QGIS EPSG value differs from ArcGIS and spatialreference.org











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Background:



I have both QGIS 3.4.1 and ArcGIS Desktop 10.6.1 installed on the same laptop, Windows 10.



I have a polygon shapefile that is projected to Lambert Conformal Conic. Arc states that the shapefile's EPSG value is 102004. Here's a screenshot from the Arc Layer Properties:



enter image description here



spatialreference.org agrees with Arc; 102004 is Lambert Conformal Conic:



enter image description here



So far, so good!



Problem:



QGIS states that this layer's EPSG value is different: 100027. Here's a QGIS screenshot:



enter image description here



But wait, there's more! spatialreference.org does not have an entry for 100027. Here's a screenshot:



enter image description here



Question:



Why doesn't the QGIS EPSG value match Arc and spatialreference.org? What does the 100027 value represent?










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  • 102004 isn't an EPSG code, notice it is ESRI:102004 not EPSG:102004 in spatialreference.org and WKID:102004 Authority:Esri in the layer properties.
    – Luke
    Nov 25 at 21:12










  • QGIS does not state that it is an EPSG code. QGIS considers that CRS as somethign that does not belong to the EPSG database and gives it some number that is not reserved for EPSG codes. You can see that all the parameters are the same which means that this CRS behaves in the same way even it has a different code in QGIS.
    – user30184
    Nov 25 at 21:14








  • 1




    Also note that the proj definition string from ESRI:102004 from spatialreference.org is exactly the same as what QGIS shows you - +proj=lcc +lat_1=33 +lat_2=45 +lat_0=39 +lon_0=-96 +x_0=0 +y_0=0 +datum=NAD83 +units=m +no_defs so although QGIS doesn't know the name of this custom ESRI (non-EPSG) projection, functionally there is zero difference between ArcGIS and QGIS when you use this projection.
    – Luke
    Nov 25 at 23:02

















up vote
2
down vote

favorite












Background:



I have both QGIS 3.4.1 and ArcGIS Desktop 10.6.1 installed on the same laptop, Windows 10.



I have a polygon shapefile that is projected to Lambert Conformal Conic. Arc states that the shapefile's EPSG value is 102004. Here's a screenshot from the Arc Layer Properties:



enter image description here



spatialreference.org agrees with Arc; 102004 is Lambert Conformal Conic:



enter image description here



So far, so good!



Problem:



QGIS states that this layer's EPSG value is different: 100027. Here's a QGIS screenshot:



enter image description here



But wait, there's more! spatialreference.org does not have an entry for 100027. Here's a screenshot:



enter image description here



Question:



Why doesn't the QGIS EPSG value match Arc and spatialreference.org? What does the 100027 value represent?










share|improve this question
























  • 102004 isn't an EPSG code, notice it is ESRI:102004 not EPSG:102004 in spatialreference.org and WKID:102004 Authority:Esri in the layer properties.
    – Luke
    Nov 25 at 21:12










  • QGIS does not state that it is an EPSG code. QGIS considers that CRS as somethign that does not belong to the EPSG database and gives it some number that is not reserved for EPSG codes. You can see that all the parameters are the same which means that this CRS behaves in the same way even it has a different code in QGIS.
    – user30184
    Nov 25 at 21:14








  • 1




    Also note that the proj definition string from ESRI:102004 from spatialreference.org is exactly the same as what QGIS shows you - +proj=lcc +lat_1=33 +lat_2=45 +lat_0=39 +lon_0=-96 +x_0=0 +y_0=0 +datum=NAD83 +units=m +no_defs so although QGIS doesn't know the name of this custom ESRI (non-EPSG) projection, functionally there is zero difference between ArcGIS and QGIS when you use this projection.
    – Luke
    Nov 25 at 23:02















up vote
2
down vote

favorite









up vote
2
down vote

favorite











Background:



I have both QGIS 3.4.1 and ArcGIS Desktop 10.6.1 installed on the same laptop, Windows 10.



I have a polygon shapefile that is projected to Lambert Conformal Conic. Arc states that the shapefile's EPSG value is 102004. Here's a screenshot from the Arc Layer Properties:



enter image description here



spatialreference.org agrees with Arc; 102004 is Lambert Conformal Conic:



enter image description here



So far, so good!



