Is this in the process of being fixed? It would be nice to make maps like this http://www.researchgate.net/post/How_do_you_create_this_visual_pseudo-3d_map_representation without having to buy and learn a graphics program.
Awesome idea Xander. Thank you. Although I only have 8 polygons to extrude over the whole USA. So mine won't look as cool as yours. Plus some of my polygons with small values are behind some with much larger values. It would cover the stack. I could create a new polygon shapefile with just squares at the center of each large region, then just join the region $ data to each of these new polygons. Then extrude just this layer so as not to have anything overlapping. And maybe extrude the regional polygons negatively so that it doesn't cover up the bar. Or I could export the tilted map with the regions shaded to a 2D png/jpg and insert it into a PowerPoint slide and insert each 3D bar graph over the regions with the original excel file. Its easy for my purposes and looks pretty cool for not having an expensive graphics program. I'll try both and see what goes over better with the boss. Thanks again.
Hi Xander,
Thanks for sharing your work. I recently just wanted to add that I have been playing with procedural solutions for this problem using CityEngine/ArcGIS Pro. So if anyone revisits this forum, you can try the same thing in another context. I think with CGA the main benefit is control over the setbacks when you have a lot of contiguous geography, but even so the application might be limited. Just wanted to share the possibility.