POST
|
I have elaborated on the steps here: 1. With the Select tool active, interactively select the annotation features in the map (alternatively, highlight rows in table) 2. In the Attribute pane, highlight the annotation layer name in the treeview for bulk editing 3. Update the attributes and apply the edit 4. Do not clear the selected annotation features by clicking Clear Selection on the tab or some other way 5. With the Select tool active, update annotation selection by interactively selecting features in the map (or highlight rows in table). This will update the selection list of features in the Attribute pane treeview and will keep the annotation layer name highlighted from step 2 for quick bulk editing. If you clear the annotation selection, the Attribute pane treeview will default back to highlighting the first feature identifier in the list of selected annotation features. Hopefully this helps clarify. If not, I will work on a video.
... View more
03-10-2023
07:39 AM
|
0
|
0
|
556
|
IDEA
|
@RoseF I recently posted a blog which you may find useful for improving your editing experience in Pro, specifically selecting features for editing. https://community.esri.com/t5/arcgis-pro-blog/selection-filtering/ba-p/1207979 Regarding Error Inspector, why are you needing to clear the selection before validating topology? What is happening? I would like to understand and help if I can. Thanks, Jennifer
... View more
10-21-2022
09:32 AM
|
0
|
0
|
397
|
IDEA
|
10-13-2022
04:55 PM
|
0
|
0
|
556
|
IDEA
|
Shannon, Thank you for the idea. While the idea for grouping vertices during streaming is Under Consideration, I want to share with you two new to Pro sketch Context Menu items that could be helpful when vertices need to be removed. This is for all sketching tools (create, Reshape, Continue Feature, etc) and could be especially useful for the streaming constructor if there are unwanted vertices. - While sketching, ensure that Vertex Editing toggle is ON on the Edit Toolbar - Hover over a vertex and wait for the cursor to change - After the cursor changes, right click on the Vertex and choose either Trim Before or Trim After - the sketch is trimmed, removing all segments and vertices prior to the vertex or after - resume the sketch
... View more
10-13-2022
02:43 PM
|
0
|
0
|
460
|
IDEA
|
10-13-2022
02:30 PM
|
0
|
0
|
461
|
POST
|
@DanielPhillipsTTU Are you able to make any other edits to the original feature class? Can you check if there is an editing session error on the layer by going to the List by Editing view of the contents pane? If there is an error, there will be a red exclamation on the layer. Hover over the red exclamation for the screentip explaining the reason.
... View more
10-11-2022
10:26 AM
|
1
|
0
|
8239
|
POST
|
@DavidGray2 Can you provide screenshots of the features and the pane so we can figure what may be happening?
... View more
10-11-2022
09:46 AM
|
0
|
0
|
3607
|
POST
|
To manually clean up overlaps and gaps, you could use the Align Edge tool. This tool will work with geodatabase and map topologies. on Edit tab, specify the Topology to use from Modify Features pane, choose Align Edge-> edges are displayed with magenta symbology Hover the mouse cursor over the edge to align--> it will display with solid yellow line and possible target edges are shown with a dashed yellow line. If target is correct, click the edge to move it
... View more
10-11-2022
09:41 AM
|
2
|
0
|
1260
|
IDEA
|
Please provide more information on your requirement and if @TimHodson response is helpful for your case.
