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lidR (version 3.1.1)

las_utilities: LAS utilities

Description

Tools to manipulate LAS objects maintaining compliance with ASPRS specification

Usage

las_rescale(las, xscale, yscale, zscale)

las_reoffset(las, xoffset, yoffset, zoffset)

las_quantize(las, by_reference = TRUE)

las_update(las)

quantize(x, scale, offset, by_reference = TRUE, ...)

is.quantized(x, scale, offset, ...)

count_not_quantized(x, scale, offset)

storable_coordinate_range(scale, offset)

Arguments

las

An object of class LAS

xscale, yscale, zscale

scalar. Can be missing if not relevant.

xoffset, yoffset, zoffset

scalar. Can be missing if not relevant.

by_reference

bool. Update the data in place without allocating new memory.

x

numeric. Coordinates vector

scale, offset

scalar. scale and offset

...

Unused.

Details

In the specification of the LAS format the coordinates are expected to be given with a certain precision e.g. 0.01 for a millimeter precision (or millifeet), meaning that a file records e.g. 123.46 not 123.45678. Also, coordinates are stored as integers. This is made possible with a scale and offset factor. For example, 123.46 with an offset of 100 and a scale factor of 0.01 is actually stored as (123.46 - 100)/0.01 = 2346. Storing 123.45678 with a scale factor of 0.01 and an offset of 100 is invalid because it does not convert to an integer: (123.45678-100)/0.01 = 2345.678. Having an invalid LAS object may be critical in some lidR applications. When writing into a LAS file, users will loose the extra precision without warning and some algorithms in lidR use the integer conversion to make integer-based computation and thus speed-up some algorithms and use less memory. Creation of an invalid LAS object may cause problems and incorrect outputs.

See Also

Other las utilities: las_check()

Examples

Run this code
# NOT RUN {
LASfile <- system.file("extdata", "example.laz", package="rlas")
las = readLAS(LASfile)

# Manual modification of the coordinates (e.g. rotation, re-alignment, ...)
las@data$X <- las@data$X + 2/3
las@data$Y <- las@data$Y - 5/3

# The point cloud is no longer valid
las_check(las)

# It is important to fix that
las_quantize(las)

# Now the file is almost valid
las_check(las)

# Update the object to set up-to-date header data
las <- las_update(las)
las_check(las)

# In practice the above code is not useful for regular users because the operators
# $<- already perform such operations on-the-fly. Thus the following
# syntax must be preferred and returns valid objects. Previous tools
# were only intended to be used in very specific cases.
las$X <- las$X + 2/3
las$Y <- las$Y - 5/3

# Rescale and reoffset recompute the coordinates with
# new scales and offsets according to LAS specification
las <- las_rescale(las, xscale = 0.01, yscale = 0.01)
las <- las_reoffset(las, xoffset = 300000, yoffset = 5248000)
# }

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