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    GIS SOFTWARE recommendation reqd.

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    • john2J Offline
      john2
      last edited by

      I need to generate slope analysis of a site very quickly using some GIS software. I am a novice when it comes to GIS. Google earth and grabbing a terrain in sketchup is the only thing that I have ever touched upon. These are some samples that I got.

      I don't want a heavy duty bulky intimidating software. I just need to do this task. Kindly suggest a suitable solution for me. Moreover, that mesh is a vector linework that was generated.


      ref1.JPG


      ref2.png

      Sketchup Make 2017 (64-bit), Vray 4.0 , Windows 10 – 64 bit, corei7-8750H, 16GB RAM, Nvidia GeForce GTX 1050Ti 4GB

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      • C Offline
        cemyapca
        last edited by

        There was a plug-in for Sketchup that did just that - try searching "Color by Slope". I haven't used it recently though. It paints surfaces according to their slopes. There is also a "Color by Height" variant. These might work for you.

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        • john2J Offline
          john2
          last edited by

          @cemyapca said:

          There was a plug-in for Sketchup that did just that - try searching "Color by Slope". I haven't used it recently though. It paints surfaces according to their slopes. There is also a "Color by Height" variant. These might work for you.

          I have tried sketchup but it never works out. Here, http://sketchucation.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=15%26amp;t=57167


          zzzzzz (1).jpg

          Sketchup Make 2017 (64-bit), Vray 4.0 , Windows 10 – 64 bit, corei7-8750H, 16GB RAM, Nvidia GeForce GTX 1050Ti 4GB

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          • U Offline
            unearthed
            last edited by

            Try this and read it in depth (It's Chris' ColorBySlope tool)
            http://sketchucation.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=15%26amp;t=56825%26amp;p=516133%26amp;hilit=+slope+analysis+#p516133

            vid howto
            http://www.sargeantillustration.com/tutorial-slope-analysis-in-sketchup/

            Subdividing your mesh will help produce a better blur effect but dramatically increase processing time.

            You will always get some sort of tiling effect (but turning linework OFF will help a lot) but you can always blur/smudge in photoshop/gimp/fotosketcher

            QGIS is the other viable approach but if you know nothing about GIS it's a lot to take on board in an afternoon! QGIS will get you there tho
            http://www.qgis.org/en/site/

            But it's not quick to explain - WELL worth learning tho' for another time.

            Growplan - People ∩ Plants ∩ Place

            windows 7 64b, 4GB RAM, SU 8.0.16846
            Gimp, QGIS, Vectorworks 12, Bricscad 11

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            • pbacotP Offline
              pbacot
              last edited by

              My wife has been working in GIS for years, with ESRI. She recommends qGIS and thinks someone like me (with CAD background) might pick it up OK.

              MacOSX MojaveSketchUp Pro v19 Twilight v2 Thea v3 PowerCADD

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              • U Offline
                unearthed
                last edited by

                Re QGIS - I'm self-taught in GIS and tend to use it for simple things like converting tiff file data (look like a monochrome image file, but each pixel contains for instance height data) into dxfs and so getting a contour file. Currently am working on using it to produce variable-width setbacks for waterway protection - which IS pretty difficult, but like this place there are great communities to ask questions.

                Growplan - People ∩ Plants ∩ Place

                windows 7 64b, 4GB RAM, SU 8.0.16846
                Gimp, QGIS, Vectorworks 12, Bricscad 11

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                • john2J Offline
                  john2
                  last edited by

                  @pbacot said:

                  My wife has been working in GIS for years, with ESRI. She recommends qGIS and thinks someone like me (with CAD background) might pick it up OK.

                  Thanks I will try this with qGIS. 😄

                  Sketchup Make 2017 (64-bit), Vray 4.0 , Windows 10 – 64 bit, corei7-8750H, 16GB RAM, Nvidia GeForce GTX 1050Ti 4GB

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