... View more
10-11-2022
09:30 AM
|
0
|
0
|
965
|
BLOG
|
How the Editing tools’ Selection Filtering experience streamlines user workflows It was great to be back at the UC, reconnecting with users and colleagues. We had many informative conversations at the ArcGIS Pro Editing showcase. In one of these conversations, a user mentioned that it seemed there were more clicks required to complete editing workflows in Pro as compared to ArcMap. I was able to demonstrate and elaborate on how selections are handled in Pro editing to reduce clicks. They seemed appreciative of the tips and communicated that this would likely help them to be more productive in Pro. This blog discusses the active select tool and selection filtering by way of a couple examples, and hopefully you will find these tips help you to be more productive as well. Overview of selection filtering and the active select tool Selection filtering is built into editing tools that operate on a feature selection, meaning that editing tools will limit selecting of features that do not satisfy the tool's criteria. Filtering happens when an editing tool is opened with a preexisting selection, and by using the active select tool at the top of the editing tool’s pane. The active select tool filters in two ways: selecting valid input features during interactive selection and triggering filters of external selections when the tool is activated. The active select tool looks like and behaves similarly to the core select tool however it only allows selecting selectable and editable features that satisfy the tool’s criteria. The two selection tools’ interactive selection methods are linked but the icons and cursors are different. The core select tool has a hollow arrow in the icon and cursor whereas the active select tool has a filled arrow. The name of the active select tool on the pane varies to help guide users depending on the tool and selection set, for example sometimes it is called ‘Change the Selection’ and other times it may be ‘Select one or more line features.’ The Attribute pane re-hosts the core Select tool. You can see in the screenshot below the Move tool’s active select tool on the left and the Attribute pane’s core Select tool on the right. Screenshot showing the active select tool on the left in the Edit Vertices tool pane and the core Select tool on the right in the Attributes pane. How does this selection filtering and active select tool work? I will demonstrate the above by reviewing two common editing tools, Edit Vertices and Reshape. Edit Vertices The Edit Vertices tool requires one selected, editable feature and that feature’s geometry can be a point, multipoint, line, polygon, annotation, dimension, or multipatch feature. There are four possible scenarios when opening the Edit Vertices tool. Scenario 1 There are zero selected features on the map and you open the Edit Vertices tool from the Edit tools gallery or Modify Features pane. On tool open, the active select tool is active and the tool name is ‘Select a feature’. You interact with the map to select a valid feature. Once a single selectable and editable feature is selected, the Edit Vertices tool is active. This is a key point; you do not need to use the core Select tool before choosing the edit tool or even once the tool is open. Choose the editing tool, and then the pane will guide you through the rest, eliminating clicks between tabs and panes. Alternatively, when the active select tool is active, a selection can be made via the attribute table or other methods and the Edit Vertices tool will activate. Screenshot showing the Edit Vertices tool without a selection. Scenario 2 There is one valid selected feature on the map and you open the tool. On tool open, the Edit Vertices tool is active. The active select tool name is ‘Change the selection’ indicating it can optionally be used to interactively redo the selection on the map or filter any external selections, e.g. table records were selected in the attribute table directly. Screenshot showing the Edit Vertices tool with a valid selection. Scenario 3 There is more than one valid selected feature on the map and you open the tool. On tool open, the active select tool is active with the tool name ‘Change the selection’. You can interact with the map to update the selection or clear features from the selection set from the tree node or update the selection in the attribute table. Once the selection is reduced to one valid feature, the Edit Vertices tool will be active. Screenshot showing the tree node context menu for managing feature selections. Scenario 4 There is a mixture of valid and invalid features selected and you open the tool. On tool open, the invalid selection is filtered (or cleared from the selection) and Edit Vertices tool will activate. Whenever a tool filters a selection, there will be a toast notification. However, if after filtering there is more than one valid selected feature, the active select tool is active. Screenshot showing the toast notification that appears in the top right corner of the application when a selection is filtered. So how does this save clicks? If you open the tool without a selection, the active select tool is active, and then when you select a single valid feature, the Edit Vertices will activate. The user does not need to go to another tab to activate the core select tool, make a selection, and then return to the editing tool. The tool guides the user through the workflow to minimize clicks and ensure a valid selection. Also, if you open the tool with too many features selected, the active select tool is active and you will be guided to reduce the selection set. Further, once you apply/finish an edit, the active select tool will reactivate making it easy to select a different feature by simply clicking on the map. To continue editing the same feature, simply click the Edit Vertices tool in the pane or click the feature in the map. Another tip with Edit Vertices (and Move and Annotation edit tools) with a single click you can apply an edit and select a different feature by single clicking the new feature to edit. The new feature will be selected and editable and the original feature is updated and not selected. Gif showing the Edit Vertices active select tool being used to select features. Reshape The Reshape tool supports one or more selected, editable line and polygon features. There are three possible scenarios when opening the Reshape tool. Scenario 1 There are zero selected features on the map and you open the Reshape tool from the Edit tools gallery or Modify Features pane. On tool open, the active select tool is active with the tool name ‘Select one or more lines or polygons’. You interact with the map to select one or more editable line and/or polygon features. Once selectable and editable features are selected, the Reshape tool is active. Same as above, you do not need to use the core Select tool before choosing the edit tool or even once the tool is open. If you switch to the core Select tool, the edit