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Chapter 2- managing GIS Data. Different how? Sometimes very large Often shared by multiple users Many sources, many file types Sometimes local, sometimes.

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 2- managing GIS Data. Different how? Sometimes very large Often shared by multiple users Many sources, many file types Sometimes local, sometimes."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 2- managing GIS Data

2 Different how? Sometimes very large Often shared by multiple users Many sources, many file types Sometimes local, sometimes served Don’t always follow latest file conventions Formats can be complicated

3 Organizing GIS Data Use organized folders Be aware of where you are saving –The default location is not a good place! Name files with descriptive names –snailhabitat, not rastercalc1

4 Use folders Store data on the C:\drive –NOT the Desktop –NOT in your user folder Develop an organizational system and USE it Separate working folders from permanent data Put downloads in separate folders when assembling data

5 Naming conventions NEVER use spaces in folder names. Ever. Use letters, numbers, or underscore only Keep folder names short: ~8-15 characters –Not a requirement, but a good practice

6 Important Although Windows permits spaces in file and folder names, in GIS they are a BAD IDEA. They often work, but sometimes a certain program or function will fail if it encounters a space in a folder name. Real GIS users FLINCH when they see spaces anywhere in folder/file names—even when they’re allowed!

7 File extensions A 3-4 letter code that designates the file type –.doc,.docx,.xls,.xlsx,.mxd,.tif,.png,.jpg Change computer settings to make these visible Very helpful when downloading and importing data sets

8 Lots of data out there, but how to find it? ArcGIS Online (not all downloadable) State and federal government sites GIS Clearinghouses (store metadata) University/research organizations Some is great, some is worthless

9 Geo.data.gov

10 Searching Search in your favorite search engine for: –topic + GIS –topic + shapefile –topic + e00 –placename + GIS –placename + shapefile –placename + e00

11

12 Searching Try some of the clearinghouse sites http://nationalmap.gov http://geo.data.gov http://www.cdc.gov/gis/data.htm http://data.geocomm.com/ Keep notes when you find a good site

13 Challenges Every site is different Many kinds of data formats Not all sites work as advertised Not all data downloads are valuable You need to develop a lot of general computer savvy You need to be willing to try, fail, explore, invent, search, learn

14 Zipping Many data sets are zipped and must be extracted before ArcGIS can use them Several zip utilities available –I like 7-zip and it is free –Download one and learn to use it

15 Source scale Data come at many scales Need to find data at a suitable scale for your project The purple, orange and black lines represent source scales of 1:25 million, 1:5 million, and 1:50,000, respectively.

16 Available scales Small scale data (world, country, state) are relatively easy to find over large areas Large scale base data down to 1:24,000 common in the United States Very large scale data (parcels) are difficult to find and very localized Specialized data (geology) typically only at small scales or localized special areas

17 Metadata Data about the data! Contains information about data needed to understand the data and evaluate its quality Should be provided with every data set distributed to the public May be stored as part of the data set or in a separate file

18 Metadata Useful for assessing the quality (fitness for a given purpose) Always look on web sites—it may be a separate download than the GIS data Download it and keep with the data

19 Metadata styles Item Description –Brief set of attributes –Quick to create –Default style Standards-based metadata –Extended information –Must set the metadata style to see it Item Description

20 To see more metadata Set the metadata style in Customize > ArcMap Options. Use FGDC or North American Profile for most US data.

21 Document downloads Update the metadata if you have changed the data set I like to put the source citation in the metadata credits so I know where it came from

22 Map documents and data frames The map document Stores collections of data for viewing and analysis Contains one or more data frames Stores properties for each layer (symbols, etc) Stores a page layout for printing Stores references to files-- not the actual data C:\mgisdata\usa\states.shp

23 GIS data are often shared…

24 Map docs and data files Same data can be used by many map documents Edits made in one document appear in ALL Shipping map document without its data is useless Changing locations of document or data can cause problems Files on disk Points to data

25 Data sources for layers Listed in Source tab Stored as pathname

26 Pathnames Absolute paths always start at the top of the data tree C:\mgisdata\usa\states.shp Relative paths start at the location of the map document..\usa\states.shp.. Means go up one level

27 Broken data links Occur when a map document cannot find data using the stored pathname because: Data were moved or deleted Drive is not available Map document copied to different computer Data not sent with map C:\mgisdata\usa\supersites.shp ?? D:\mgisdata\usa\supersites

