I wanting to create and display multiple driving routes calculated from two sets of coordinates (Start & Stop) that exist from within the same attribute table. I suppose its much like a batch process, taking each set of coordinates, calculating the route distance, display and then move onto the coordinates in the next row until there are no rows left. I'm looking to have a mass of routes cobwebbed in the display so that I can analyze fro crossing patterns.
Can this be done somehow please?
Solved! Go to Solution.
You can use the Network Analyst Route solver to do this. Here is a tutorial introducing the basics of the Route solver: https://pro.arcgis.com/en/pro-app/latest/help/analysis/networks/route-tutorial.htm
You do not need a batch process. You can calculate the Route between each start/stop pair all at once as long as you set up the problem correctly. To specifically create routes between paired start/stop locations, you need to generate a unique Route ID for each pair. When you load all the point locations into the Stops sublayer of the Route layer, map the Route IDs into the RouteID field. Each unique RouteID value in the Stops sublayer will be calculated as a separate route.
Example Stops:
StopID RouteID
Person A Route 1
Destination A Route 1
Person B Route 2
Destination B Route 2
The output will contain two routes, one from Person A to Destination A and another from Person B to Destination B.
Moved to the Network analyst space. It was languishing in the Spatial analyst
You can use the Network Analyst Route solver to do this. Here is a tutorial introducing the basics of the Route solver: https://pro.arcgis.com/en/pro-app/latest/help/analysis/networks/route-tutorial.htm
You do not need a batch process. You can calculate the Route between each start/stop pair all at once as long as you set up the problem correctly. To specifically create routes between paired start/stop locations, you need to generate a unique Route ID for each pair. When you load all the point locations into the Stops sublayer of the Route layer, map the Route IDs into the RouteID field. Each unique RouteID value in the Stops sublayer will be calculated as a separate route.
Example Stops:
StopID RouteID
Person A Route 1
Destination A Route 1
Person B Route 2
Destination B Route 2
The output will contain two routes, one from Person A to Destination A and another from Person B to Destination B.
Many thanks.