PROJ is a generic coordinate transformation software, that transforms coordinates from one coordinate reference system (CRS) to another. This includes cartographic projections as well as geodetic transformations.
For more information on the PROJ project please see the web page at:
The PROJ mailing list can be found at:
https://lists.osgeo.org/mailman/listinfo/proj/
See the NEWS.md file for changes between versions.
The following command line utilities are included in the PROJ package:
proj
: for cartographic projection of geodetic coordinates.cs2cs
: for transformation from one CRS to another CRS.geod
: for geodesic (great circle) computations.cct
: for generic Coordinate Conversions and Transformations.gie
: the Geospatial Integrity Investigation Environment.projinfo
: for geodetic object and coordinate operation queries.projsync
: for synchronizing PROJ datum and transformation support data.More information on the utilities can be found on the PROJ website.
Consult the Installation page of the official documentation. For builds on the master branch, install.rst might be more up-to-date.
Sources are distributed in one or more files. The principle elements
of the system are stored in a compressed tar file named proj-x.y.z.tar.gz
where
"x" will indicate the major release number, "y" indicates the minor release
number, and "z" indicates the patch number of the release.
In addition to the PROJ software package, distributions of datum
conversion grid files and PROJ parameter files are also available.
The grid package is distributed under the name proj-data-x.y.zip
,
where "x" is the major release version and "y" is the minor release
version numbers. The resource packages can be downloaded from the
PROJ website.
More info on the contents of the proj-data package can be found at the PROJ-data GitHub repository.
The resource file packages should be extracted to PROJ_LIB
where PROJ will find them after installation. The default location of
PROJ_LIB
on UNIX-based systems is /usr/local/share/proj
but it may
be changed to a different directory. On Windows you have to define
PROJ_LIB
yourself.
As an alternative to installing the data package on the local system, the resource files can be retrieved on-the-fly from the PROJ CDN. A network-enabled PROJ build, will automatically fetch resource files that are not present locally from the CDN.
See CITATION