Problem:



QGIS states that this layer's EPSG value is different: 100027. Here's a QGIS screenshot:



enter image description here



But wait, there's more! spatialreference.org does not have an entry for 100027. Here's a screenshot:



enter image description here



Question:



Why doesn't the QGIS EPSG value match Arc and spatialreference.org? What does the 100027 value represent?










share|improve this question















Background:



I have both QGIS 3.4.1 and ArcGIS Desktop 10.6.1 installed on the same laptop, Windows 10.



I have a polygon shapefile that is projected to Lambert Conformal Conic. Arc states that the shapefile's EPSG value is 102004. Here's a screenshot from the Arc Layer Properties:



enter image description here



spatialreference.org agrees with Arc; 102004 is Lambert Conformal Conic:



enter image description here



So far, so good!



Problem:



QGIS states that this layer's EPSG value is different: 100027. Here's a QGIS screenshot:



enter image description here



But wait, there's more! spatialreference.org does not have an entry for 100027. Here's a screenshot:



enter image description here



Question:



Why doesn't the QGIS EPSG value match Arc and spatialreference.org? What does the 100027 value represent?







qgis arcgis-desktop coordinate-system epsg






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share|improve this question













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edited Nov 25 at 21:23









Vince

14.3k32646




14.3k32646










asked Nov 25 at 20:40









Stu Smith

1,8551330




1,8551330












  • 102004 isn't an EPSG code, notice it is ESRI:102004 not EPSG:102004 in spatialreference.org and WKID:102004 Authority:Esri in the layer properties.
    – Luke
    Nov 25 at 21:12










  • QGIS does not state that it is an EPSG code. QGIS considers that CRS as somethign that does not belong to the EPSG database and gives it some number that is not reserved for EPSG codes. You can see that all the parameters are the same which means that this CRS behaves in the same way even it has a different code in QGIS.
    – user30184
    Nov 25 at 21:14








  • 1




    Also note that the proj definition string from ESRI:102004 from spatialreference.org is exactly the same as what QGIS shows you - +proj=lcc +lat_1=33 +lat_2=45 +lat_0=39 +lon_0=-96 +x_0=0 +y_0=0 +datum=NAD83 +units=m +no_defs so although QGIS doesn't know the name of this custom ESRI (non-EPSG) projection, functionally there is zero difference between ArcGIS and QGIS when you use this projection.
    – Luke
    Nov 25 at 23:02




















  • 102004 isn't an EPSG code, notice it is ESRI:102004 not EPSG:102004 in spatialreference.org and WKID:102004 Authority:Esri in the layer properties.
    – Luke
    Nov 25 at 21:12










  • QGIS does not state that it is an EPSG code. QGIS considers that CRS as somethign that does not belong to the EPSG database and gives it some number that is not reserved for EPSG codes. You can see that all the parameters are the same which means that this CRS behaves in the same way even it has a different code in QGIS.
    – user30184
    Nov 25 at 21:14








  • 1




    Also note that the proj definition string from ESRI:102004 from spatialreference.org is exactly the same as what QGIS shows you - +proj=lcc +lat_1=33 +lat_2=45 +lat_0=39 +lon_0=-96 +x_0=0 +y_0=0 +datum=NAD83 +units=m +no_defs so although QGIS doesn't know the name of this custom ESRI (non-EPSG) projection, functionally there is zero difference between ArcGIS and QGIS when you use this projection.
    – Luke
    Nov 25 at 23:02


















102004 isn't an EPSG code, notice it is ESRI:102004 not EPSG:102004 in spatialreference.org and WKID:102004 Authority:Esri in the layer properties.
– Luke
Nov 25 at 21:12




102004 isn't an EPSG code, notice it is ESRI:102004 not EPSG:102004 in spatialreference.org and WKID:102004 Authority:Esri in the layer properties.
– Luke
Nov 25 at 21:12












QGIS does not state that it is an EPSG code. QGIS considers that CRS as somethign that does not belong to the EPSG database and gives it some number that is not reserved for EPSG codes. You can see that all the parameters are the same which means that this CRS behaves in the same way even it has a different code in QGIS.
– user30184
Nov 25 at 21:14






QGIS does not state that it is an EPSG code. QGIS considers that CRS as somethign that does not belong to the EPSG database and gives it some number that is not reserved for EPSG codes. You can see that all the parameters are the same which means that this CRS behaves in the same way even it has a different code in QGIS.
– user30184
Nov 25 at 21:14






