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Simplifying Line And Polygon Shapefiles



The Mapperz blog has a new post on ArcGIS 9.2’s Simplify Polygon feature:

“Simplifies a polygon by removing small fluctuations or extraneous bends from its boundary while preserving its essential shape.”

A nice tool to have to simplify polygon shapefiles with too high a level of detail. But suppose you don’t have ArcGIS 9.2 (at around $1500 list)? There’s a free web-based shapefile utility that does something similar.

MapShaper is a Flash-based utility that will take your line or polygon shapefile (16MB maximum), and let you:

  • “edit linework interactively”
  • “simplify and smooth excess detail”
  • “export edited layers in multiple formats”

Here’s a screenshot showing a subsection of the sample world data set that you can load to try out the program, part of the Gulf of Mexico/Caribbean Sea area:

simplifying shapefile with MapShaper

The controls on the bottom allow you to zoom in and out, add, subtract, and “lock” shapefile vertices so they won’t disappear during simplification (to give you some control over which features won’t get “simplified out”), and set the simplification level using the slide control. Controls on the left let you select the simplification algorithm, leave the original shapefile lines up for comparison purposes, and set the line drawing display mode. Here’s the same map as above, but with the simplification set at 50%:

simplifying shapefile with MapShaper

As a bonus, the number of vertex coordinates is reduced to 13% of the original, making it smaller and faster-loading. Once you’re done, you can export the simplified data as a shapefile, or as an Encapsulated PostScript (EPS) file for printing. Because it’s done in Flash, MapShaper should run on any OS with a browser that supports Flash.

Other posts in the GIS Tools series

  1. Converting E00 Vector Data To Shapefiles - A Free And Fairly Painless Approach
  2. Simplifying Line And Polygon Shapefiles
  3. Converting US Census TIGER Data Into Shapefiles For Free
  4. Converting Shapefiles and ArcINFO Coverages To AutoCAD DXF Format
  5. Converting Point Shapefiles To Text/Spreadsheet Format
  6. Converting Text/Spreadsheet Files To Point Shapefile Format
  7. An Easier Way To Convert Shapefiles to Text/Spreadsheet Format
  8. Converting Text/Spreadsheet Data To Line/Area Shapefiles
  9. Full Resolution Raster Map Combining, Subsetting And Export With The TatukGIS Viewer
  10. Viewing Vector Data In The TatukGIS Viewer
  11. The LizardTech Stand-Alone MRSID Viewer
  12. Converting Raster Area Images Into Polygon Shapefiles
  13. SAGA GIS 2.0 Released
  14. ILWIS GIS Is Now Open Source
  15. AVHRR Analysis Add-On For ILWIS
  16. Advanced Image Mosaicking With Regeemy
  17. A Free GIS Viewer (And Cheap GIS Editor) For Windows Mobile Systems
  18. Updates For MapWindow And Saga GIS Programs
  19. Updates For Two Open-Source GIS Programs
  20. Putting Together A Basic Linux GIS Workstation
  21. Free Online Courses For Open Source GIS
  22. GIS-Oriented Linux Distributions
  23. Tabular Terrain Elevation Data
  24. Quick Data Gridding With QuikGrid
  25. A Good Introduction To Geospatial Data Analysis
  26. Converting Digital Elevation Models To Shapefile/DXF Contours
  27. Fixing "Broken" Shapefiles
  28. A Simple DBF Editor
  29. Two Online Vector GIS/GPS/KML Conversion Utilities
  30. Another Shapefile Repair Tool
  31. Quantum GIS (qGIS) Version 0.10 Released
  32. Online Raster Map Georeferencing/Registration With Map Rectifier
  33. Using The Demo Version Of Global Mapper As A Raster/Vector Data Viewer
  34. New Stable Release Of MapWindow GIS
  35. The Big List Of Free Metadata Software I
  36. The Big List Of Free Metadata Software II
  37. GIS On A Stick
  38. ILWIS 3.5 Released
  39. European Open Street Map (OSM) Data In Shapefile Format
  40. GISVM - A Virtual Ubuntu Linux GIS Workstation
  41. A Basic Raster Image GeoMetaData Extractor/Viewer


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6 Responses to “Simplifying Line And Polygon Shapefiles”


  1. 1 Rick Marshall

    You have a wonderful blog and do a great job of postinig lots of very useful information. Please keep it coming!

  2. 2 Anonymous

    Worse - it’s not available in ArcView. Once you shell out $25,000 or so for ArcINFO, then you can use the feature. Thanks!

  3. 3 Kurt

    This site is dead. You cant save your simplifyed data

  4. 4 Patricia

    Hello
    When we simplify our polygons using this method , polygons and small islands disapear. Can we put a limit on that and not allow number of points in each polygons go below a certain number? so we can stop disappearing of polygons.

  5. 5 Leszek Pawlowicz

    You can adjust the simplification level so as not to lose too much detail.

  1. 1 arcview convert line to polygon

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