Geography 353 Cartography and Visualization
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Geog 353 Lecture Outline: Map Making Tools
Update: 8/24/08
Where we are...
1. Map Purpose: Introduction to Map Design
- Why are you making your map?
- Who is your map for? who is the audience?
- What is the final medium?
- Importance of evaluation
2. Collect appropriate Mappable Data: Map Making
Process & Mappable Data
- Phenomena and data
- Data layers
- Getting data
- Data organization
- Quantifying data
- Transforming data
- Data accuracy
- Digital data and GIS
3. Map Making Tools: This lecture
- Map making tools without computers
- Map making on the internet
- Map making with GIS
- Graphic design and other map making tools
4. Geographic Framework
- Map projections
- Map scale
- Map coordinates
5. Map Design
- Map Layout
- Intellectual and Visual Hierarchies
- Map Generalization and Classification
- Map Symbolization
- Type on maps
- Color on Maps
- Finishing Your Map
Map Making Tools:
- Making Maps Without Computers
- Making Maps PDF) Ch 4. Making Maps Without Computers (p. 75)
Making Maps with Computers: some background
- computer mapping: computers used in the process of making maps
- automated mapping: computers automate part/all of the mapmaking process
- Geographic Information Systems: Computer hardware and software
for the capture, storage, retrieval, analysis, and output (paper or digital
display) of spatial data. Maps play a vital role in the analysis
(visualization) and display components of GIS.
- a problem with the term "computer mapping" - almost all mapping is now done by computer
- so the term computer mapping has become redundant
A Brief History of Computers and Mapping
- late 1950s mapping experiments with early computers
- SYMAP: Harvard 1965 mainframe; line printer output: patterns made of characters:

- Idea from earlier "map typewriters": ca. 1905


- Source: "Machine-Made Line Drawings for the Illustration of Scientific Papers" by
R. A. Daly. American Journal of Science, Mar 1905, p. 227.
- development of computer pen plotters: replicate human tasks: replace people
drawing maps with pens with computers drawing maps with pens:
- late 1970s: development of desktop publishing and subsequently desktop
mapping computer technologies
- desktop publishing: computer set up with graphics and page layout capabilities
connected to print quality output device (all on one desktop)
- Postscript, LaserPrinters
- desktop mapping: all computer operations necessary to digitally assemble the
map's component parts (base maps, data, lettering, symbols, etc.) and to produce
final output
- OSU MAP, Atlas Graphics, ArcView
- constant change: new computer tools
- animation, interactivity, sound, multimedia, hypermedia, analysis
- future: WWW-based multimedia GIS
Map Making Tools (continued):
Digital File Formats and Conversions
- File: collection of records handled as a basic unit of storage in the computer
- File format: specific way the information has been stored in the file with codes
which tell how to interpret the file. Many different graphic file formats
Common Graphic File Formats

- Raster file formats: Raster software generates files which are made up of pixels
- ex) black square in raster file: turn all the pixels within a four sided area black
- ex) digital satellite data
- ex) a map digitally scanned on a flatbed scanner
- common raster formats include PICT, TIFF, GIF, JPEG
- Vector file formats: vector software generates files which are made up of points,
lines, and areas
- ex) black square in vector file: four points, connect with line, box attribute is black
- ex) USGS DLG data, US Census TIGER data, ArcGIS digital data, Google KML/KMZ files
- ex) a map digitized on a digitizer
- common vector formats include: ArcGIS (.shp, .lyr), PostScript (.ps), Keyhole Markup Language (.kml, compressed as .kmz)
- Usually have to work with both types of formats: convert between, or use both together
- Our lab project: begin with vector (ArcGIS .shp file) and convert to vector .kml and raster (.gif) file.
Common Non-graphic File formats
- for the lab we will need to deal with various text files
- the text data we found on the WWW
- a simple text file (ASCII file, .txt)
- Open with most Word Processors, Spreadsheet software (MS Excel)
- Convert into specialized text formats: Comma delineated text file
- Spreadsheet file formats
- many different types: ex) MS Excel
- Lab: convert a comma delineated file into an DBASE (.dbf) file
- .dbf file can be imported into ArcGIS
- HTML (HyperText Markup Language) files
- Text files used to create what you see on the WWW
- Can convert word processor files into HTML for the WWW (MS Word, Powerpoint)
- Can also generate HTML files in special HTML scripting software (SeaMonkey, Dreamweaver, GoLive)
Assign Lab 2
- first: check that Lab 1 is complete
- second: Lab Exercise 2:
HyperText Markup Language (HTML) and Map Mashups
E-mail: jbkrygier@owu.edu
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