This is for students in 12 arts...
Plzz anyone give illustration/overview for topic Globalisation in Political science
Answers
Answer:
In GIS, vector and raster are two different ways of representing spatial data. However, the distinction between vector and raster data types is not unique to GIS: here is an example from the graphic design world which might be clearer.
Raster data is made up of pixels (or cells), and each pixel has an associated value. Simplifying slightly, a digital photograph is an example of a raster dataset where each pixel value corresponds to a particular colour. In GIS, the pixel values may represent elevation above sea level, or chemical concentrations, or rainfall etc. The key point is that all of this data is represented as a grid of (usually square) cells. The difference between a digital elevation model (DEM) in GIS and a digital photograph is that the DEM includes additional information describing where the edges of the image are located in the real world, together with how big each cell is on the ground. This means that your GIS can position your raster images (DEM, hillshade, slope map etc.) correctly relative to one another, and this allows you to build up your map.
Vector data consists of individual points, which (for 2D data) are stored as pairs of (x, y) co-ordinates. The points may be joined in a particular order to create lines, or joined into closed rings to create polygons, but all vector data fundamentally consists of lists of co-ordinates that define vertices, together with rules to determine whether and how those vertices are joined.
Note that whereas raster data consists of an array of regularly spaced cells, the points in a vector dataset need not be regularly spaced.
In many cases, both vector and raster representations of the same data are possible:
Explanation: