RasterSelector
Selects specific bands and palettes of a raster for subsequent transformer operations.
Typical Uses
- Isolating specific bands or palettes to perform operations on.
How does it work?
The RasterSelector receives raster features and designates specific bands and palettes as “selected.”
Once a selection is performed, transformers that support raster selection will only affect the selected bands and palettes. Unselected elements are passed through unaltered, and remain in an unselected state until another RasterSelector operation is performed.
The default state of a raster feature is that all bands and palettes are selected - that is, after reading in the raster, subsequent raster transformers will operate on all bands and palettes. Raster transformers may support both band and palette selection, band selection only, or may be unaffected by it. Check a transformer’s documentation for raster selection support details.
Bands and palettes are selected using the band and palette indices, specified in a string. The string may either be entered as a parameter or provided as an attribute.
Selection Strings
The format of the string is B P (band number, then palette number, separated by a space). If the raster does not have palettes, only band numbers should be specified.
- Indices are zero-based, so the first band or palette is at index 0.
- The keyword ALL can be used in place of band and palette numbers to select all bands or all palettes on a specific band.
- Multiple bands or band-palette pairs are separated by a semicolon (;).
- Multiple palettes on one band are separated by a comma (,).
Selection String Examples
All bands |
ALL |
All bands and all palettes |
ALL ALL |
First palette of the first band of a raster |
0 0 |
First palette of the first band and first palette of the third band |
0 0;2 0 |
First three bands of the raster (without palettes) |
0;1;2 |
First three bands of the raster (with their palettes) |
0 ALL;1 ALL;2 ALL |
First two palettes on the first band |
0 0,1 |
- It is possible to select bands without selecting the attached palettes.
- It is NOT possible to select palettes without selecting the owning band.
- Specific palettes cannot be selected on ALL bands; for example, ALL 2.
In this example, we will remove the green band from an RGB raster. The original raster has three bands - red, green, and blue - and no palettes. Note the band index numbers, starting with zero (0). Green is Band 1.
The operation will take three steps (though the third is optional):
- Select the band to be removed.
- Remove the selected band.
- Perform another raster selection, to re-select the remaining bands for further processing (optional).
The raster is first routed into a RasterSelector. In the parameters dialog, Selection Mode is Band and Palette List.
The Band and Palette List is set to 1, which will select the green band (Band 1) only.
Next, the raster passes through a RasterBandRemover. This transformer has no parameters to set, and removes all currently selected bands.
After exiting the RasterBandRemover, the raster feature has no bands selected, as the previously selected band no longer exists. Selection does not generally affect writers, but if further processing is required, the remaining bands need to be re-selected.
Another RasterSelector is added, and the Band and Palette List is set to ALL, selecting all bands.
The output raster feature has only two bands - red and blue. Note that the band index numbering has been reset - Band 1 is now blue.
In this example, we will select a palette to be extracted into an attribute, using a RasterPaletteExtractor transformer. The source raster has one band, with two palettes - an RGB palette containing colors, and a string palette that contains labels. We are interested in the string palette.
Note that the only band is Band 0, and the string palette is Palette 1.
This operation will take two steps:
- Select the palette of interest, and the band it is on.
- Perform the extraction.
The raster is first routed into a RasterSelector. In the parameters dialog, Selection Mode is Band and Palette List.
The Band and Palette List is set to 0 1, representing Band 0 and Palette 1, separated by a space.
The next step is the RasterPaletteExtractor. In the parameters dialog, we set a name for a new attribute which will contain the contents of the selected palette, naming it _palette.
The output raster feature has a new attribute, with the contents of the selected palette.
Note that the state of the raster feature as it exits the RasterPaletteExtractor is still one band and one palette selected. If further processing was required, another RasterSelector may be needed to re-select all bands and palettes, as shown in the previous example.
A Band and Palette List of ALL ALL will re-select all bands and palettes.
Usage Notes
- This function overrides any existing selection on the raster. All unspecified bands and palettes on a raster after selection are treated as unselected for future operations.
- Selection is not considered by writers, so use the RasterBandSeparator and filtering to write subsets of the bands and palettes as individual features.
Choosing a Raster Transformer
FME has an extensive selection of transformers for working with raster data. They can be generally categorized as working with whole rasters, bands, cells or palettes, and those designed for workflow control or combing raster with vector data.
For information on raster geometry and properties, see Rasters (IFMERaster).
