Administration Guide

The Purpose of Spatial Extender

Use Spatial Extender to create a geographic information system (GIS): a complex of objects, data, and applications that allows you to generate and analyze spatial information about geographic features. Geographic features include the objects that form the surface of the earth and the objects that occupy it. They make up both the natural environment (examples are rivers, forests, hills, and deserts) and the cultural environment (cities, residences, office buildings, landmarks, and so on).

Spatial information includes facts such as:

Spatial information, either by itself or in combination with traditional database output, can help you to design projects and make business and policy decisions. For example, suppose that a welfare district manager needs to verify which welfare applicants and recipients actually live within the area that the district services. Spatial Extender can derive this information from the serviced area's location and from the addresses of the applicants and recipients.

Or suppose that the owner of a restaurant chain wants to do business in nearby cities. To determine where to open new restaurants, the owner needs answers to such questions as: Where in these cities are there concentrations of the type of people who would frequent my restaurants? Where are the major highways? Where is the crime rate lowest? Where are my competitor's restaurants located? Spatial Extender can produce spatial information in visual displays to answer such questions, and the underlying database management system can generate labels and text to explain the displays.


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