1




1




Also note that the proj definition string from ESRI:102004 from spatialreference.org is exactly the same as what QGIS shows you - +proj=lcc +lat_1=33 +lat_2=45 +lat_0=39 +lon_0=-96 +x_0=0 +y_0=0 +datum=NAD83 +units=m +no_defs so although QGIS doesn't know the name of this custom ESRI (non-EPSG) projection, functionally there is zero difference between ArcGIS and QGIS when you use this projection.
– Luke
Nov 25 at 23:02






Also note that the proj definition string from ESRI:102004 from spatialreference.org is exactly the same as what QGIS shows you - +proj=lcc +lat_1=33 +lat_2=45 +lat_0=39 +lon_0=-96 +x_0=0 +y_0=0 +datum=NAD83 +units=m +no_defs so although QGIS doesn't know the name of this custom ESRI (non-EPSG) projection, functionally there is zero difference between ArcGIS and QGIS when you use this projection.
– Luke
Nov 25 at 23:02












1 Answer
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When you add a new custom projection to QGIS, it allocates a unique code to it and stores it in a local sqlite database (srs.db)



The first one you add is numbered 100000, the second is 100001... and numbers are allocated sequentially each time you do this. As @user30184 says, this is to prevent duplicates.



Your 100027 doesn't correspond to the corresponding ArcGIS/spatialreference.org codes. It means that this is the 28th custom projection you've added (based on the uniqueness of the proj4 string for the projection)



The projection is shown as 'USER:100027', rather than 'ESRI:100027' or 'EPSG:100027', which suggests that it's not equivalent.






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    up vote
    4
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    When you add a new custom projection to QGIS, it allocates a unique code to it and stores it in a local sqlite database (srs.db)



    The first one you add is numbered 100000, the second is 100001... and numbers are allocated sequentially each time you do this. As @user30184 says, this is to prevent duplicates.



    Your 100027 doesn't correspond to the corresponding ArcGIS/spatialreference.org codes. It means that this is the 28th custom projection you've added (based on the uniqueness of the proj4 string for the projection)



    The projection is shown as 'USER:100027', rather than 'ESRI:100027' or 'EPSG:100027', which suggests that it's not equivalent.






    share|improve this answer



























      up vote
      4
      down vote













      When you add a new custom projection to QGIS, it allocates a unique code to it and stores it in a local sqlite database (srs.db)



      The first one you add is numbered 100000, the second is 100001... and numbers are allocated sequentially each time you do this. As @user30184 says, this is to prevent duplicates.



      Your 100027 doesn't correspond to the corresponding ArcGIS/spatialreference.org codes. It means that this is the 28th custom projection you've added (based on the uniqueness of the proj4 string for the projection)



      The projection is shown as 'USER:100027', rather than 'ESRI:100027' or 'EPSG:100027', which suggests that it's not equivalent.






      share|improve this answer

























        up vote
        4
        down vote










        up vote
        4
        down vote









        When you add a new custom projection to QGIS, it allocates a unique code to it and stores it in a local sqlite database (srs.db)



        The first one you add is numbered 100000, the second is 100001... and numbers are allocated sequentially each time you do this. As @user30184 says, this is to prevent duplicates.



        Your 100027 doesn't correspond to the corresponding ArcGIS/spatialreference.org codes. It means that this is the 28th custom projection you've added (based on the uniqueness of the proj4 string for the projection)



        The projection is shown as 'USER:100027', rather than 'ESRI:100027' or 'EPSG:100027', which suggests that it's not equivalent.






        share|improve this answer














        When you add a new custom projection to QGIS, it allocates a unique code to it and stores it in a local sqlite database (srs.db)



        The first one you add is numbered 100000, the second is 100001... and numbers are allocated sequentially each time you do this. As @user30184 says, this is to prevent duplicates.



        Your 100027 doesn't correspond to the corresponding ArcGIS/spatialreference.org codes. It means that this is the 28th custom projection you've added (based on the uniqueness of the proj4 string for the projection)



        The projection is shown as 'USER:100027', rather than 'ESRI:100027' or 'EPSG:100027', which suggests that it's not equivalent.







        share|improve this answer














        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer








        edited Nov 26 at 1:06









        Vince

        14.3k32646




        14.3k32646










        answered Nov 25 at 21:22









        Steven Kay

        16.3k21553




        16.3k21553






























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