A look at geo-referencing in a world file – Triton TritonMap User Manual

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June 2004 DelphMap™ User's Manual

to the computer’s world of row-and-order scheme. Geo-referenced files can do
this if those files make all their geo-referenced information available in a separate
header file. (In fact, if the header file contains geo-referencing, the file is then a
special kind of header file called a world file.)

In the case of DelphMap, the world file has an extension of TFW and is created
whenever a TIFF or GeoTIFF file is exported from DelphMap.

Conveniently enough, this header file is an ASCII file, which can be easily read
and interpreted by a variety of software programs. If the user knows the geo-
referencing that is contained in a given geo-referenced image, the user can even
create the header file apart from the geo-referenced file, without having to run it
through some software that would extract the world geo-information contained in
the image.

A Look at Geo-Referencing in a World File

When your software displays a geo-referenced image on your screen, the
software capable of displaying the image looks for the geo-referencing in any of
these sources, in this order:

1. the world file (if available)

2. the header file (if your image file supports header files)

3. the row-and-column information in the image (also called an identity

transformation)

If more than one geo-referenced source is available, the software uses the
source having the highest priority (1 before 2 before 3 in the above list) and
disregards the other source or sources. An important implication of this rule of
precedence is that if your image doesn’t have a corresponding world file, and you
create one, the created world file takes precedence over the other two sources
because a world file always has highest priority.





Chapter 8: TIFF and GeoTIFF Differences

120

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