tool will not automatically activate when there is a valid selection. Screenshot showing Reshape tool without a selection. Scenario 2 There is one or more valid selected features on the map and you open the tool. On tool open, the Reshape tool is active. The active select tool name is ‘Change the selection’ indicating it can be used to interactively redo the selection on the map or filter any external selections. Screenshot showing Reshape tool with a valid selection. Scenario 3 There is a mixture of valid and invalid features selected and the user opens the tool. On tool open, the invalid selection is filtered (or cleared from the selection) and the Reshape tool will activate. Whenever a tool filters a selection, there will be a toast notification. Selection filtering may be more apparent with Reshape than Edit Vertices since it will only select lines and polygons. You can choose to reactivate the active select tool at any time while the tool is open to update the selection on the map or filter external selections, e.g. point features were added to the selection using Select by Location. How about the scenario of adding to a valid selection? You can add to the selection before or during the sketch by holding the shift key and clicking the feature to add to the selection. Conversely, features can be removed from the selection before or during the sketch via the tree node feature identifier’s context menu. Adding to and removing from the selection set is available for edit tools that support one or more selected feature. Gif showing Reshape active select tool interactively selecting and filtering features. Additional Reshape Functionality Reshape has two options that are only available with one selected feature: choose result for polygons and lines, and reshape with single intersection for lines only. To leverage these options, you are responsible for ensuring there is only one polygon or line feature selected. Reshape also supports reshaping features without a user specified selection; when this option is chosen, the active select tool is not visible on the tool pane and the tool will figure out which features to update per the sketch. Other tools that have an option to operate without a selection are Align Features and Extend or Trim External Selections I also want to share information about how editing tools handle external selections. Prior to 2.9, external selections that were not valid for the active tool were prevented. This could be confusing to users that could not select a point feature or table record when Reshape was open and had an active edit tool, for example. Starting at 2.9, editing tools allow external selections and provide a way to restore filtered selections. These changes were made to reduce confusion and to reduce interference with non-editing workflows. Continuing with the above example, as noted above, Reshape requires line and/or polygon features to be selected. If the tool pane is visible and has an active tool (either the active select tool or the actual Reshape tool), and you select records in a standalone table, the newly selected records will be added to the selection set. The tool will present two notifications: the tree node displays a warning icon and the tool pane displays a warning notification. Both notifications provide information that the selection includes records that are not compatible with the tool. You can ignore the notifications and continue with non-editing workflows or simply click the active select tool to trigger the filter to clear the unsupported selected records. Screenshot showing invalid selection notifications. If a tool’s selection filtering is unexpected and unwanted, promptly deactivate the tool to restore the selection. You can deactivate the tool by clicking the back arrow to return to Modify Features pane, activating the Explore tool, or activating the core Select tool on the tab or in the Attribute pane. The restore capability is only available before an edit is made or another selection change; Once an edit is made, the selection cannot be restored. Gif showing filtering and restoring selections. Summary This blog described how edit tools that operate on a selection will filter selections on open or when using the active select tool. The goal is to support and intuitively guide users to a valid selection set with a minimum of user clicks. In addition, this blog discussed how editing tools have been enhanced to allow external selections and to restore selections. Please let us know your feedback and if you have any questions.
... View more
08-31-2022
01:39 PM
|
2
|
0
|
977
|
IDEA
|
Validate is available for stand-alone tables in ArcGIS Pro. For a selected set of rows, right click on the layer name node in the Attribute Pane and choose 'Select Only Invalid Objects'. Only rows that do not pass validation will remain selected. https://pro.arcgis.com/en/pro-app/latest/help/editing/edit-feature-attributes.htm
... View more
04-22-2022
02:12 PM
|
0
|
0
|
836
|
IDEA
|
The Measure tool has an option to Measure Angle. Will this work? https://pro.arcgis.com/en/pro-app/latest/help/mapping/navigation/measure.htm
... View more
12-22-2021
01:50 PM
|
0
|
0
|
1324
|
POST
|
I am glad that you can accomplish what you need by specifying Field Mapping to just the Shape column. It is a quick and easy way to update the data. I would like to share an alternative approach that may be useful for other scenarios. As you noted, you can use Replace Geometry to update a feature's geometry but retain it's attributes. To get the geometry from another feature, you can right click over the feature and choose Replace Sketch. Additional vertices can be added and/or other modifications can be made to the sketch (change length, reverse direction, set M values, move a vertex, etc.) before applying the edit operation. 1. Choose Replace Geometry - If there is already one selected feature, Replace Geometry will be be active. - If there is not already one selected feature, Replace Geometry's Active Select tool is active (tool name is Select a feature). Select one feature and Replace Geometry tool will automatically become active 2. Right click over the feature with the geometry to use and choose Replace Sketch. 3. Continue or modify the sketch, and apply the edit operation to update the feature
... View more
12-22-2021
01:35 PM
|
2
|
0
|
1879
|
BLOG
|
In this blog, I will discuss how to create a multipart polygon, specifically a multipart polygon with holes, also known as a donut polygon. Although this article focuses on polygons, some of the functionality discussed here is not specific to polygons so please try it out with your workflows and let us know what you think. I will describe four interactive methods that result in polygon features with donut holes: Create a new multipart polygon; Create a new polygon with the clip intersecting option to modify an existing polygon; Modify an existing polygon using the Continue Feature tool; Modify an existing polygon and output a new polygon using the Split tool.
