One of my users has asked for a "pan to layer" option.
The use case for this would be to move to the center of layer WITHOUT changing the current camera scale. For workflows that require us to print at specific scales, using "zoom to" adds a few extra clicks to then actually get the camera back to where you want it.
Current alternatives are:
So there is a way to do this in ArcGIS Pro.
1. At the top of the application on the Quick Access toolbar, click the down arrow to the right of the undo/redo buttons and select Customize the Quick Access toolbar.
2. In the Customize the Quick Access pane, select All commands from the "Choose commands from" dropdown.
3. In the Search box, type pan to
4. Of the 12 items filtered by pan to, I chose the 11th one - Pan to Selection (Selected features).
5. Click the Add-> button and then click OK
In ArcGIS Pro, you can select a feature or features in a map. The layer in the Contents Pane must also be selected. The newly added button on the Quick Access toolbar will be "on" - click that and the map pans to the selected features at the same scale as it was before. There are other pan to commands that work in attribute tables as well.
Thanks for the response, Robert.
I tested all 10 currently available to me in ver 3.3, and, unfortunately, all of them require a selection or are context-specific such as a topology error or device location, etc.
This request is to move the camera while maintaining scale, without having a selection active, and currently none of the offerings available fulfill that need.
@AlfredBaldenweck since this is being reported as an ArcMap equivalency request, can you share what command or workflow your user is using in ArcMap. I've poked around a bit and haven't found a "pan to layer" command (and its entirely possible I could just be missing it, so please help! :))
Thanks
That is absolutely fair, I was trying to scour the old documentation for this command since ArcMap was taken from us and even if I were to get a personal license, I wouldn't be able to download it.
My user swears it was there and I also vaguely remember it, but it just might be the case that it didn't exist after all and we're asking for something new.
Feel free to edit the title of this Idea, then, or I can do it instead if we're both in agreement that this isn't an equivalency request after all.
Thanks @AlfredBaldenweck I updated the title and the intro wording to the request. If you do find where/how it was available in ArcMap, do let us know. I can't find it.
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