Find the bearing of straight lines
This is a simple wrapper around the geosphere function bearing()
to return the
bearing (in degrees relative to north) of lines.
line_bearing(l, bidirectional = FALSE)
l |
A spatial lines object |
bidirectional |
Should the result be returned in a bidirectional format? Default is FALSE. If TRUE, the same line in the oposite direction would have the same bearing |
Returns a boolean vector. TRUE means that the associated line is in fact a point (has no distance). This can be useful for removing data that will not be plotted.
Other lines:
angle_diff()
,
geo_toptail()
,
is_linepoint()
,
line2df()
,
line2points()
,
line_breakup()
,
line_match()
,
line_midpoint()
,
line_sample()
,
line_segment()
,
line_via()
,
mats2line()
,
n_sample_length()
,
n_vertices()
,
onewaygeo()
,
points2line()
,
toptail_buff()
,
toptailgs()
,
update_line_geometry()
lib_versions <- sf::sf_extSoftVersion() lib_versions # fails on some systems (with early versions of PROJ) if (lib_versions[3] >= "6.3.1") { bearings_sf_1_9 <- line_bearing(flowlines_sf[1:5, ]) bearings_sf_1_9 # lines of 0 length have NaN bearing bearings_sp_1_9 <- line_bearing(flowlines[1:5, ]) bearings_sp_1_9 plot(bearings_sf_1_9, bearings_sp_1_9) line_bearing(flowlines_sf[1:5, ], bidirectional = TRUE) line_bearing(flowlines[1:5, ], bidirectional = TRUE) }
Please choose more modern alternatives, such as Google Chrome or Mozilla Firefox.