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I added the layer from the item (https://www.arcgis.com/home/item.html?id=8c2db10c952e45b68efdfc78f64267b0) and noticed that the scale range is off and it will not display at regional/countrywide/global extents, though I am having trouble with it at all extents. I will have the Living Atlas curation team reach out to WorldPop, the publisher of the service.
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02-06-2023
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See this blog article: Add KML to your ArcGIS Online maps. https://www.esri.com/arcgis-blog/products/arcgis-online/mapping/using-kml-in-arcgis-online-web-maps/ If you really need a feature layer, then Pro can be used or you can export a shapefile from Google Earth and then publish the feature layer from the shapefile. Other KML to shapefile converters can be found on the web...
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02-03-2023
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Note that these will be localized and also available in the future when other regions are the organization defaults.
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02-03-2023
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The Enhanced Contrast Dark and Enhanced Contrast Light basemaps are now out of beta. These are designed to offer higher contrast for the visually impaired. For details, see: https://www.esri.com/arcgis-blog/products/arcgis-living-atlas/mapping/working-with-enhanced-contrast-basemaps-to-improve-accessibility/ For all related Living Atlas high contrast content, see: https://livingatlas.arcgis.com/en/browse/?q=%22Enhanced%20Contrast%20Map%22#d=2&q=%22Enhanced%20Contrast%20Map%22 These two are now part of the Esri default basemap gallery if your organization region is set to United States (Settings > General > Organization Defaults > Region). Those organizations using a different region can still use these basemaps using a custom basemap gallery, or start with the high contrast basemap after signing in at the Living Atlas website. How to make a custom basemap gallery using Living Atlas basemaps: https://www.esri.com/arcgis-blog/products/arcgis-online/mapping/living-atlas-custom-basemap-gallery/
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02-02-2023
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Talk to your account manager, something could be worked out...
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02-02-2023
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The information you have in the CSV is not enough to create boundaries. I'm not sure exactly what boundaries you are looking for, but these are all the boundaries for the U.K. found in ArcGIS Living Atlas: https://livingatlas.arcgis.com/en/browse/?q=boundaries#d=2&q=boundaries&rgnCode=GB If any of those boundaries are what you are looking for, then you'll need to figure out how to associate those 28 percentage values with the appropriate boundaries. If you have something in common between your data and the boundaries, like a region name, you can do a join to carry your information over to the boundaries.
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02-02-2023
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I have used the "group of groups" in the past to organize content, and there have been a couple of Fed gov agencies that have implemented similar as well as educational institutions. Unfortunately, a group is not an item natively, so you cannot add it directly to another group. The workflow would be to add the group as an item - web application would do. Once you have a "group item" you can add it to another group. That's a bit of a work-around, but definitely works. I've got an old blog somewhere that I will try to resurrect and will post here if I can find it. Fundamentally you can create a "group of groups" using Category Gallery and categorized group items. Just share all the content you want to use into a larger group and apply categories - they can be filtered by category for discovery. Blog here: https://www.esri.com/arcgis-blog/products/arcgis-online/mapping/category-gallery/ Other ways to create a destination that has many "groups of content" would be using Hub - everybody has Hub Basic, you do not need Premium. And this could be implemented using a site where rows of could be displayed and opened from the main Hub page. You would have to either add your groups as items as described above, or use categories to do this.
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01-31-2023
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Apologies, I'm not a WAB power user and have never used the time slider or filter widgets. You could post this out on the WAB Community: https://community.esri.com/t5/arcgis-web-appbuilder-questions/bd-p/arcgis-web-appbuilder-questions Experience Builder would be the path forward from WAB. Similar widgets exist, though again I have not used them: https://doc.arcgis.com/en/experience-builder/latest/configure-widgets/timeline-widget.htm ExB Community: https://community.esri.com/t5/arcgis-experience-builder-questions/bd-p/arcgis-experience-builder-questions
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01-30-2023
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This blog article covers using Arcade to add information from Living Atlas layers not in your map. Similar Arcade can be applied for layers from other organizations. https://www.esri.com/arcgis-blog/products/arcgis-living-atlas/decision-support/enhance-your-pop-ups-using-arcade-living-atlas/
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01-27-2023
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Field descriptions help clarify confusion around definitions, units, sources, vintages, and more. When people use the layer in Map Viewer, they can access each field's description when setting the layer's style and when they open the table in the map. This information helps them understand how to use and symbolize the data. Many layers in Living Atlas contain field descriptions for all attributes. These descriptions help analysts learn more about what exactly they are mapping in just a few clicks. For more information about field descriptions, and how they are used in Living Atlas and can be implemented in your work, see High-quality field descriptions make mapping easier.
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01-24-2023
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Hello Juneoh - A map in a story map must be a web map, either published from ArcGIS Desktop or created in the story using express maps. If you don't have the ability to publish your map as a web map, then a last resort option might be to use a screen capture and just use the image in your story. There really isn't a "migration" rather it's a publish-as-web-map task you face. Assuming you are a member of an ArcGIS organization, another option might be to go back to the source data and publish the layers in ArcGIS Online/Enterprise and build your web map that way. Rather than using ArcMap, you should be using ArcGIS Pro - it's the next gen modern desktop GIS and has been designed to replace ArcMap.
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01-23-2023
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The new USA 118th Congressional District features have been recently published. These layers are updated at least twice a year. Two iterations are available, one focused on the U.S. and the other including overseas territories. View the item details below: USA 118th Congressional Districts (all territories) USA 118th Congressional Districts
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01-20-2023
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Perhaps to simplify what Paul said. It is not possible in ArcGIS Online to combine multiple unique and heterogenous services (point + poly, line + poly, etc) into a single service endpoint. Using analysis tools you can merge like features into a single service, but not different feature types. Using ArcGIS Pro, you can publish a single service endpoint combining heterogenous feature types, like the point + polygon service you mention.
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01-17-2023
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I am glad you found that blog article, I was going to point you to it. Both the Sea Surface Temperature and Chlorophyll-a layers are subscriber content (meaning you need to have an account to view them, or public can view them in an app (like WAB) that has proxied for them. Subscriber content does not consume any credits, premium subscriber content does. There aren't many premium subscriber layers in Living Atlas, but below are the badges you would see to distinguish subscriber content from premium subscriber content. Subscriber (need an account/proxy in app) Premium subscriber (need an account/proxy in app, and consumes credits) If I understand correctly, it seems you're on your way now..!
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01-14-2023
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I tried on my test case to build a WAB app and see the same issue with the title. One thing to remember about WAB is that it is not up to the same JSAPI vintage with Map Viewer, Instant Apps, and Experience Builder. All those are built upon the latest JSAPI 4.x and can take advantage of capabilities that WAB is unable to leverage. I'm puzzled as to why an older vintage of WAB supports the pop-up correctly and a more recent one does not. But certainly there have been updates to WAB since 2019. I am not sure at all if this might help you, but I added the Sea Surface Temperature via its URL using Map Viewer Classic, then created a WAB app using the saved map from Classic. I didn't spend but a few seconds configuring the pop-up, but it looks like the time is being displayed correctly. I'm not sure how your app will be used, but by adding the Living Atlas layer directly from the URL you would not easily be able to share the app publicly. If for internal use, this might work for you if you spend a bit more time with the pop-up. The issue with Slider has been logged with the dev team, I expect it to be fixed in the upcoming February update. In the meanwhile, I'd suggest logging an issue with support and they might be able to find other workarounds for your WAB issue, and can also help you track progress on the Slider fix.
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01-13-2023
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