Working with Rasters
RasterCellOriginSetter | Sets the cell origin point within cells in a raster. |
RasterConvolver |
Applies a convolution filter (sometimes called a kernel or lens) to raster features and outputs the results. |
RasterExpressionEvaluator | Evaluates expressions on each cell in a raster or pair of rasters, including algebraic operations and conditional statements. |
RasterExtentsCoercer | Replaces the geometry of input raster features with a polygon covering either the extents of a raster or the extent of data within a raster. |
RasterGCPExtractor | Extracts Ground Control Point (GCP) coordinate system and point values from a raster feature and exposes them as attributes. |
RasterGCPSetter | Sets Ground Control Points (GCPs) on a raster, pairing cell positions with known coordinates. |
RasterGeoreferencer | Georeferences a raster by either known corner coordinates or origin, cell size, and rotation. |
RasterHillshader | Generates a grayscale shaded relief representation of terrain, based on elevation values. |
RasterInterpretationCoercer |
Alters the interpretation type of rasters, including all bands, and converts cell values if necessary. |
RasterMosaicker | Merges multiple raster features into a single raster feature. |
RasterPropertyExtractor | Extracts the geometry properties of a raster feature and exposes them as attributes. |
RasterPyramider | Resamples rasters to multiple resolutions, based on either number of levels or dimensions of the smallest output raster. |
RasterResampler | Resamples rasters, based on specified output dimensions, cell size in ground units, or percentage of original, and interpolates new cell values. |
RasterRotationApplier |
Rotates a raster feature according to its rotation angle property, interpolating new cell values, updating all other affected raster properties, and producing an output raster feature with a rotation angle of zero. |
RasterSubsetter | Clips raster features using pixel bounds instead of ground coordinates, and optionally adds cells around the perimeter. |
RasterTiler | Splits each input raster into a series of tiles by specifying either a tile size in cells/pixels or the number of tiles. |
RasterToPolygonCoercer | Creates polygons from input raster features. One polygon is output for each contiguous area of pixels with the same value in the input raster. |
WebMapTiler | Creates a series of image tiles that can be utilized by web mapping applications such as Bing™ Maps, Google Maps™, or Web Map Tile Service. This is done by resampling rasters to various different resolutions and then splitting them into tiles. |
Working with Bands
RasterBandAdder | Adds a new band to a raster feature. |
RasterBandCombiner | Merges coincidental raster features into a single output raster feature, preserving and appending all bands. |
RasterBandInterpretationCoercer |
Alters the interpretation type of individual raster bands, converting cell values if necessary. |
RasterBandKeeper |
Removes all unselected bands from a raster feature. |
RasterBandMinMaxExtractor | Extracts the minimum and maximum band values, palette keys, and palette values from a raster feature, and adds them to a list attribute. |
RasterBandNameSetter | Sets the band name of selected bands on a raster, making raster contents simpler to understand compared to band numbers. |
RasterBandNodataRemover | Removes the existing nodata identifier from selected bands of a raster feature. Any values previously equal to the nodata value are considered valid data. |
RasterBandNodataSetter | Sets a new nodata value on selected bands of a raster feature. |
RasterBandOrderer | Specifies the required order of bands in a raster. Bands are reordered according to the input band indices. |
RasterBandPropertyExtractor | Extracts the band and palette properties of a raster feature and exposes them as attributes. |
RasterBandRemover | Removes any selected bands from a raster feature. |
RasterBandSeparator | Separates bands or unique band and palette combinations, and outputs either individual raster features or a single new raster feature containing all combinations. |
RasterStatisticsCalculator | Calculates statistics on raster bands and adds the results as attributes. |
Working with Cells
RasterAspectCalculator |
Calculates the aspect (direction of slope) for each cell of a raster. Aspect is measured in degrees from 0 to 360, clockwise from north. |
RasterCellCoercer | Creates individual points or polygons for each cell in a raster, optionally extracting band values as z coordinates or attributes. |
RasterCellValueCalculator | Evaluates basic arithmetic , minimum, maximum or average operations on the cell values of a pair of rasters. |
RasterCellValueReplacer | Replaces a range of band values in a raster with a new single value. |
RasterCellValueRounder | Rounds off raster cell values. |
RasterSingularCellValueCalculator | Performs basic arithmetic operations on the cell values of a raster against a numeric value. |
RasterSlopeCalculator | Calculates the slope (maximum rate of change in z) for each cell of a raster. |
Working with Palettes
RasterPaletteAdder |
Creates a palette from an attribute, and adds this palette to all selected bands on a raster. |
RasterPaletteExtractor | Creates a string representation of an existing palette on a raster and saves it to an attribute. |
RasterPaletteGenerator | Generates a palette out of the selected band(s) of a raster. The output raster will have the selected band(s) replaced by a new band with a palette. |
RasterPaletteInterpretationCoercer |
Alters the interpretation type of raster palettes. |
RasterPaletteNodataSetter |
Identifies the palette key that matches a raster band’s nodata value, and sets a value on it. |
RasterPaletteRemover | Removes selected palette(s) from raster features. |
RasterPaletteResolver | Resolves the palette(s) on a raster by replacing cell values with their corresponding palette values. Palette values with multiple components, such as RGB, are broken down and the individual values assigned to multiple, newly-added bands. |
