1SHPDUMP(1)                         shapelib                         SHPDUMP(1)
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NAME

6       shpdump  - dumps as text and/or validates the content of an ESRI shape‐
7       file
8

SYNOPSIS

10       shpdump [-validate] shp_file
11

DESCRIPTION

13       Prints the contents of the shapefile shp_file  to  standard  output  in
14       textual  format. Shapefiles actually consist of two files with the same
15       basename and extensions .shp and .shx (or .SHP and .SHX) containing the
16       shape  data  and shape index respectively. The files to open are deter‐
17       mined by first stripping any filename extension from shp_file  and  at‐
18       tempting   to   open   the  files  shp_file.shp  or  shp_file.SHP,  and
19       shp_file.shx or shp_file.SHX for the respective data and index files.
20
21       Output consists of a header giving number and type  of  shapes  in  the
22       file  and  the bounds for the minimum and maximum X, Y, Z, and M values
23       appearing in the shapes. The header is followed by the  geometric  data
24       for  each  shape  in  the file. All shapes in the file should be of the
25       same type, except that NullShape typed shapes may  be  intermixed  with
26       any other type. The header has the form
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29           Shapefile Type: type # of Shapes: count
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31           File Bounds: (minX,minY,minZ,minM)
32                    to  (maxX,maxY,maxZ,maxM)
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36       See section SHAPE TYPES below for the list of possible shape types.
37
38       Next  for each shape in the file a header giving it´s shape_index, it´s
39       type type, number of vertices nVertices, number of  parts  nParts,  and
40       bounding box is given, followed by the vertex data of each part.
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42
43           Shape:  shape_index (type) nVertices=nVertices, nParts=nParts
44             Bounds: (minX,minY,minZ,minM)
45                 to  (maxX,maxY,maxZ,maxM)
46
47             vertices of the first part
48
49           + vertices of the second part...
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51           + vertices of the last part
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54
55       The  shape_index  of  a  shape is the number of the shape starting from
56       zero in the shape file. Each vertex has the form
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58
59           (X,Y,Z,M)
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63       If there are multiple parts then the type of the part is  appended  ap‐
64       pended to first vertex of each part, and the first vertex of the second
65       and following parts is preceded by a plus (+) sign. The  part  type  is
66       Ring  for  all  shape types except MultiPatch where it is the type of a
67       surface patch. See below for the description of possible part types.
68

SHAPE TYPES

70       Each type of shape  except  MultiPatch  typed  shapes  comes  in  three
71       flavours:  The normal unsuffixed type, where points lie in X/Y-space; a
72       type with suffix M where points lie in X/Y-space and additionally  have
73       a  measure  value  in  M-space;  and finally a type with suffix Z where
74       points lie in X/Y/Z-space and also have a measure value in M-space.
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76       NullShape
77              A shape without data. Shapes of this type may be intermixed with
78              other  shapes  and  are sometimes used to represented deleted or
79              missing geometric data for a shape.
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81       Point or PointZ or PointM
82              A single point.
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84       Arc or ArcZ or ArcM
85              Piecewise linear paths. Shapes of this type may consist of  mul‐
86              tiple  parts which may or may not intersect and/or connect. Arcs
87              are called PolyLines in the shapefile specification.
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89       Polygon or PolygonZ or PolygonM
90              Polygon shapes consist of one or more parts, called rings,  that
91              each define a closed path. Rings must contain at least four ver‐
92              tices with the first and last vertices being equal, and must not
93              self-intersect.  For  shapes of type Polygon, the rings define a
94              polygon with optional holes by  giving  the  vertices  of  inner
95              rings  a  counterclockwise orientation and the vertices of outer
96              rings a clockwise orientation. Intersection and  orientation  is
97              always computed in X/Y-space and never in X/Y/M-space.
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99       MultiPoint or MultiPointZ or MultiPointM
100              A set of points.
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102       MultiPatch
103              A MultiPatch represents one or more surfaces in X/Y/Z-space, and
104              consists of a number of parts called it´s surface patches.  Each
105              surface  patch describes a either a surface or a hole in another
106              surface, depending on the type of the patch. Patches may share a
107              common  boundary  but may not otherwise intersect. The type of a
108              patch may be one of
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110              TriangleStrip: A set of connected  triangles.  The  first  three
111              points  define  the first triangle and every following point de‐
112              fines a new triangle using the new point and  the  two  previous
113              points.
114
115              TriangleFan:  A  set  of  connected  triangles.  The first three
116              points define the first triangle and every following  point  de‐
117              fines  a  new  triangle  using  the  previous point, the current
118              point, and the first point, thus  forming  a  fan  of  triangles
119              around the first point.
120
121              OuterRing:  The  outer  ring  of  a sequence of rings defining a
122              polygon with holes. All following parts of  type  InnerRing  are
123              taken to be the holes of the polygon. The sequence of rings ends
124              with the first non-InnerRing typed  part  or  the  part  of  the
125              shape, whichever comes first.
126
127              InnerRing: An inner ring in a sequence of rings defining a poly‐
128              gon with holes. This type of part may only follow  an  OuterRing
129              or other InnerRing typed parts.
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131              FirstRing:  The  first in a sequence of rings defining a polygon
132              of unspecified type. The following parts of  type  Ring  defines
133              the  other  rings in the polygon. This type of part is used when
134              the innerness or outerness of a polygon isn´t known or  applica‐
135              ble.  The  sequence  of rings defining the polygon ends with the
136              first non-Ring typed part or the last part of the shape,  which‐
137              ever comes first.
138
139              Ring:  A  ring  in a sequence of rings defining a polygon of un‐
140              specified type. It may only follow a  FirstRing  or  other  Ring
141              typed parts.
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143              UknownPartType: This type is returned for parts whose type isn´t
144              recognised.
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146       UnknownShapeType
147              This type is returned for shapes whose type isn´t recognised.
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OPTIONS

