qgis / QGIS

QGIS is a free, open source, cross platform (lin/win/mac) geographical information system (GIS)
https://qgis.org
GNU General Public License v2.0
9.82k stars 2.9k forks source link

🧪 QGIS tests Docker Status Build Status OpenSSF Scorecard OpenSSF Best Practices 🪟 MingW64 Windows 64bit Build DOI

QGIS is a full-featured, user-friendly, free-and-open-source (FOSS) geographical information system (GIS) that runs on Unix platforms, Windows, and MacOS.

Features

1. Flexible and powerful spatial data management

Example: Temporal animation

Example: Temporal animation

Example: 3D map view

Example: 3D map view

2. Beautiful cartography

Example: Map of Bogota, Colombia in the style of Starry Starry Night, by Andrés Felipe Lancheros Sánchez

Map of Bogota, Colombia in the style of Starry Starry Night

For more maps created with QGIS, visit the QGIS Map Showcase Flickr Group.

QGIS Map Showcase

3. Advanced and robust geospatial analysis

Example: Travel isochrones

Example: Travel isochrones

Example: Model designer

Example: model designer

4. Powerful customization and extensibility

Example: Style manager

Example: Style manager

Example: Plugins

Example: Plugins

5. QGIS Server

Headless map server -- running on Linux, macOS, Windows, or in a docker container -- that shares the same code base as QGIS.

Example: QGIS server WMS response

Example: QGIS Server response to a WMS request

Example: QGIS server WFS response

Example: QGIS Server response to a WFS Feature request

Under the hood

QGIS is developed using the Qt toolkit and C++, since 2002, and has a pleasing, easy to use graphical user interface with multilingual support. It is maintained by an active developer team and supported by vibrant community of GIS professionals and enthusiasts as well as geospatial data publishers and end-users.

Versions and release cycle

QGIS development and releases follow a time based schedule/roadmap. There are three main branches of QGIS that users can install. These are the Long Term Release (LTR) branch, the Latest Release (LR) branch, and the Development (Nightly) branch.

Every month, there is a Point Release that provides bug-fixes to the LTR and LR.

Free and Open Source

QGIS is released under the GNU Public License (GPL) Version 2 or any later version. Developing QGIS under this license means that you can (if you want to) inspect and modify the source code and guarantees that you, our happy user will always have access to a GIS program that is free of cost and can be freely modified.

QGIS is part of the Open-Source Geospatial Foundation (OSGeo), offering a range of complementary open-source GIS software projects.

Installing and using QGIS

Precompiled binaries for QGIS are available at the QGIS.org download page. Please follow the installation instructions carefully.

The building guide can be used to get started with building QGIS from source.

For installation of QGIS Server, see its getting started documentation.

Documentation

A range of documentation is available. This includes:

Help and support channels

There are several channels where you can find help and support for QGIS:

Get involved with the community

Bug reporting and bug fixing

You can help us by submitting bug reports or fixing bugs in the QGIS bug tracker.

New features and enhancements

If you wish to contribute patches you can:

  1. fork the project
  2. make your changes
  3. commit to your repository
  4. and then create a pull request.

    The development team can then review your contribution and commit it upstream as appropriate.

If you commit a new feature, add [FEATURE] to your commit message AND give a clear description of the new feature. The label Needs documentation will be added by maintainers and will automatically create an issue on the QGIS-Documentation repo, where you or others should write documentation about it.

For large-scale changes, you can open a QEP (QGIS Enhancement Proposal). QEPs are used in the process of creating and discussing new enhancements or policy for QGIS.

Translations

Please help translate QGIS to your language. At this moment about forty languages are already available in the Desktop user interface and about eighty languages are available in transifex ready to be translated.

The translation process is managed by the Translation Team and all the activities are done under the Transifex platform.

Other ways to contribute

If you are not a developer, there are many other possibilities that do not require programming skills to help QGIS to evolve. Check our project homepage for more information.