This article addresses the question how algorithm arguments in
qgis_run_algorithm()
should be formatted.
When you run qgis_show_help()
or
qgis_get_argument_specs()
for a given algorithm, you will
quickly find out that QGIS has a diverse set of possible argument
types.
As an example, take a look at the qgis_type
column
below:
qgis_get_argument_specs("native:joinbynearest") |>
subset(select = name:qgis_type)
#> # A tibble: 9 × 3
#> name description qgis_type
#> <chr> <chr> <chr>
#> 1 INPUT Input layer source
#> 2 INPUT_2 Input layer 2 source
#> 3 FIELDS_TO_COPY Layer 2 fields to copy (leave empty to copy all… field
#> 4 DISCARD_NONMATCHING Discard records which could not be joined boolean
#> 5 PREFIX Joined field prefix string
#> 6 NEIGHBORS Maximum nearest neighbors number
#> 7 MAX_DISTANCE Maximum distance distance
#> 8 OUTPUT Joined layer sink
#> 9 NON_MATCHING Unjoinable features from first layer sink
Although you can pass a string 1 to a QGIS argument in
qgis_run_algorithm()
, {qgisprocess}
makes it
possible to pass familiar R objects that naturally match the QGIS
argument type. This is often easier than constructing a string in the
format required by QGIS.
The tables further below show which R objects can be passed to each QGIS argument type! You can find a bit more background information in issue #13.
Some arguments will receive a default value if they are unspecified.
Defaults are provided by either {qgisprocess}
or QGIS.
Typical defaults by {qgisprocess}
are temporary filepaths
for (missing) output argument types sink
,
vectorDestination
, rasterDestination
,
fileDestination
and folderDestination
.
QGIS argument type | Supported R object |
---|---|
source , vector |
a string (filepath) or an appropriate spatial vector object
(sf , SpatVector ,
SpatVectorProxy ) |
raster |
a string (filepath) or an appropriate spatial raster object
(SpatRaster , stars , stars_proxy ,
RasterLayer , RasterBrick ) |
layer |
a string (filepath) or an appropriate spatial object
(sf , SpatVector , SpatVectorProxy ,
SpatRaster , stars , stars_proxy ,
RasterLayer , RasterBrick ) |
multilayer |
a list of layers created by qgis_list_input()
(alternatively, repeat the same argument providing each layer in
turn) |
aggregates , field_mapping ,
tininputlayers , vectortilewriterlayers |
a nested list created by qgis_list_input() (unnamed
list) or qgis_dict_input() (named list) or a combination of
both (a native:aggregate example is found here).
These argument types are typically not supported by the legacy (no-JSON)
input method. |
point |
a vector of 2 point coordinates, a simple feature geometry
(sfg ) of class POINT , or an sfc
(geometry set) or sf object with exactly one
POINT geometry |
band |
an integer value |
extent |
a vector of the form c(xmin, xmax, ymin, ymax) , a
bbox object from {sf} , a
SpatExtent object from {terra} or an
Extent object from {raster} |
crs |
a crs object from {sf} , a CRS
object from {raster} or a WKT2 string (e.g. obtained with
terra::crs() ) |
coordinateoperation |
PROJ string of a coordinate operation, possibly obtained using
sf::sf_proj_pipelines() |
sink , vectorDestination |
a string: filepath to a vector file format (defaults to a temporary GeoPackage if argument is missing) |
rasterDestination |
a string: filepath to a raster file format (defaults to a temporary GeoTIFF file if argument is missing) |
An important group of spatial QGIS argument types are those used in
specifying an input layer. QGIS essentially needs a filepath string
here. If a spatial R object is provided instead,
{qgisprocess}
will:
{terra}
and {stars}
).However if the spatial R object simply results from reading a spatial
file and if its filepath is not included in the object’s
metadata (e.g. for sf
or SpatVector
objects),
then you will get most efficiency if you pass the original filepath
directly.
QGIS argument types | Supported R object |
---|---|
enum |
a character vector with one or more acceptable string values. A numeric vector with the corresponding index number(s) can also be provided, but contrary to the character vector its acceptability won’t be checked. |
range |
a vector of length 2, defining minimum and maximum value respectively |
file , field , layout ,
layoutitem , maptheme ,
execute_sql |
string |
string |
any string, including data-defined overriding
("field:..." or "expression:..." ) |
distance , number |
numeric (length 1), or a string for data-defined overriding
("field:..." or "expression:..." ) |
boolean |
logical (length 1), or a string for data-defined overriding
("field:..." or "expression:..." ) |
color |
a colour string that col2rgb() understands
(e.g. "pink1" or "#1A664D80" ), or a string for
data-defined overriding ("field:..." or
"expression:..." ) |
expression , raster_calc_expression |
a string (formatted as "expression:..." ). See
vignette("qgis_expressions") . |
matrix |
a matrix or a data frame with contents as required by the algorithm |
relief_colors |
a matrix or a data frame with three columns and with rows
corresponding to intervals. The first two columns define the interval
(minimum and maximum respectively) and the third column must be a colour
string that col2rgb() understands
(e.g. "pink1" or "#1A664D80" ). |
fileDestination , folderDestination |
a string: path to a file or directory (defaults to a temporary file or directory if argument is missing) |
The object returned by qgis_run_algorithm()
is a
qgis_result
. It contains one or several output
elements, shown when printing the qgis_result
object.
A single output element can be extracted with
qgis_extract_output()
, and it has one of the following
classes: qgis_outputFile
, qgis_outputFolder
,
qgis_outputLayer
, qgis_outputMultilayer
,
qgis_outputNumber
, qgis_outputRaster
,
qgis_outputString
or qgis_outputVector
.
These objects essentially represent a string. They can be passed
directly to an appropriate argument in a next
qgis_run_algorithm()
step.
Also note that the pipe-friendly function
qgis_run_algorithm_p()
(notice the _p
) is able
to accept an ‘incoming’ qgis_result
object as its first
argument. It will extract the appropriate output element on the fly.
A string is a character vector of length 1.↩︎