Practical GIS Analysis
By admin • Dec 2nd, 2008 • Category: Uncategorized •
Practical GIS Analysis
by David L. Verbyla

Practical GIS Analysis
By David L. Verbyla
Publisher: CRC
Number Of Pages: 304
Publication Date: 2002-04-18
ISBN-10 / ASIN: 0415286093
ISBN-13 / EAN: 9780415286091
Binding: Hardcover
The hard part of problem solving using GIS analysis is the selection of the proper tools. The only practical guide for solving geo-spatial problems independent of specific GIS software and hardware, Practical GIS Analysis will teach you how GIS tools work, and how you can use them to solve problems in both vector and grid GIS worlds. The book includes real-life applications from urban problems including real estate query, irrigation analysis, urban emergency response, address geocoding, street management, resource allocation, groundwater analysis, auto accident analysis, parcel analysis, and optimal path analysis. You can test your problem-solving abilities by trying the more than eighty GIS problems (and solutions) presented in this book. If you want to learn how GIS works, and what kinds of problems you can solve using it, this book is for you.
Summary: Practical GIS
Rating: 4
This books is good if you want to understand
how GIS works (what goes on conceptually
behind the buttons and toolbars).
I found the chapters on dynamic segmentation
and network analysis to be really good at
explaining how routes, sections and events
are linked together, how address geocoding,
optimal routing, and resource allocation work
in a GIS.
The chapter on image analysis was good if you
have limited background in imagery: contrast
enhancement, image rectification, supervised
and unsupervised classification, accuracy assessment,etc.
Although the chapter on “Saving time in GIS Analysis”
is primarily command line arc/info examples, some
of the concepts such as good documentation files,
and “assume your GIS lies” are good ideas.
The book uses examples primarily from arc/info
commands and has nothing about geodatabases, spatial
database engines, map coordinates or projections or datums,
etc. The book’s value is in explaining how GIS works
from a conceptual level, with good exercises and solutions
for each chapter. I wish it were soft-cover and about half
the price.
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