Disponible avec une licence Spatial Analyst.
Synthèse
Defines the relationship between the vertical cost factor and the vertical relative moving angle (VRMA) through a symmetrical inverse linear function in either the negative or positive side of the VRMA, respectively. The two linear functions are symmetrical with respect to the VF (y) axis.
Illustration
Discussion
This object is used in the Distance Accumulation and Distance Allocation Spatial Analyst tools, as well as the Path Distance, Path Distance Allocation, and Path Distance Back Link Legacy Distance tools.
The vertical factor (VF) object defines the relationship between the vertical cost factor and the vertical relative moving angle (VRMA).
VF defines the vertical difficulty encountered in moving from one cell to the next.
VRMA identifies the slope angle between the FROM or processing cell and the TO cell.
The VfSymInverseLinear class, as its name implies, is the inverse of the VfSymLinear vertical factor class. It is composed of two inverse linear functions relative to the VRMAs, which are symmetrical to the VF (y) axis. Both lines intercept the y-axis at the zeroFactor. The slope of the lines is defined as a single slope relative to the positive VRMA using the slope vertical factor argument, which is mirrored to the negative VRMAs.
Syntaxe
VfSymInverseLinear ({zeroFactor}, {lowCutAngle}, {highCutAngle}, {slope})
Paramètre | Explication | Type de données |
zeroFactor | The zeroFactor will be used to position the y-intercept of the symmetric inverse linear function. (La valeur par défaut est 1.0) | Double |
lowCutAngle | The VRMA degree defining the lower threshold, below which (less than) the VFs are set to infinity. (La valeur par défaut est -45.0) | Double |
highCutAngle | The VRMA degree defining the upper threshold, beyond which (larger than) the VFs are set to infinity. (La valeur par défaut est 45.0) | Double |
slope | Identifies the slope of the straight line in the VRMA-VF coordinate system. Slope is specified as the rise/run. For example, a 30-degree slope is 1/30, specified as 0.03333 (rise/run: 1 VF on the y axis / 30 degrees on the x axis); a -45-degree slope as -0.022222. (La valeur par défaut est -0.022222) | Double |
Propriétés
Propriété | Explication | Type de données |
zeroFactor (Lecture et écriture) | The zeroFactor is used to position the y-intercept for the vertical factor class. | Double |
lowCutAngle (Lecture et écriture) | The VRMA degree defining the lower threshold, below which (less than) the VFs are set to infinity. | Double |
highCutAngle (Lecture et écriture) | The VRMA degree defining the upper threshold, beyond which (larger than) the VFs are set to infinity. | Double |
slope (Lecture et écriture) | Identifies the slope of the straight line in the VRMA-VF coordinate system. Slope is specified as the rise over the run. For example, a 30-degree slope is 1/30, specified as 0.03333 (rise/run: 1 VF on the y axis / 30 degrees on the x axis); a 90-degree slope as 0.011111. | Double |
Exemple de code
Demonstrates how to create a VfSymInverseLinear class and use it in the DistanceAccumulation tool within the Python window.
import arcpy
from arcpy import env
from arcpy.sa import *
env.workspace = "C:/sapyexamples/data"
myVerticalFactor = VfSymInverseLinear(1.0, -45, 45, -0.02222)
outDistAccum = DistanceAccumulation("Source.shp", "", "elev.tif",
"cost.tif", "elev.tif",
myVerticalFactor)
outDistAccum.save("C:/sapyexamples/output/distAccumVfIL.tif")
Performs a DistanceAccumulation analysis using the VfSymInverseLinear class.
# Name: VfSymInverseLinear_Ex_02.py
# Description: ses the VfSymInverseLinear object to run the
# DistanceAccumulation tool
# Requirements: Spatial Analyst Extension
# Import system modules
import arcpy
from arcpy import env
from arcpy.sa import *
# Set environment settings
env.workspace = "C:/sapyexamples/data"
# Set local variables
inSourceData = "source.shp"
inCostRaster = "costraster.tif"
inElevation = "elev.tif"
# Create the VfSymInverseLinear Object
zeroFactor = 1.0
lowCutAngle = -45
highCutAngle = 45
slope = -0.02222
myVerticalFactor = VfSymInverseLinear(zeroFactor, lowCutAngle, highCutAngle,
slope)
# Check out the ArcGIS Spatial Analyst extension license
arcpy.CheckOutExtension("Spatial")
# Execute PathDistance
outDistAccum = DistanceAccumulation(inSourceData, "", inElevation,
inCostRaster, inElevation,
myVerticalFactor)
# Save the output
outDistAccum.save("C:/sapyexamples/output/distaccumvfIL2.tif")
Rubriques connexes
Vous avez un commentaire à formuler concernant cette rubrique ?