Module: RGeo::Feature::Factory

Defined in:
lib/rgeo/feature/factory.rb

Overview

This is a standard interface for factories of features. Generally, each Feature implementation will implement these methods as a standard way to create features.

If the implementation is unable to create the given feature, it should generally return nil. Implementations may also choose to raise an exception on failure.

Some implementations may extend this interface to provide facilities for creating additional objects according to the capabilities provided by that implementation. Examples might include higher-dimensional coordinates or additional subclasses not explicitly required by the Simple Features Specification.

Factory is defined as a module and is provided primarily for the sake of documentation. Implementations need not necessarily include this module itself. Therefore, you should not depend on the result of is_a?(Factory) to check type. However, to support testing for factory-ness, the Factory::Instance submodule is provided. All factory implementation classes MUST include Factory::Instance, and you may use it in is_a?, ===, and case-when constructs.

Defined Under Namespace

Modules: Instance

Instance Method Summary collapse

Instance Method Details

#collection(_elems_) ⇒ Object

Create a feature of type GeometryCollection. The elems should be an Enumerable of Geometry objects.

Although implementations are free to attempt to handle input objects that are not of this factory, strictly speaking, the result of building geometries from objects of the wrong factory is undefined.



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# File 'lib/rgeo/feature/factory.rb', line 170

def collection(_elems_)
  nil
end

#coord_sysObject

Returns the coordinate system specification for the features created by this factory, or nil if there is no such coordinate system.

NOTE: This is a required method of the factory interface, but the coordinate system classes themselves are not yet available, so implementations should just return nil for now.



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# File 'lib/rgeo/feature/factory.rb', line 237

def coord_sys
  nil
end

#line(_start_, _end_) ⇒ Object

Create a feature of type Line. The given point arguments should be Point objects, or objects that can be cast to Point.

Although implementations are free to attempt to handle input objects that are not of this factory, strictly speaking, the result of building geometries from objects of the wrong factory is undefined.



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# File 'lib/rgeo/feature/factory.rb', line 126

def line(_start_, _end_)
  nil
end

#line_string(_points_) ⇒ Object

Create a feature of type LineString. The given points argument should be an Enumerable of Point objects, or objects that can be cast to Point.

Although implementations are free to attempt to handle input objects that are not of this factory, strictly speaking, the result of building geometries from objects of the wrong factory is undefined.



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# File 'lib/rgeo/feature/factory.rb', line 113

def line_string(_points_)
  nil
end

#linear_ring(_points_) ⇒ Object

Create a feature of type LinearRing. The given points argument should be an Enumerable of Point objects, or objects that can be cast to Point. If the first and last points are not equal, the ring is automatically closed by appending the first point to the end of the string.

Although implementations are free to attempt to handle input objects that are not of this factory, strictly speaking, the result of building geometries from objects of the wrong factory is undefined.



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# File 'lib/rgeo/feature/factory.rb', line 142

def linear_ring(_points_)
  nil
end

#multi_line_string(_elems_) ⇒ Object

Create a feature of type MultiLineString. The elems should be an Enumerable of objects that are or can be cast to LineString or any of its subclasses. Returns nil if any of the contained geometries is not a LineString, which would break the MultiLineString contract.

Although implementations are free to attempt to handle input objects that are not of this factory, strictly speaking, the result of building geometries from objects of the wrong factory is undefined.



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# File 'lib/rgeo/feature/factory.rb', line 200

def multi_line_string(_elems_)
  nil
end

#multi_point(_elems_) ⇒ Object

Create a feature of type MultiPoint. The elems should be an Enumerable of Point objects, or objects that can be cast to Point. Returns nil if any of the contained geometries is not a Point, which would break the MultiPoint contract.

Although implementations are free to attempt to handle input objects that are not of this factory, strictly speaking, the result of building geometries from objects of the wrong factory is undefined.



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# File 'lib/rgeo/feature/factory.rb', line 185

def multi_point(_elems_)
  nil
end

#multi_polygon(_elems_) ⇒ Object

Create a feature of type MultiPolygon. The elems should be an Enumerable of objects that are or can be cast to Polygon or any of its subclasses. Returns nil if any of the contained geometries is not a Polygon, which would break the MultiPolygon contract. Also returns nil if any of the other assertions for MultiPolygon are not met, e.g. if any of the polygons overlap.

Although implementations are free to attempt to handle input objects that are not of this factory, strictly speaking, the result of building geometries from objects of the wrong factory is undefined.



