You’re saying he doesn’t know what he’s talking about? He is saying you can’t really do GIS without multiple layers. This is basic knowledge for anyone working in GIS.
Explain how qgis doesn’t allow multiple layers. I have a project open right now with 6 layers. That to me seems like “multiple layers.”
And how would that concept even apply to postgis? A postgis query can operate over many tables.
And there are a variety of open source tools that allow multi-dimensional data structures. That’s multiple layers in multiple dimensions.
So I’m hoping, if there’s some aspect of a GIS layer I don’t understand, he can explain it. Qgis totally supports multiple layers in the sense that most people think of it.
He doesn’t have to divulge “secret information” to do this. If he is referring to some aspect of the qgis architecture he can just say so. Qgis is open source, their GitHub repo is clean and well documented. Im merely asking for him to explain why it handling multiple layers is somehow not really handling multiple layers.
I am not claiming to be world class expert in GIS and English is not my mother tongue. This comment by tarotuser is confusing me "Yeah, there's a massive amount of essential features just missing from OSM and QGIS. Like, even the most basic - layers. They don't even really exist in OSM side of things. Whereas if I'm doing travel-time-bands from medical centers, I absolutely must use multiple boundary layers." Layers have existed in QGIS for a long time. What are those "massive amount of essential features just missing from OSM and QGIS"?