TAP Tile Coverage Population Count

Q:  Can I use my TAP Tile coverage study to do a population count in the coverage area?

A:  For TAP 5.0.1030 systems with a Maintenance Subscription date of November 30, 2004, or later, TAP Coverage studies can be used to perform population counts in SoftWright’s HDMapper program.

Note that all values shown in this article are for illustration purposes only.  It is important that you use good engineering judgment to determine the values that are appropriate for your equipment and specific application.

(Population counts are one common use of the more general Data Summation function available in HDMapper.  Population counts are provided as a separate function as described in this FAQ.)

You must first setup and run the Area Coverage Tile study and plot the coverage area with HDMapper.  The Tile study must be run with the tile points plotted as “Filled Tiles”.  Tile studies written as “Symbol Points”, or Radial studies (which always use Symbol Points) cannot be used for population counts.  For population counts using Contour coverage areas, see the article on TAP Contour Coverage Population Counts.

The shapefiles created by Tile studies run with earlier versions of TAP (before TAP 5.0.1030) cannot be used with the population count function.  You do not need to run the study again, but you can use the TAP “Export Coverage to Shapefile” function to create a new shapefile with the new version of the software.  This new shapefile can be used for the population count.  (Be sure to select “Write rectangles” in the Export function for the type of file to write.)

Likewise, if you want to use a Tile study that was created with a “Symbol Points” shapefile, you can use the Export function to create a new shapefile with “Filled Tiles” for the same study without running the study again.

You should be sure the population layer(s) you want to use are included in the map.  The population layers can be included automatically with the “Set TAP5 Default Layers” function, or you can add layers to the map manually.

This FAQ describes Coverage Population Counts for Tile coverage studies.  For population counts using Aggregate Coverage areas, see the article on TAP Aggregate Coverage Population Counts.

Population Count Setup

When the map includes the coverage and population layers you want to use, click the “Coverage Pop Count” button:

The Data Summation form will be displayed:

Layer to Use

First, use the pulldown “Layer” list to choose the layer you want to use as the area to count.  In this example, the map contains only a single coverage layer:

(Note in the more general Data Summation function you can select any polygon area layer.)

Data Field to Use

Next, select the data value field to use.  For standard coverage studies, the only field available for coverage population counts is the “DBU_FIELD” indicating the field strength computed:

(Note in the more general Data Summation function you can select any data field in the layer.)

Data Field Range

When the data field is selected, the number of values on the layer is shown.  If the data field is a numeric type (as in the case of the DBU_FIELD data), the range of values is also shown.

Select the range of values to include in the counting area.  The initial default values are the minimum and maximum values found in the layer. 

For a Tile study (as in this example), the range of values determines the tile areas to be used for the population count.  When you specify a range of values, only the population points that are included in tile areas within that field strength range are counted.

You can enter values manually for the “From” and “To” values to use.  You can also double-click the ‘From’ or ‘To’ values to open the TAP Mobile Facility database:

The Mobile Facility lookup enables you to select or create records that reflect the required field values for your particular system and hardware and operating conditions.

When you close the Mobile Facility lookup, the selected value is inserted into the ‘From’ or ‘To’ value you double-clicked:

This feature gives you great flexibility in selecting the range of values in the tile study to use for the population count. 

In this example, value selected from the Mobile Facility lookup as the minimum value to use is the same as the value used in plotting the coverage study:

(Remember that these values are for illustration only.)

In this example, the population count would include only those areas with a field strength high enough for the specified required field values.  You could select other ‘From’ and ‘To’ values for the range to count the population in other field strength ranges for the study. 

Layers to Count

Determine the layer(s) you want to count.  For Coverage Population counts, the layers listed only included those layers that are recognized as containing population information, such as the U.S. Census Block Centroid layers.

(Note in the more general Data Summation function all “point” type layers are displayed and you can select data fields in any of the layers.)

Fields to Count

Select the data field(s) you want to count in each layer by marking the checkbox for that data field.  For Coverage Population counts, the fields listed only include those fields that are recognized as containing population information, such as the “POP100” field in the Block Centroid files.

(Note in the more general Data Summation function all fields in the “point” type layers are displayed and you can select any data fields in any of the layers.)

Sum All Values

If more than one data field is to be counted you have the option to sum all the fields by marking the “Sum all values” checkbox.

For population counts, only population fields are available for counting, so summing all the values is a useful function

In the more general Data Summation function, a variety of fields are available and may be selected and you may choose not to sum the “apples and oranges” totals for each field.

Population Count

When the information on the Data Summation form is set up as desired, click the Continue button.

The program will begin the population count, and an information form will be displayed:

 

When the count is completed, the results will be displayed in Notepad:

The information includes he name of the selection layer, the range information, and the population count for each population layer.

The information is written to an ASCII file in the same folder as the selection layer.  The file is written in a sub folder named “DATA SUMMATION”:

The file has the same name as the shapefile for the selection layer, with the TXT file extent.

You can save the file to a different name, or copy and paste the information into other documents, such as Microsoft Word.

If multiple coverage population counts are done using the same selection layer shapefile, the information will be appended to this file.

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