Provided by: grass-doc_7.0.3-1build1_all
NAME
v.perturb - Random location perturbations of vector points.
KEYWORDS
vector, geometry, statistics, random, point pattern
SYNOPSIS
v.perturb v.perturb --help v.perturb [-b] input=name [layer=string] output=name [distribution=string] parameters=float[,float,...] [minimum=float] [seed=integer] [--overwrite] [--help] [--verbose] [--quiet] [--ui] Flags: -b Do not build topology --overwrite Allow output files to overwrite existing files --help Print usage summary --verbose Verbose module output --quiet Quiet module output --ui Force launching GUI dialog Parameters: input=name [required] Name of input vector map Or data source for direct OGR access layer=string Layer number or name (’-1’ for all layers) A single vector map can be connected to multiple database tables. This number determines which table to use. When used with direct OGR access this is the layer name. Default: -1 output=name [required] Name for output vector map distribution=string Distribution of perturbation Options: uniform, normal Default: uniform parameters=float[,float,...] [required] Parameter(s) of distribution If the distribution is uniform, only one parameter, the maximum, is needed. For a normal distribution, two parameters, the mean and standard deviation, are required. minimum=float Minimum deviation in map units Default: 0.0 seed=integer Seed for random number generation Default: 0
DESCRIPTION
v.perturb reads a vector map of points and writes the same points but perturbs the eastings and northings by adding either a uniform or normal delta value. Perturbation means that a variating spatial deviation is added to the coordinates.
NOTES
The uniform distribution is always centered about zero. The associated parameter is constrained to be positive and specifies the maximum of the distribution; the minimum is the negation of that parameter. Do perturb into a ring around the center, the minimum parameter can be used. Usually, the mean (first parameter) of the normal distribution is zero (i.e., the distribution is centered at zero). The standard deviation (second parameter) is naturally constrained to be positive. Output vector points are not guaranteed to be contained within the current geographic region.
SEE ALSO
v.random v.univar
AUTHOR
James Darrell McCauley when he was at: Agricultural Engineering Purdue University Random number generators originally written in FORTRAN by Wes Peterson and translated to C using f2c. Last changed: $Date: 2011-11-08 22:24:20 +0100 (Tue, 08 Nov 2011) $ Main index | Vector index | Topics index | Keywords index | Full index © 2003-2016 GRASS Development Team, GRASS GIS 7.0.3 Reference Manual