If you'd like to take a more detailed look at web apps, try Oso Mudslide - Before and After. To learn more about spatial analysis and problem solving, try Analyze Volcano Shelter Access in Hawaii or Identify Landslide Risk Areas in Colorado. What's next? To learn more about mapmaking in ArcGIS Online, try Fight Child Poverty with Demographic Analysis or Track Crime Patterns to Aid Law Enforcement. Finally, you shared your findings by turning your map into an interactive web app. The spatial patterns revealed in your map helped you determine where evacuation assistance is most needed in the event of a hurricane. You added demographic data by census tract and used smart mapping to emphasize areas with limited vehicle ownership. In this lesson, you created a map with a layer of hurricane evacuation routes in Houston, Texas. You can click View Application and copy the app's URL to share it with anyone. On the Settings (light) toolbar, click Search.Next, you'll navigate to your area of interest. As you add data to your map, it will be listed here. The Settings (light) toolbar allows you to access tools and options for configuring and interacting with map layers and other map components. The Contents (dark) toolbar allows you to manage and view the map contents and work with the map. On either side of the map are the toolbars.
#TITLE CASE ARCGIS 10.3 SERIES#
A reference series map book lacks a title page, overview map, ancillary pages. The default basemap is Topographic, but your map may have a different basemap depending on your organization's settings. This ArcGIS 10.3 documentation has been archived and is no longer updated. The only layer on the map is the basemap, which provides geographic context such as water bodies and political boundaries. It may show the United States (such as in the example image), the world, or another extent. Your map's appearance varies based on your account or organizational settings and your browser window size. Otherwise, it will open an existing map (the last map you were using). Refer to the individual element objects for more information: DataFrame, GraphicElement, LegendElement, MapsurroundElement, PictureElement, and TextElement.If you're in a new session, clicking Map will open a new map. Wildcards can be skipped in the scripting syntax simply by passing an empty string (""), an asterisk (*), or entering wildcard=None, or nothing at all if it is the last optional parameter in the syntax. A wildcard string of "*title" will return a page element with a name Main Title. Wildcards are used on the name property and are not case sensitive. The element_type parameter can be skipped simply by passing an empty string ("") or entering element_type=None. This makes it possible to easily search and replace text strings, for example, without having to navigate through a group element structure. ListLayoutElements will also return the elements within a group element into a flattened list. If two elements have the same name, there is no way for certain to ensure it is the element you want to reference. It is the map document author's responsibility to ensure each page element is given a unique name so that elements can be uniquely identified. ListLayoutElements only returns elements from a page layout and not map annotation elements that may exist within a data frame.Įach page element has a name property that can be set within the element properties dialog box within ArcMap (located on the Size and Position tab). For loops on a list provide an easy mechanism to iterate through each item in the list (e.g., for elm in (mxd):). In order to return an element object, an index value must be used on the list (e.g., elm = (mxd)). ListLayoutElements always returns a Python list object even if only one page element is returned. Returns a Python list of layout elements that exist within a map document (.