I’m supervising an MSc student for her thesis this summer, and the work she’s doing with me is going to involve a fair amount of programming, in the context of remote sensing & GIS processing. She’s got experience programming in IDL from a programming course during the taught part of her Masters, but has no experience of Python.
I’ve just sent her an email with links to some useful resources, but in the spirit of Matt Might’s Blog tips for busy academics, I thought it would be worth doing a ‘reply to public’, and putting the list of resources here. So, here goes…
- Software Carpentry Python course:- this is designed for people new to programming, so some of it will be very easy for you. However, it takes you through a good example of scientific programming with Python, including plotting graphs and dealing with arrays. I suggest that you use the Jupyter Notebook to run through this – there are instructions on how to do that in the course, and there is a brief intro to the notebook in this YouTube video (start at approx 3 minutes – the stuff before that is irrelevant for you)
Geoprocessing with Python using Open Source GIS: This is a very good set of slides and tutorials – along with assignments, homework tasks and solutions – from a course run at Utah State University. Unfortunately it is now very old – it was written in 2008/9 – and so it refers to a number of out of date things (such as the ‘numeric’ library for Python, which has been replaced by numpy). A lot of the GDAL content is still useful though – for example, this set of slides on reading raster data with GDAL is pretty good.
There are various good tutorials from conferences such as SciPy (Scientific Python) and FOSS4G (Free and Open Source Software for Geospatial). For example, you can watch a video of a three-hour tutorial from SciPy 2015 called Geospatial Data with Open Source tools in Python, and you can find the slides and other resources here. This goes into quite a lot of depth, and new Python programmers may find it all quite daunting – but it demonstrates the nice modern ways of doing things (using libraries like Fiona and rasterio) rather than the less-nice and lower-level GDAL library.
There are also a few useful resources for switching from IDL to Python. Specifically:
- A Numpy reference for IDL users: (Numpy is the Python library that provides functions to manipulate arrays – unlike IDL, this isn’t included by default in Python – but it does come with the Anaconda distribution I mentioned above).
I wrote a blog post comparing a set of ‘Ten Little Programs’ in IDL with equivalents in Python, which should give you an idea of the similarities and differences, and how you can translate some of your code.
This is a very short list of a few resources – I’m sure there are some better ones out there, and so please let me know if you’ve got any recommendations!