Select to view content in your preferred language

Create line by bearing and distance

279
8
Jump to solution
a month ago
MichaelPorter2
Occasional Contributor

Much of what I do involves retracing historical metes & bounds and surveys. In ArcMap I was able to do this using "COGO Line", with the result being a simple line in an established feature class.

When I try to duplicate this procedure in ArcGis Pro (3.3) I end up with a separate class showing the lines as drawn, but labeled (which I do not want) and the whole procedure is much more cumbersome than I am used to.

Is there something I am missing?

2 Solutions

Accepted Solutions
Robert_LeClair
Esri Notable Contributor

You can turn off the labels by selecting the layer in the Contents Pane, clicking the Labeling contextual tab, and clicking the Label button to turn off labels.

View solution in original post

8 Replies
Eugene_Adkins
Frequent Contributor

I’m not in front of my computer so I could be wrong but I think you can do this with some of the creation options when you create a new feature for the feature class. 

This might be a better resource. You may need to enable the COGO.

0 Kudos
MichaelPorter2
Occasional Contributor

Thanks, but that is what I tried and that doesn't produce the results I need. Specifically, the command adds the bearing and distance as labels on the created line(s) and appears to add the lines in a new feature class.

0 Kudos
Robert_LeClair
Esri Notable Contributor

You can turn off the labels by selecting the layer in the Contents Pane, clicking the Labeling contextual tab, and clicking the Label button to turn off labels.

MichaelPorter2
Occasional Contributor

this does work -- a little clunky, but you get there in the end. Thanks for the advice!!

Robert_LeClair
Esri Notable Contributor
0 Kudos
MichaelPorter2
Occasional Contributor

Thanks, but I watched the video, and the result is not what i need. The procedure is cumbersome and does not allow flexibility in units.

I really wish I could continue work with my now-out-of-support ArcMap.

0 Kudos
Robert_LeClair
Esri Notable Contributor

If you have ArcMap still installed on your computer, you can continue using it for as long as you want.  Even though the program is no longer supported, it continues to work as it always did.

0 Kudos
MichaelPorter2
Occasional Contributor

Unfortunately, the licensing on ArcMap runs out. 😞

0 Kudos