I am working with the Flood Information Tool and Hazus. I am completing project information in the "Project Setup and Validation" box and when I create and select a new folder in the working directory, it says" "the working directory path cannot contain spaces." The new folder does not contain spaces. Any assistance would be greatly appreciated.
Thank you,
Nick
Solved! Go to Solution.
I located the initial external drive of where the files were located and removed the spaces in its title.
Many thanks,
Nick Zubel
Could you elaborate? If you are working in PRO, then what is the location where your project was made?
Can you look for your default Project settings and report what is set there at the General level regarding where projects are created and the location of the geodatabase that is being created/used
You say that the new folder doesn't contain spaces, but the error is saying that the path can't contain spaces. Check the full path that leads to the working directory where you're creating your folder.
The horrid C:\Users folder is a candidate if there is a space or other punctuation in your name or the path
I am sorry for the late response. The directory I am using is the following: E:\City_of_Berkeley_DDMP_Hazus
I also tried E:\CityofBerkeleyDDMPHazus, but still get the invalid directory message: "The working directory path cannot contain spaces."
Just a thought - I have not used HAZUS myself, but have heard from other GIS folks who use it that it has some levels of raster processing as part of it. What potentially may be going on is that the folder it is being pointed at violates the ESRI GRID format rules, which are very strict. Therefore, try creating a very short folder name (<13 characters, or better <9 characters) and see if it then works.
The name of an Esri Grid format raster has more specific restrictions:
Source: Output raster formats and names—ArcGIS Help | ArcGIS Desktop
Chris Donohue, GISP
Okay I figured it out. Thank you everyone!
I'm glad you figure it out, Nick. Could you close the loop by explaining the solution? Thanks!
Thank you Chris. That was very helpful. I really appreciate it.