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Segments Versus Polygons

Geographic objects represented by vector data might or might not be formatted as polygons. Imagine two variables, latcoast and loncoast, that correspond to a sequence of points that caricature the coast of the island of Great Britain. If this data returns to its starting point, then a polygon describing Great Britain exists. This data might be plotted as a patch or as a line, and it might be logically employed in calculations as either.

Now suppose that you want to represent the Anglo-Scottish border, proceeding from the west coast at Solway Firth to the east coast at Berwick-upon-Tweed. This data can only be properly defined as a line, defined by two or more points, which you can represent with two more variables, latborder and lonborder. When plotted together, the two pairs of variables can form a map. The patch of Great Britain plus the line showing the Scottish border might look like two patches or regions, but there is no object that represents England and no object that represents Scotland, either in the workspace or on the map.

In order to represent both regions properly, the Great Britain polygon needs to be split at the two points where the border meets it, and a copy of latborder and lonborder concatenated to both lines (placing one in reverse order). The resulting two polygons can be represented separately (e.g., in four variables named latengland, lonengland, latscotland, and lonscotland) or in two variables that define two polygons each, delineated by NaNs (e.g., latuk, lonuk).

Two polygons representing Great Britain. The second polygon includes a line that represents the Scottish border.

The distinction between line and polygon data might not appear to be important, but it can make a difference when you are performing geographic analysis and thematic mapping. For example, polygon data can be treated as line data and displayed with functions such as linem, but line data cannot be handled as polygons unless it is restructured to make all objects close on themselves.

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