Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

GIS Brownbag Series Attributes. In the beginning… Earliest GIS systems did not have attributes Needed separate layers for labels (e.g. names) CAD software.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "GIS Brownbag Series Attributes. In the beginning… Earliest GIS systems did not have attributes Needed separate layers for labels (e.g. names) CAD software."— Presentation transcript:

1 GIS Brownbag Series Attributes

2 In the beginning… Earliest GIS systems did not have attributes Needed separate layers for labels (e.g. names) CAD software still maintains different separate layers

3 Amelia Earhart

4 Shapefile showing Amelia’s last flight Right-click on the name of the shapefile for the flight path to open attribute table

5 LENGTHFROM_CITYTO_CITY 1414.502OaklandTucson 2323.930TucsonNew Orleans 1186.745New OrleansMiami 1783.788MiamiSan Juan 974.294San JuanCaripito 1004.282CaripitoParamaribo Attributes: Length FROM_CITY TO_CITY

6 Feeding sites of a chimp called “Fifi” Aerial photograph of Gombe National Park. Feeding sites stored in a shapefile or personal geodatabase Aerial photograph stored as a raster

7 Raster attributes Number of attributes attached to rasters is limited

8 Shapefile or Personal Geodatabase Attributes Many attributes can be attached to each feature OBJECTID and Shape attributes are automatically generated by ArcGIS

9 Attributes can be: Numbers (whole or with decimal places) Names or text Dates Hyperlinks

10 Depending on type of attribute different maps can be created This map was created based on text attribute Numbers allow to display population size

11 Depending on type of attribute different analysis can be done What if you want to show the area for each County?

12 Adding fields to an attribute table Step 1: Create a new attribute that will hold the area B. Click “Options” button. Then select “Add Field” A. Open attribute table If “Add Field..” is “greyed-out” stop edit session and try again

13 Pick any name you like. Must be < 11 characters Other choices: Text, Date, Short or Long Integer Number of spaces to store a number Number of decimals. E.g. 1.1234

14 The new attribute “Area” has been added! Right-click on “AREA” and select Calculate Geometry Notice how all the area’s are set to “0” Step 2: Calculate the area

15

16

17 Joining other data to attribute tables Table with population size for each County Goal: show those numbers on a map Solution: join this data to the shapefile from previous slide Step 1: Save your data in Excel as a DBF4 file

18 Add your.dbf file to ArcMap

19 Determine how you are going to join your data Join “population” table to shapefile Look for a primary key: an attribute that both tables have in common and that can be used for the join. Here: both tables have County names

20 Joining tables Right-click on the shapefile

21 Choose “No” Make sure that primary key is the same data type in both tables: E.g. you can not join numbers to text.

22 Data from shapefile Data from “population” table we joined to the shapefile

23 Tip: export joined table to new shapefile

24 Map showing population size for each County Maybe population density would be a more informative map..

25 Density is “POPULATION” / “AREA”

26 Add a new field to store density attribute

27 Right-click on DENSITY

28

29

30 Types of Relationships This is a one-to-one relationship One record in the shapefile matches one record in the population table

31 FIDName 0Joe 1Kelly 2Dan 3George 4Spencer 5Mike NamePet JoeCat JoeDog KellyCat DanDog MikeSnake MikeCat MikeHamster Is this a one-to-one relationship? ? Types of Relationships Can we join this data? NO! Instead of “join”, use a “relate” NO! It is a one-to-many

32 Relates: Example DBF table with information about a few different laterals Goal: we want to look at those laterals on a map

33 This is the NHD: it has the geometry Relate NHD to the laterals table This is a one-to-many relationship

34

35

36

37 H Canal is selected

38 Use “info” tool on this line segment Attributes for that line segment By clicking the + you see related tables

39 Tables that NHDFlowline layer is related to By relating tables the user has much more information at “his/her fingertips”

40

41 Upcoming Brownbag Lectures May 20: Model Builder June 17: How to make maps that communicate Check out previous Brownbag Presentations on WEnet


Download ppt "GIS Brownbag Series Attributes. In the beginning… Earliest GIS systems did not have attributes Needed separate layers for labels (e.g. names) CAD software."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google