POST
|
The Using Feature Layers | ArcGIS for Developers section in the guide has documentation on the properties and how to access them. As the API works against several versions of ArcGIS Enterprise and ArcGIS Online, the specific properties are not hard-coded but dynamic depending upon the capabilities of the backend GIS you are working against.
... View more
04-08-2020
01:57 AM
|
1
|
0
|
1298
|
POST
|
OAuth2/SAML is an interactive workflow and we do not know what identity provider may be configured and how it prompts the user to sign in. We have some special logic to handle non-interactive login given the username and password if the configured identify provider is a particular one and responds to our requests with a known format. This is the identity provider configured on our Python API demo portal (python.playground.esri.com) and a few other Esri portals. The approach we use to login non-interactly on such portals is similar to the one described at https://www.prowestgis.com/there-and-back-again/. However, it’s more likely that we wont encounter such portals in the wild and we fall back to interactive login if that is the case. This is what you are experiencing. The recommended suggestion for non-interactive login for scripts is to use built-in users instead of SAML.
... View more
10-02-2019
09:49 AM
|
0
|
1
|
5168
|
POST
|
OAuth2/SAML is an interactive workflow and we do not know what identity provider may be configured and how it prompts the user to sign in. We have some special logic to handle non-interactive login given the username and password if the configured identify provider is a particular one and responds to our requests with a known format. This is the identity provider configured on our Python API demo portal (python.playground.esri.com) and a few other Esri portals. The approach we use to login non-interactly on such portals is similar to the one described at https://www.prowestgis.com/there-and-back-again/. However, it’s more likely that we wont encounter such portals in the wild and we fall back to interactive login if that is the case. This is what you are experiencing. The recommended suggestion for non-interactive login for scripts is to use built-in users instead of SAML.
... View more
10-02-2019
09:36 AM
|
0
|
3
|
2048
|
POST
|
I am unable to reproduce it with v1.5. What version of the Python API are you using?
... View more
10-22-2018
05:51 AM
|
0
|
5
|
1372
|
POST
|
When using IWA, we don't provide the username and password altogether. The code should be gis = GIS(portal) # IWA instead of gis = GIS(portal, '', '') # IWA Can you confirm you're using the first way of connecting using IWA?
... View more
10-22-2018
05:44 AM
|
0
|
1
|
1170
|
IDEA
|
The GitHub repo for the SDK includes the API documentation at arcgis-python-api/apidoc at master · Esri/arcgis-python-api · GitHub Feedback is welcome using both GitHub issues and Pull Requests.
... View more
10-22-2018
05:39 AM
|
0
|
0
|
1323
|
POST
|
Pandas is the de-facto standard for working with tabular data using Python. This is the primary reason for extending Pandas to work with spatial data. Users who are already familiar with Pandas can use pandorable code to work with feature data. Pandas is also a common denominator between ArcGIS Feature Layers / spatial data (From shapefiles and file geodatabases) and many Python libraries like scikit-learn. It provides a higher level API than numpy and is the preferred way to work with non-numeric data, whereas numpy might be considered better for numeric data. Finally, it's a matter of taste - I like Pandas but Dan apparently has a preference for numpy. I don't quite understand how "import pandas as pd" is more trouble than "import numpy as np". Both are available in the standard anaconda environment.
... View more
10-22-2018
05:37 AM
|
3
|
1
|
1714
|
POST
|
You can use itemobject.share(True) to make it public.
... View more
07-05-2018
06:35 AM
|
1
|
1
|
765
|
POST
|
The script can be run as a genera scheduled task using Task Scheduler on Windows and cron on Linux. You could follow the blog post at https://www.esri.com/arcgis-blog/products/product/analytics/scheduling-a-python-script-or-model-to-run-at-a-prescribed-t… for tips on how to do this except that you'd use the Python.exe from the environment that has ArcGIS API for Python installed in it. Refer to Schedule [Virtualenv Dependent] Python Script with Windows Task Scheduler - Super User for how to do this with conda.
... View more
04-18-2018
11:09 PM
|
1
|
22
|
3253
|
POST
|
Can you try specifying just the hostname without http:// in the proxy_host parameter?
... View more
03-28-2018
08:57 AM
|
1
|
1
|
654
|
POST
|
Thank you for reporting this issue. We will investigate it and work on a fix.
... View more
03-28-2018
08:55 AM
|
1
|
0
|
1289
|
POST
|
Thanks for letting us know. We've created a bug report and will look into fixing these issues.
... View more
03-26-2018
10:09 PM
|
0
|
1
|
969
|
IDEA
|
Can you post which parts are broken on the Community forum or the SDK repo? We'll look into fixing them.
... View more
03-26-2018
12:22 PM
|
0
|
1
|
2212
|
POST
|
The current conda install lays down ipywidgets v7.0, which is incompatible with the map widget in ArcGIS API for Python v1.4.0 A workaround is to `conda uninstall ipywidgets` and then `conda install -c esri arcgis`. Alternatively, you can create a new conda environment, activate it, and install the ArcGIS API for Python in the new environment, and then the map widget should work. We are working on updating the widget to work with the latest version of ipywidget.
... View more
03-19-2018
10:58 AM
|
0
|
0
|
645
|
Title | Kudos | Posted |
---|---|---|
1 | 07-25-2017 07:26 AM | |
1 | 10-11-2017 06:06 AM | |
1 | 07-25-2017 07:29 AM | |
2 | 08-29-2017 11:26 AM | |
2 | 08-29-2017 09:51 AM |
Online Status |
Offline
|
Date Last Visited |
02-16-2024
03:28 AM
|