Can someone walk through the proper way to set a projection and export the shapefile so it will properly open up in another GIS program? I'm having trouble.
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Welcome to gis.stackexchange! Please note that a good question on this site is expected to show some degree of research on your part, i.e. what you have tried and - if applicable - code so far. For more info, you can check our [faq]. – underdark Jul 12 '17 at 18:11
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thanks. this does work however when I export it the projection doesnt export. I checked the "Match project CRS" box in the Appearance tab. I'm using a custom projection – Francois Aug 16 '22 at 18:28
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- Open Qgis, Start A new Project (ctrl + N)
- Open Project Properties (Ctrl + Shift + P), Choose CRS (coordinate reference system) - depends where you are, what you want to draw etc.
- Create New shapefile, add whatever attribues for each entry you want. Your shapefile will inherit the projection system of your project. Save when you're done.
- If you want to reproject to another CRS: At the layer list, right click your newly created shapefile, and choose save-as. At the menu choose the other CRS. Hit save. You're done.
nickves
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Does a chart exist somewhere that shows you the proper coordinate system for what you want to show? – Mike Guillen Sep 24 '12 at 01:18
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1My tool of choise is the spatialrefence.org site. Since you were asking before for NY check those results. ( http://spatialreference.org/ref/?search=new+york ) Check what fit your needs and search it at Qgis by it's EPGS code. – nickves Sep 24 '12 at 01:22
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Thanks for all your help! Why is there multiple listings for the same thing though? Like Central, East, West, in feet, etc ... – Mike Guillen Sep 24 '12 at 01:41
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2oooh thats a tough one. They're not although they do look the same Short answer is because the earth is not flat ;) When we project, we project to a cartesian coordinate system (x,y) from a spherical coordinate system (λ,φ), and by definition we can't accurately project from a set of coordinates to another (π is irrational number afterall). You can search for more info about projections and datums and a partial asnwer here http://gis.stackexchange.com/questions/664/whats-the-difference-between-a-projection-and-a-datum – nickves Sep 24 '12 at 02:02