150       -validate
151              count the number of objects that have invalid ring ordenings
152
153              Performs validation on the orientation of inner and outer  rings
154              in  Polygon,  PolygonZ,  and  PolygonM objects. According to the
155              shapefile specification outer rings should be given a  clockwise
156              orientation,  and  inner rings that define holes a counterclock‐
157              wise orientation. If some rings of  a  shape  are  oriented  the
158              wrong  way  around  then  the  following message is output after
159              dumping that shape:
160
161              count rings wound in the wrong direction.
162
163              In addition the total number of shapes  with  problem  rings  is
164              output after the last shape has been dumped:
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166              count object has invalid ring orderings.
167
168       shp_file
169              the name of an existing shapefile.
170

EXIT STATUS

172       0      Successful program execution.
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174       1      No shapefile shp_file was given or it couldn´t be opened.
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EXAMPLE

177       $ shpdump shapefile.shp
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179       Shapefile Type: Arc   # of Shapes: 3
180
181       File Bounds: ( 3531586.750, 7253086.100,0,0)
182                to  ( 3536417.463, 7778375.875,0,0)
183
184       Shape:0 (Arc)  nVertices=2, nParts=1
185         Bounds:( 3536397.797, 7253086.100, 0, 0)
186             to ( 3536417.463, 7253163.597, 0, 0)
187            ( 3536397.797, 7253163.597, 0, 0) Ring
188            ( 3536417.463, 7253086.100, 0, 0)
189
190       Shape:1 (Arc)  nVertices=3, nParts=1
191         Bounds:( 3458966.390, 7373335.808, 0, 0)
192             to ( 3459141.856, 7373474.681, 0, 0)
193            ( 3458966.390, 7373474.681, 0, 0) Ring
194            ( 3458979.042, 7373466.273, 0, 0)
195            ( 3459141.856, 7373335.808, 0, 0)
196
197       Shape:2 (Arc)  nVertices=7, nParts=1
198         Bounds:( 3531586.750, 7777880.500, 0, 0)
199             to ( 3532930.206, 7778375.875, 0, 0)
200            ( 3531586.750, 7777880.500, 0, 0) Ring
201            ( 3532228.265, 7778072.455, 0, 0)
202            ( 3532310.897, 7778119.445, 0, 0)
203            ( 3532367.866, 7778144.877, 0, 0)
204            ( 3532440.559, 7778168.920, 0, 0)
205            ( 3532506.504, 7778190.785, 0, 0)
206            ( 3532930.206, 7778375.875, 0, 0)
207
208       $
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DIAGNOSTICS

211       The following diagnostics may be issued on stdout:
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213       Unable to open:shp_file
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AUTHOR

216       shpdump  is part of shapelib, maintained by Frank Warmerdam. This guide
217       was created by Eduardo Patoo Kanegae and converted to manpage by  Johan
218       Van  de  Wauw.  It  was  further  enhanced with the man page written by
219       Joonas Pihlaja (jpihlaja@cc.helsinki.fi).
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BUGS

222       The -validate option supports only one outer ring in a polygonal  shape
223       and  assumes  that  the  first  ring  in  a shape is the outer ring. It
224       doesn´t support polygons inside MultiPatch shapes. The X and Y  coordi‐
225       nates of a point are printed to three decimal places only.
226

SEE ALSO

228       dbfadd(1),  dbfcat(1), dbfcreate(1), dbfdump(1), dbfinfo(1), shpadd(1),
229       shpcat(1),  shpcentrd(1),  shpcreate(1),  shpdxf(1),   shpfix(1),   sh‐
230       pinfo(1), shpproj(1), shprewind(1), shptest(1)
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234                                  March 2022                        SHPDUMP(1)
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