28 When to use… Absolute paths –Data placed on central server for access by many –Data will not be moved or rearranged –You want to be able to transfer map docs without transferring data also Relative paths –When you plan to keep data with its map documents and move them together as a set –When you want to distribute maps/data to other organizations

29 Which type of pathname will still work if you…

30 File locks Programs place “locks” on files they use. Other programs cannot modify a locked file. To remove a lock, close the program using it. ArcGIS doesn’t always recognize when a lock has been removed Save, close ArcMap, and reopen to get rid of most file lock problems Reboot computer as last resort

31 The ArcCatalog Interface Folder tree Display window Menu/tool bars

32 Connecting to folders Shortcuts to frequently used folders or servers Must be added for drives other than C:\

33 Three view tabs ContentsPreview Description

34 Contents tab Viewing mode Large icons List Details Thumbnails

35 Description tab User can view metadata to evaluate data quality User can create, edit, import, or export metadata

36 Preview tab- Geography Zoom In Zoom Out Pan Full Extent Previous/Next Extent Identify Create Thumbnail Tools

37 Preview tab – Table

38 File Properties Right-click file name

39 The Catalog window Provides access to ArcCatalog functions within ArcMap Helps avoid file lock issues

40 Catalog window Access to most ArcCatalog functions within ArcMap

41 The Catalog window Open it here Right-click to manage

42 Previewing in the Catalog window Preview data and metadata

43 Warning! ArcCatalog and the Catalog window make permanent changes to stored files. They don’t warn you that they are doing so. They don’t have an “Undo” button. Be very careful when working in the Catalog.

44 Know the difference! Table of Contents Contains layers and properties Changes affect the map display only Catalog window Manages files and folders Changes are permanent

45 Assembling a geodatabase- Creating items Most items can be created by right- clicking the appropriate container and choosing the item Type in name while it is still selected and press enter Right-click a folder Right-click a geodatabase

46 Assembling a geodatabase Decide on coordinate system to use Search/download/find data sets Import to geodatabase format –Subset if needed using a query or clip –Project to coordinate system during or after import Update metadata

47 Import/export Same operation, only direction changes Import coverages, shapefiles, rasters, other feature classes Other formats might need conversion first (e00, CAD)

48 Using ArcCatalog to export Right-click the feature class to be exported Save in your geodatabase Enter query to select subset of features (optional)

49 Using ArcToolbox to export Open Feature Class to Feature Class tool Fill out as before (same tool)

50 Using a query during export

51 The Clip tool Use Clip to extract major roads within New Jersey

52 Changing the coordinate system If needed, use the Environments button on the tool to set the desired output coordinate system

53 Using ArcMap to export See what you are selecting with the query Convert the projection when exporting

54 1. Set the coordinate system 1.Set the data frame to the output coordinate system chosen for the new geodatabase Note: There are many different datum folders in the State Plane folder. Usually we choose the ordinary NAD 1983 datum.

55 2. Add the data set 2.Add the data set you want to export to the map. Rotated because the coordinate system is set for New Jersey

56 3. Query the table 3.Query the table (optional) to select a subset of the features

57 4. Export the data set 4.Export the (selected) features using the coordinate system of the data frame. 5.Save in your geodatabase

58 ArcToolbox features Hundreds of functions organized into toolsets Expandable by purchasing extensions. Runs in ArcMap or ArcCatalog Many functions in the toolbox are not accessible from the menus and toolbars. Create custom toolsets with your favorite tools Create your own tools

59 Using a tool Access info and Help Error tips Double-click

60 Searching for tools Search window Find tools based on name or keyword See where tool lives Click to open tool Hover for description

61 Background processing Lets you keep working while a tool runs, BUT Slower Confusing Crashes more Turn it off!

62 Using ESRI Data & Maps Comes free as DVDs/Downloads with purchase of ArcGIS Contact your administrator to find it Encourage its placement on a central file server Use the metadata to learn more about each data set and evaluate whether it is suitable for what you want to do

63 Contents Layer files Pre-symbolized layers for adding to maps. Spatial data containers Feature classes for exporting or adding to ArcMap.

64 Redistribution rights Data from many sources Licensed to Esri customers Static map view and printouts may be freely distributed Many data sets cannot be given to others Consult Help to learn which before giving copies to anyone Cite sources on maps ESRI Data and Maps (2013) [Download]. Esri, Inc., Redlands, CA.


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