ice_g_geotiff.tif", .shp, .shx, etc. > open.
The data will appear in great by default.
If you have a vector layer to load : click icon "Add a Vector Layer". Etc.
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Add raster layer
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Topo data appear in grey.
Custom colors
- Main page : Wikipedia:Graphic Lab/Resources/QGis mapcolor files - for more colormap files
To set custom colors, it is need to edit the layer's properties. Topographic GIS data are by default displayed using greys : a palette or mapcolor going from white to black. But you can use other paletters/mapcolors. Palettes/mapcolors are a set of colors that you appreciate and generally use.
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If you already created your own palette (.qml), the fastest way :
1. Properties > Symbology box > Laod style [browse + select]> Apply. Othersiwe.... -
2a. Properties > Symbology box > change "Color map: Grayscale" into "Color map: Colormap" > Apply so the Colormap box is now working.
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2b. Properties > Colormap box > Edit entry (repeat as needed) > Apply
If need :
* You can "Save As Default" to attach this style to this GIS file ;
* You can "Save this style" if this style may be useful to use/load for other files. -
Final result, either by loading or slow edition.
Since the Graphic labs developped such guidelines for colors, the following mapcolors have been created, and shared, to ease the creation of wiki maps. Enjoy !
- Installation
To copy-paste in text document, then save as PALETTENAME.qml. Then, in QGis : LAYER > Properties > Load a style > [browse and select the .qml file]
Output : Print composer
You are now working with QGis, your GIS data (namely: ETOPO1), your customized palette. To output your first topographic background, don't use File > Save as Image, which is a simple screenshot. For a better quality :
- Use the Print composer: QGis (1.6) > File > New print composer (Ctrl+P). First, in this composer window, overfly its topbar icons : one pop up "Add new map". Click this icon, then click&drag on the white area to put the map, then adjust. Second, on the right box : General > Composition > Paper quality > Size > Custom : set the size you want, larger it is, higher will be your output quality !
- Smoothing colors: be sure the color style is set to "linear":
- QGis (1.6) > Layer > Properties > Colormap > Color interpolation : set on "linear". The output will now be smoother, colors going smoothly from one to another.
Then : Composer > File > Export as image/PDF/SVG, and that's it, an high quality topo background.
- Others functionalities
Grids: Within the Print Composer > selecting an item > Item (right side) > Grid > customize as you wish/can. Add icons: user/share/qgis/svg/
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0. Starting point (QGIS, not Pront composer): Data are ready an using the correct colormap.
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01. File > New Print composer (Ctrl+P) > (you have a white page) > icon 'Add new map' > draw the diagonal of the area for your map
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02. Choice the page size (mm) and quality (dpi) : higher means better quality.
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03. Centering the map
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04. Grid tab, add grid.
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05. Grid tab, add annotations
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06. Starting point for the localizator BUT white border in the tab : this is troublesome.
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06. Starting point for the localizator without white in the maptab : Great !
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07. icon 'Add new map' > draw the diagonal of the area for your map (same than 01)
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08. Icon 'Add basic shape' > trace a shape > change to rectangle
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09. Final look.
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10. Save as png.
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11. QGis Print composer's Final high quality output (you can zoom in !)
Links
The table above has links to various tutorials and resources which can help in the creation of Wikipedia maps from digital georeferenced data (GIS).