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Random GeoJSON and WKT with randgeo

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randgeo generates random points and shapes in GeoJSON and WKT formats for use in examples, teaching, or statistical applications.

Points and shapes are generated in the long/lat coordinate system and with appropriate spherical geometry; random points are distributed evenly across the globe, and random shapes are sized according to a maximum great-circle distance from the center of the shape.

randgeo was adapted from https://github.com/tmcw/geojson-random to have a pure R implementation without any dependencies as well as appropriate geometry. Data generated by randgeo may be processed or displayed of with packages such as sf, wicket, geojson, wellknown, geojsonio, or lawn.

Package API:

setup

Install randgeo – and we'll need a few other packages for examples below.

install.packages("randgeo")
install.packages(c('leaflet', 'lawn'))

library(randgeo)

GeoJSON

Functions that start with geo are for creating GeoJSON data in JSON format. If you want to create an R list or data.frame, you can use jsonlite::fromJSON.

Random point

Evenly distributed across the sphere. The bbox option allows you to limit points to within long/lat bounds.

geo_point()
#> $type
#> [1] "FeatureCollection"
#>
#> $features
#> $features[[1]]
#> $features[[1]]$type
#> [1] "Feature"
#>
#> $features[[1]]$geometry
#> $features[[1]]$geometry$type
#> [1] "Point"
#>
#> $features[[1]]$geometry$coordinates
#> [1] 105.95999 -46.58477
#>
#>
#> $features[[1]]$properties
#> NULL
#>
#>
#>
#> attr(,"class")
#> [1] "geo_list"

Random polygon

Centered on a random point, with default maximum size

geo_polygon()
#> $type
#> [1] "FeatureCollection"
#>
#> $features
#> $features[[1]]
#> $features[[1]]$type
#> [1] "Feature"
#>
#> $features[[1]]$geometry
#> $features[[1]]$geometry$type
#> [1] "Polygon"
#>
#> $features[[1]]$geometry$coordinates
#> $features[[1]]$geometry$coordinates[[1]]
#> $features[[1]]$geometry$coordinates[[1]][[1]]
#> [1] -138.49434  -25.11895
#>
#> $features[[1]]$geometry$coordinates[[1]][[2]]
#> [1] -145.95566  -28.17623
#>
#> $features[[1]]$geometry$coordinates[[1]][[3]]
#> [1] -145.87817  -28.74364
#>
#> $features[[1]]$geometry$coordinates[[1]][[4]]
#> [1] -146.61325  -28.59748
#>
#> $features[[1]]$geometry$coordinates[[1]][[5]]
#> [1] -139.18167  -31.07703
#>
#> $features[[1]]$geometry$coordinates[[1]][[6]]
#> [1] -140.88748  -31.24708
#>
#> $features[[1]]$geometry$coordinates[[1]][[7]]
#> [1] -143.50402  -33.93551
#>
#> $features[[1]]$geometry$coordinates[[1]][[8]]
#> [1] -146.48114  -30.43185
#>
#> $features[[1]]$geometry$coordinates[[1]][[9]]
#> [1] -144.68315  -35.45465
#>
#> $features[[1]]$geometry$coordinates[[1]][[10]]
#> [1] -157.58084  -24.52897
#>
#> $features[[1]]$geometry$coordinates[[1]][[11]]
#> [1] -138.49434  -25.11895
#>
#>
#>
#>
#> $features[[1]]$properties
#> NULL
#>
#>
#>
#> attr(,"class")
#> [1] "geo_list"

Visualize your shapes with lawn.

lawn::view(jsonlite::toJSON(unclass(geo_polygon(count = 4)), auto_unbox = TRUE))

WKT

Functions prefixed with wkt create random Well-Known Text (WKT) data. These functions wrap the GeoJSON versions, but then convert the data to WKT.

Random point

wkt_point()
#> [1] "POINT (179.8795330 -29.1106238)"

Random polygon

wkt_polygon()
#> [1] "POLYGON ((-60.0870329 -12.9315478, -61.5073816 -25.3204334, -62.6987366 -24.5766272, -64.1853669 -24.0497260, -67.7152546 -27.4752321, -68.4190340 -26.9510818, -67.6018452 -21.5489551, -64.3083560 -21.6772242, -63.1471630 -21.9415438, -64.1137279 -14.2398013, -60.0870329 -12.9315478))"

Use case

Example of geospatial data manipulation, using randgeo, leaflet and lawn.

Steps:

library(randgeo)
library(lawn)
library(leaflet)

generate random data

set.seed(5)
polys <- randgeo::geo_polygon(count = 2, num_vertices = 4, bbox = c(-120, 40, -100, 50))

Get intersection of polygons

polysinter <- lawn::lawn_intersect(polys$features[[1]], polys$features[[2]])

map polygons

polysinter %>% lawn::view()

generate random points – clip points to polygon

pts <- randgeo::geo_point(count = 500, bbox = c(-120, 40, -100, 50))
pts <- lawn::lawn_within(
  points = lawn_featurecollection(pts),
  polygons = lawn_featurecollection(polysinter)
)

Draw polygon + points on map

polysinter %>%
  view() %>%
  addGeoJSON(geojson = jsonlite::toJSON(unclass(pts)))

Feedback

Let us know what you think! randgeo doesn't have any revdep's on CRAN yet, but is being used in one package on GitHub.

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