This is the command r.regiongrass that can be run in the OnWorks free hosting provider using one of our multiple free online workstations such as Ubuntu Online, Fedora Online, Windows online emulator or MAC OS online emulator
PROGRAM:
NAME
r.region - Sets the boundary definitions for a raster map.
KEYWORDS
raster, metadata
SYNOPSIS
r.region
r.region --help
r.region [-cd] map=name [region=name] [raster=name] [vector=name] [n=value]
[s=value] [e=value] [w=value] [align=name] [--help] [--verbose] [--quiet]
[--ui]
Flags:
-c
Set from current region
-d
Set from default region
--help
Print usage summary
--verbose
Verbose module output
--quiet
Quiet module output
--ui
Force launching GUI dialog
Parameters:
map=name [required]
Name of raster map to change
region=name
Set region from named region
raster=name
Set region to match this raster map
vector=name
Name of vector map
Set region to match this vector map
n=value
Value for the northern edge
s=value
Value for the southern edge
e=value
Value for the eastern edge
w=value
Value for the western edge
align=name
Raster map to align to
DESCRIPTION
The r.region program allows the user to manage the boundaries of a raster map. These
boundaries can be set by the user directly and/or set from a region definition file
(stored under the windows directory in the user’s current mapset), a raster or vector map,
or a 3dview file.
The align parameter sets the current resolution equal to that of the named raster map, and
align the boundaries to a row and column edge in the named map. Alignment only moves the
existing boundaries outward to the edges of the next nearest cell in the named raster map
-- not to the named map’s edges. To perform the latter function, use the raster=name
option.
NOTES
After all updates have been applied, the raster map’s resolution settings are recomputed
from the boundaries and the number of rows and columns in the raster map.
The n=value may also be specified as a function of its current value: n=n+value increases
the current northing, while n=n-value decreases it. This is also true for s=value,
e=value, and w=value.
EXAMPLES
Assign absolute coordinates to map:
r.region map=mymap n=220750 s=220000 w=638300 e=639000
Shift map (using offset, here by 100 map units in two directions):
r.region map=mymap n=n+100 e=e+100 w=w+100 s=s+100
Use r.regiongrass online using onworks.net services