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# File 'lib/rgeo/feature/factory.rb', line 217

def multi_polygon(_elems_)
  nil
end

#override_cast(_original_, _type_, _flags_) ⇒ Object

This is an optional method that may be implemented to customize casting for this factory. Basically, RGeo defines standard ways to cast certain types of objects from one factory to another and one SFS type to another. However, a factory may choose to override how things are casted TO its implementation using this method. It can do this to optimize certain casting cases, or implement special cases particular to this factory.

This method will be called (if defined) on the destination factory, and will be passed the original object (which may or may not already be created by this factory), the SFS feature type (which again may or may not already be the type of the original object), and a hash of additional flags. These flags are:

:keep_subtype

indicates whether to keep the subtype if casting to a supertype of the current type

:force_new

indicates whether to force the creation of a new object even if the original is already of the desired factory and type

:project

indicates whether to project the coordinates from the source to the destination proj4 coordinate system, if available

It should return either a casted result object, false, or nil. A nil return value indicates that casting should be forced to fail (and RGeo::Feature.cast will return nil). A false return value indicates that this method declines to override the casting algorithm, and RGeo should use its default algorithm to cast the object. Therefore, by default, you should return false.



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# File 'lib/rgeo/feature/factory.rb', line 273

def override_cast(_original_, _type_, _flags_)
  false
end

#parse_wkb(_str_) ⇒ Object

Parse the given string in well-known-binary format and return the resulting feature. Returns nil if the string couldn’t be parsed.



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# File 'lib/rgeo/feature/factory.rb', line 89

def parse_wkb(_str_)
  nil
end

#parse_wkt(_str_) ⇒ Object

Parse the given string in well-known-text format and return the resulting feature. Returns nil if the string couldn’t be parsed.



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# File 'lib/rgeo/feature/factory.rb', line 82

def parse_wkt(_str_)
  nil
end

#point(_x_, _y_, *_extra_) ⇒ Object

Create a feature of type Point. The x and y parameters should be Float values.

The extra parameters should be the Z and/or M coordinates, if supported. If both Z and M coordinates are supported, Z should be passed first.



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# File 'lib/rgeo/feature/factory.rb', line 100

def point(_x_, _y_, *_extra_)
  nil
end

#polygon(_outer_ring_, _inner_rings_ = nil) ⇒ Object

Create a feature of type Polygon. The outer_ring should be a LinearRing, or an object that can be cast to LinearRing. The inner_rings should be a possibly empty Enumerable of LinearRing (or objects that can be casted to LinearRing). You may also pass nil to indicate no inner rings.

Although implementations are free to attempt to handle input objects that are not of this factory, strictly speaking, the result of building geometries from objects of the wrong factory is undefined.



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# File 'lib/rgeo/feature/factory.rb', line 158

def polygon(_outer_ring_, _inner_rings_ = nil)
  nil
end

#proj4Object

Returns a RGeo::CoordSys::Proj4 representing the projection for the coordinate system of features created by this factory, or nil if there is no such proj4 projection.



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# File 'lib/rgeo/feature/factory.rb', line 225

def proj4
  nil
end

#property(_name_) ⇒ Object

Returns meta-information about this factory, by key. This information may involve support for optional functionality, properties of the coordinate system, or other characteristics.

Each property has a symbolic name. Names that have no periods are considered well-known names and are reserved for use by RGeo. If you want to define your own properties, use a name that is namespaced with periods, such as :'mycompany.myprop'.

Property values are dependent on the individual property. Generally, properties that involve testing for functionality should return true if the functionality is support, or false or nil if not. A property value could also invlove different values indicating different levels of support. In any case, the factory should return nil for property names it does not recognize. This value is considered the “default” or “no value” value.

Currently defined well-known properties are:

:has_z_coordinate

Set to true if geometries created by this factory include a Z coordinate, and the Point#z method is available.

:has_m_coordinate

Set to true if geometries created by this factory include a M coordinate, and the Point#m method is available.

:is_cartesian

Set to true if this Factory guarantees that it operates in Cartesian geometry. If false or nil, no such guarantee is made, though it is possible the geometries may still be Cartesian.

:is_geographic

Set to true if this Factory’s coordinate system is meant to be interpreted as x=longitude and y=latitude. If false or nil, no information is present about whether the coordinate system is meant to be so interpreted.



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# File 'lib/rgeo/feature/factory.rb', line 75

def property(_name_)
  nil
end