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Introduction to Geographic Information Systems with ArcView GIS Exercises CD-ROM
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by Kang-tsung
Sales Rank: 690054
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$0.82
At Amazon

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Hardcover: 336 pages
Publisher: McGraw-Hill Science/Engineering/Math; 1 edition September 25, 2001
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0072382694
ISBN-13: 978-0072382693
Product Dimensions:
9.4 x 7.5 x 0.9 inches
Shipping Weight: 2 pounds
Book Description
Designed for a comprehensive coverage of GIS topics, this book is organized into three parts. Part 1 (chapters 1 to 8) covers the fundamentals of GIS including coordinate systems, data models, data input, data management, and data display. Part 2 (chapters 9 to 12) includes data exploration, analysis using vector and raster data, and terrain analysis. Part 3 (chapters 13 to 16) covers spatial interpolation, GIS modeling, regions, and network and dynamic segmentation. Also included in the book are new developments in GIS such as the object-oriented model and research-oriented questions such as the effect of spatial scale.
This book stresses both concepts and practice. GIS concepts from fields such as geography, cartography, spatial analysis, and database management explain the purpose and objectives of GIS operations and the interrelationship among GIS operations. A basic understanding of map projection, for example, explains why we must project map layers to be used together to a common coordinate system and why we need to input numerous projection parameters. Each chapter in this book is divided into two main sections. The first section covers topics and concepts addressed in the chapter. The second section covers applications, usually with three to five problem-solving tasks.
To include data sets and instructions for the practice sections, we chose GIS packages as examples for this book, and ArcView software is included complimentary with this textbook.
Customer Reviews & Comments
I just finished using this book for a second-level ArcView class. At first I didn't like it that much, mostly because the writing is very soporific, but also because it blurs coverage of GIS topics and ArcView specifics together, without a clear sense of what kind of information was being presented. (E.g. tutorial GIS material appears in the middle of exercises. This should be separated and stand off in a separate font, for instance, than the low level instructions of what ArcView commands to perform for the exercise.) However, as I read this book more, I got to like it and appreciate it much more. It occupies a unique niche in the GIS literature field, because *NO OTHER BOOK* that I have been able to track down (with one exception given below) combines high level GIS concepts with their realization in ArcView (if there are others I'd like to know). Most other books are either GIS theory alone, or very *very* low level bloated books about ArcView as a program (e.g. practically everything esri publishes), with little or no connection to, or explication of, high level GIS concepts, theory, and data structures. (Also as I read on, the writing became less soporific: I don't know if this was because I got used to the author's writing style, or if the writing actually improved.) In contrast to all those other ArcView books, this book presents some GIS theory, and then shows how to actually do something with these concepts in ArcView. The exercises on the CD provide data and shapefiles specific to what is being taught, so that the reader learns how to actually do quite powerful things in ArcView. It became quite exciting to see some of the cool things that could be done as the chapters went on. (For learning and using ArcView, this book goes along well with Theobald's excellent reference on ArcView, which also bridges the gap between GIS theory and ArcView by presenting almost every nut and bolt relevant to ArcView usage, organized by high level GIS concepts.) Regarding the complaints in the other review: I encountered just a couple of bugs in the supplied CD exercises, and most of them could by remedied in one way or another. (The newer printing of the book may or may not have these bugs fixed.) Although a trial version of ArcView is included on the CD for installing on your home computer (I used a Mac with Virtual PC), the text includes exercises using the ArcInfo program when there was something that couldn't be done in ArcView. On the book's cover, they clearly mention that only ArcView is included on the CD. For the exercises which required special extensions such as 3D Analyst, we used the college's computers which had those extensions installed, so that was not a problem. It is unfortunate that not every tool covered in the book could have a trial verision included in the CD (not the fault of the publisher, but of esri), but I'd rather have the knowledge coverage in the book so I can learn about it even if the program is not on the CD. I think this book deserves five stars for content, but I'm giving it four because of the stylistic problems described above.
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Introduction to Geographic Information Systems with ArcView GIS Exercises CD-ROM
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Price: $0.82

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