Hi Jamal,
Please convert your img file to tiff or grid format using Copy Raster tool.
http://help.arcgis.com/en/arcgisdesktop/10.0/help/index.html#//001700000094000000
and then reclassify the raster again.
Thanks.
Jamal,
In the Reclassify tool, click the button called "Precision" and send a screenshot of your settings. As the warning is indicating (not an error message) you may need to make adjustments to the precision, or maybe you just need to get it back to the defaults if you already made adjustments. I calculated an NDVI raster and reclassified it without any warnings. Only after fiddling with the settings and reducing the significant digits to only a couple was I able to repro the warning messages your are getting.
Regards,
Eric
Jamal,
Try increasing the significant digits to 9. If that doesn't work, check the option to use "Format" precision. For your min use -1.0 and for the max use 1.0. This worked for me. Optionally you could use the real min/max obtained from the layer properties > source tab > statistics section. Those are the real min/max values. The stats in the classification dialog are estimates.
Note, your screenshot is the default. Everytime you open the tool it should have those values. Any changes will only 'stick' if you make the changes, run the tool, then run the tool again from the Results window.
Regards,
Eric
Hi Jamal,
Sorry I haven't had a chance to get back to you sooner. I believe what you're experiencing is a data/version specific bug in the software. I would not expect any user to type the min/max (unless it's a workaround) to reclassify some data. I was only attempting, with that suggestion, to get you a reclassified raster that you could continue working with.
In an earlier post, I mentioned that I created a NDVI raster (from a single Landsat scene) using the Raster Calculator and was able to reclassify it without having to type the min/max or make any changes to the precision dialog. I actually had to intentionally mess it up to get the same warning as you. By default it was working as you would expect it to. The main difference between you and me though, is I was using 10.1 Beta version, and we have different (yet similar) data.
If you have the tutorial data installed you could use the same Landsat scene I used, to create your own NDVI raster and attempt to reclassify it to see if you get the error in 10.0. See attached for data location. If you can't repro the warning messages with the tutorial data, then it's probably specific to the raster values in your real dataset, and you might consider sending it to your local Esri distributor so they can forward it to us as part of a bug report.
Best Regards,
Eric
Thank you Eric for the comprehensive answer.
The issue here is the reclassification not the NDVI! I expected that the ArcGIS can reclassify any raster AUTOMATICALLY!!! by the way, i got the NDVI (fro the image) from ERDAS 2011 then added this NDVI to ArcGIS for further analysis!
what about ArcGIS 10.1? when will it be available? and how come the ArcGIS 10.0 is full of bugs that much even with the very basic issues?
very much appreciated
regards
Jamal