Monday, November 28, 2016

Matt Strimas-Mackey - Fishnets and Honeycomb: Square vs. Hexagonal Spatial Grids

In spatial analysis, we often define grids of points or polygons to sample, index, or partition a study area. For example, we may want to overlay a study area with a grid of points as part of some regular spatial sampling scheme, divide a large region into smaller units for indexing purposes as with UTM grid zones, or slice the study area into subunits over which we summarize a spatial variable. In the latter scenario, the most common approach is to use a raster format, in which a grid of uniform square cells is overlayed on a study area and each cell is assigned a value for the spatial variables of interest. In ecology and conservation applications, variables may include number of individuals of a threatened species per grid cell, elevation, mean annual rainfall, or land use.
more

Thursday, November 24, 2016

Martin Pohlmann - Our Journey to Git

Martin Pohlmann details his experience migrating from Subversion to Git, citing his plan and his results. In this post he shares some technical aspects of his journey with focus on the biggest obstacles he had to master: Combining multiple Subversion repositories into one Git repository, shrinking the repository size, dealing with Subversion externals and resulting changes in our development process. More

Friday, November 18, 2016

Saturday, November 5, 2016

DZone - Continuous Delivery: You're Doing It Wrong!

In this article, Alex Martins discusses why you should focus on building quality into an application instead of saving it for testing later.

More

DZone - BDD: Cucumber in Action

Cucumber is an open-source tool that is used to support Behavior Driven Development with plain text specifications. Implementations of Cucumber exist for number of platforms, including Java.
More