Introduction to Vector Data
Last updated on 2023-08-14 | Edit this page
Estimated time: 15 minutes
Overview
Questions
- What are the main attributes of vector data?
Objectives
- Describe the strengths and weaknesses of storing data in vector format.
- Describe the three types of vectors and identify types of data that would be stored in each.
About Vector Data
Vector data structures represent specific features on the Earth’s surface, and assign attributes to those features. Vectors are composed of discrete geometric locations (x, y values) known as vertices that define the shape of the spatial object. The organization of the vertices determines the type of vector that we are working with: point, line or polygon.
Points: Each point is defined by a single x, y coordinate. There can be many points in a vector point file. Examples of point data include: sampling locations, the location of individual trees, or the location of survey plots.
Lines: Lines are composed of many (at least 2) points that are connected. For instance, a road or a stream may be represented by a line. This line is composed of a series of segments, each “bend” in the road or stream represents a vertex that has a defined x, y location.
Polygons: A polygon consists of 3 or more vertices that are connected and closed. The outlines of survey plot boundaries, lakes, oceans, and states or countries are often represented by polygons.
Data Tip
Sometimes, boundary layers such as states and countries, are stored as lines rather than polygons. However, these boundaries, when represented as a line, will not create a closed object with a defined area that can be filled.
Identify Vector Types
The plot below includes examples of two of the three types of vector objects. Use the definitions above to identify which features are represented by which vector type.
State boundaries are polygons. The Fisher Tower location is a point. There are no line features shown.
Vector data has some important advantages:
- The geometry itself contains information about what the dataset creator thought was important
- The geometry structures hold information in themselves - why choose point over polygon, for instance?
- Each geometry feature can carry multiple attributes instead of just one, e.g. a database of cities can have attributes for name, country, population, etc
- Data storage can be very efficient compared to rasters
The downsides of vector data include:
- Potential loss of detail compared to raster
- Potential bias in datasets - what didn’t get recorded?
- Calculations involving multiple vector layers need to do math on the geometry as well as the attributes, so can be slow compared to raster math.
Vector datasets are in use in many industries besides geospatial fields. For instance, computer graphics are largely vector-based, although the data structures in use tend to join points using arcs and complex curves rather than straight lines. Computer-aided design (CAD) is also vector- based. The difference is that geospatial datasets are accompanied by information tying their features to real-world locations.
Vector Data Format for this Workshop
Like raster data, vector data can also come in many different
formats. For this workshop, we will use the Shapefile format. A
Shapefile format consists of multiple files in the same directory, of
which .shp
, .shx
, and .dbf
files
are mandatory. Other non-mandatory but very important files are
.prj
and shp.xml
files.
- The
.shp
file stores the feature geometry itself -
.shx
is a positional index of the feature geometry to allow quickly searching forwards and backwards the geographic coordinates of each vertex in the vector -
.dbf
contains the tabular attributes for each shape. -
.prj
file indicates the Coordinate reference system (CRS) -
.shp.xml
contains the Shapefile metadata.
Together, the Shapefile includes the following information:
- Extent - the spatial extent of the shapefile (i.e. geographic area that the shapefile covers). The spatial extent for a shapefile represents the combined extent for all spatial objects in the shapefile.
- Object type - whether the shapefile includes points, lines, or polygons.
- Coordinate reference system (CRS)
- Other attributes - for example, a line shapefile that contains the locations of streams, might contain the name of each stream.
Because the structure of points, lines, and polygons are different, each individual shapefile can only contain one vector type (all points, all lines or all polygons). You will not find a mixture of point, line and polygon objects in a single shapefile.
More Resources on Shapefiles
More about shapefiles can be found on Wikipedia. Shapefiles are often publicly available from government services, such as this page from the US Census Bureau or this one from Australia’s Data.gov.au website.
Why not both?
Very few formats can contain both raster and vector data - in fact, most are even more restrictive than that. Vector datasets are usually locked to one geometry type, e.g. points only. Raster datasets can usually only encode one data type, for example you can’t have a multiband GeoTIFF where one layer is integer data and another is floating-point. There are sound reasons for this - format standards are easier to define and maintain, and so is metadata. The effects of particular data manipulations are more predictable if you are confident that all of your input data has the same characteristics.
Key Points
- Vector data structures represent specific features on the Earth’s surface along with attributes of those features.
- Vector objects are either points, lines, or polygons.