Creating new polygon features
First, I will discuss two workflows to create a new multipart polygon using Feature Template construction tools. From the Create Features pane, choose a Polygon feature template. For sketching a new multipart polygon, we can use one of the following construction tools: polygon, autocomplete polygon, right angle, or trace.
Create a new polygon with a donut hole
I have a sketch in progress and am ready to add the donut hole. To proceed, I add a part to the sketch by choosing Finish Part from the context menu. After choosing Finish Part, the sketch will remain in progress and I simply resume digitizing to add another part. For a donut, I digitize within an existing part of the sketch. When done, I finish the sketch to create the multipart feature.
Create a new multipart polygon
If you prefer shortcut keys, either hit F4 on the keyboard or hold down the shift key while double clicking to execute the Finish Part menu item. Without the shift key, double clicking will finish the sketch and create the new feature.
The Finish Part command is available on the following tools’ context menu: Feature Template construction tools, Replace Geometry edit tool, Continue Feature edit tool, and Split interactive edit tool. One more note on the context menu, the context menu may look different depending on the feature geometry type being edited and if the right click is on an edge or in open space.
Create a new polygon and clip intersecting, existing polygons
Some Feature Template construction tools support tool options that can be set at time of use on the Active Template pane or stored with the template’s properties. Polygon construction tools have an option to clip intersecting polygons within the same feature layer. The option takes the input sketch on finish and searches for any existing, intersecting features to clip. In addition to the new polygon, overlapping polygons are clipped and may result in a multipart polygon.
Modify existing polygon features
Now, I will discuss modify tools for updating existing polygons. The modify tools are available from the Edit tab tools gallery or from the Modify Features pane.
Modify an existing polygon to have a donut hole
The Continue Feature tool is the suggested tool for modifying an existing polygon feature to be a multipart polygon or to add additional parts to a multipart polygon. Upon opening the tool, if there is a valid selection, which for this tool is one feature, the tool will be active and the feature sketch is shown on the map. If the selection is not valid, the tool will be in active select mode. Without changing to the core select tool, either select a single polygon feature on the map or, if there are two or more features selected, select one feature on the map or reduce the selection set down to one by interacting with the feature identifier in the tree node. To use the tool, I begin clicking in the map to add vertices to the sketch. I can digitize a part within the existing polygon to create a donut or digitize new distinct parts using the Finish Part capability as described above. When the polygon sketch is ready, I finish the sketch and commit the edits. A new feature is created and the original single part polygon is now a multipart polygon.
Split an existing polygon to have a donut hole
The Split tool, Interactive mode, is the suggested tool to split an existing polygon into two or more features. For my scenario, Split is different from Continue Feature because it results in multiple polygon features, one within the other, rather than one polygon feature with a hole. Like Continue Feature, and the majority of the modify features tools, the tool will activate on open if the selection is valid for the tool’s criteria. If it is not valid, simply update the selection on the map or via the treenode without changing the tool. Split can support multiple selected features but for my case, I just need the one polygon selected. Once I have the polygon selected, I start sketching on the map. Rather than sketching a polygon like I’ve shown in the prior workflows, I am sketching a line. To use Split interactive to create a donut, I need to create a closed loop line by snapping the last vertex to the first vertex. Once I have a closed loop line, I can finish the sketch to create one or more polygons within another polygon.
If mid sketch vertex editing is making it challenging to close the line back onto itself, aside from rushing to the beat the timer, there are two options. The video shows beating the vertex editing timer as well as the two options I describe below.
The first option is to place the last vertex somewhere near the first. Then, take advantage of the mid sketch vertex editing capability by hovering over the vertex to get into vertex editing mode. Once in this mode, move the vertex and snap it onto the first vertex.
The second option is new at 2.9 and may be the preferred of the two options. It is now possible to toggle off mid-sketch vertex editing on the edit toolbar and then snap the last vertex to the first vertex. Sketch vertex editing can be toggled on/off at any time while using any edit tool that sketches on the map.
... View more
12-01-2021
12:27 PM
|
3
|
0
|
2368
|
Title | Kudos | Posted |
---|---|---|
1 | 10-11-2022 10:26 AM | |
1 | 12-13-2023 01:16 PM | |
1 | 12-13-2023 01:06 PM | |
1 | 12-13-2023 10:24 AM | |
2 | 08-31-2022 01:39 PM |
Online Status |
Offline
|
Date Last Visited |
Thursday
|