Workflow Control
RasterCheckpointer | Forces accumulated raster operations to be processed, saving the state to disk and releasing resources to tune performance or assist with memory limitations. |
RasterConsumer | Reads raster features for testing purposes, including any accumulated raster operations. No additional operations are performed, and nothing is done with the features. |
RasterExtractor | Serializes the geometry of a raster feature into a Blob attribute, encoding the contents according to a choice of common binary raster formats. |
RasterNumericCreator | Creates a numeric raster of specified size and resolution, with default cell values. |
RasterReplacer | Decodes a binary attribute containing encoded rasters stored as Blobs, replacing the feature’s geometry with the decoded raster. |
RasterRGBCreator | Creates a color raster feature of specified size, resolution, and interpretation type, with default cell values. |
RasterSelector |
Selects specific bands and palettes of a raster for subsequent transformer operations. |
Vectors and Rasters
ImageRasterizer | Creates a raster representation of vector or point cloud input features, using the fme_color attribute over a solid background fill for vector features. Point clouds may be rendered using their color or intensity components. |
NumericRasterizer | Creates a numeric raster representation of vector or point cloud input features, where cell values are taken from the z coordinates of the input features and overlaid on a uniform background. |
MapnikRasterizer | Generates a raster from input vector and raster features, with fine control over symbolization and labeling, using the Mapnik toolkit. |
PointOnRasterValueExtractor | Extracts the band and palette values from a raster at the location of one or more input points and sets them as attributes on the feature. |
RasterDEMGenerator | Produces a raster digital elevation model (DEM) by uniformly sampling a Delaunay triangulation generated from input points and breaklines. |
VectorOnRasterOverlayer | Rasterizes vector or point cloud features onto an existing raster. For vector features the fme_color attribute sets pixel color, and point clouds may be rendered using their color or intensity components. |
Configuration
Input Ports
This transformer accepts only raster features.
If a specific band or palette number is specified in the Band and Palette List parameter, that band or palette must exist on the input feature. If the specified band or palette number does not exist, an error will occur.
Output Ports
Raster features with specified bands and palettes in a selected state.
Non-raster features will be routed to the <Rejected> port, as well as invalid rasters.
Rejected features will have an fme_rejection_code attribute with one of the following values:
INVALID_GEOMETRY_TYPE
INVALID_RASTER_NO_BANDS
Rejected Feature Handling: can be set to either terminate the translation or continue running when it encounters a rejected feature. This setting is available both as a default FME option and as a workspace parameter.
Parameters
Selection Mode |
Band and Palette List: To specify explicit bands and palettes in the Band and Palette List parameter. Attribute: A band and palette selection string will be provided in an attribute. |
Band and Palette List | Enter a band and palette list string. |
Attribute | Specify the attribute containing the band and palette list string. |
Editing Transformer Parameters
Using a set of menu options, transformer parameters can be assigned by referencing other elements in the workspace. More advanced functions, such as an advanced editor and an arithmetic editor, are also available in some transformers. To access a menu of these options, click beside the applicable parameter. For more information, see Transformer Parameter Menu Options.
Defining Values
There are several ways to define a value for use in a Transformer. The simplest is to simply type in a value or string, which can include functions of various types such as attribute references, math and string functions, and workspace parameters. There are a number of tools and shortcuts that can assist in constructing values, generally available from the drop-down context menu adjacent to the value field.
Using the Text Editor
The Text Editor provides a convenient way to construct text strings (including regular expressions) from various data sources, such as attributes, parameters, and constants, where the result is used directly inside a parameter.
Using the Arithmetic Editor
The Arithmetic Editor provides a convenient way to construct math expressions from various data sources, such as attributes, parameters, and feature functions, where the result is used directly inside a parameter.
Conditional Values
Set values depending on one or more test conditions that either pass or fail.
Parameter Condition Definition Dialog
Content
Expressions and strings can include a number of functions, characters, parameters, and more - whether entered directly in a parameter or constructed using one of the editors.
These functions manipulate and format strings. | |
A set of control characters is available in the Text Editor. | |
Math functions are available in both editors. | |
These operators are available in the Arithmetic Editor. | |
These return primarily feature-specific values. | |
FME and workspace-specific parameters may be used. | |
Working with User Parameters | Create your own editable parameters. |
Reference
Transformers that support band or band and palette selection:
RasterBandInterpretationCoercer
RasterPaletteInterpretationCoercer
Processing Behavior |
|
Feature Holding |
No |
Dependencies | None |
FME Licensing Level | FME Professional Edition and above |
Aliases | RasterBandSelector, RasterPaletteSelector |
History | |
Categories |
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Examples may contain information licensed under the Open Government Licence – Vancouver