geos_combine {sf} | R Documentation |
Combine or union feature geometries
Description
Combine several feature geometries into one, without unioning or resolving internal boundaries
Usage
st_combine(x)
st_union(x, y, ..., by_feature = FALSE, is_coverage = FALSE)
Arguments
x |
object of class |
y |
object of class |
... |
ignored |
by_feature |
logical; if |
is_coverage |
logical; if |
Details
st_combine
combines geometries without resolving borders, using c.sfg (analogous to c for ordinary vectors).
If st_union
is called with a single argument, x
, (with y
missing) and by_feature
is FALSE
all geometries are unioned together and an sfg
or single-geometry sfc
object is returned.
If by_feature
is TRUE
each feature geometry is unioned individually.
This can for instance be used to resolve internal boundaries after polygons were combined using st_combine
.
If y
is provided, all elements of x
and y
are unioned, pairwise if by_feature
is TRUE, or else as the Cartesian product of both sets.
Unioning a set of overlapping polygons has the effect of merging the areas (i.e. the same effect as iteratively unioning all individual polygons together). Unioning a set of LineStrings has the effect of fully noding and dissolving the input linework. In this context "fully noded" means that there will be a node or endpoint in the output for every endpoint or line segment crossing in the input. "Dissolved" means that any duplicate (e.g. coincident) line segments or portions of line segments will be reduced to a single line segment in the output. Unioning a set of Points has the effect of merging all identical points (producing a set with no duplicates).
Value
st_combine
returns a single, combined geometry, with no resolved boundaries; returned geometries may well be invalid.
If y
is missing, st_union(x)
returns a single geometry with resolved boundaries, else the geometries for all unioned pairs of x[i]
and y[j]
.
See Also
st_intersection, st_difference, st_sym_difference
Examples
nc = st_read(system.file("shape/nc.shp", package="sf"))
st_combine(nc)
plot(st_union(nc))