Hey, I'm a French student in Geography and I had to do a task in ArcGIS pro, and God I was LOST. But you and your channel exist and you literally saved my life ! Thanks for your tips ! 👍
@@GISChops that one right there would be a fun story to tell you. After all these years and him not wanting to learn any of this stuff he now kind of wants a career doing this.
I ran the enable COGO tool on my line feature class, then entered the subdivision boundary in the traverse tool. The bearings and distances are then stored in the fields the enable COGO tool created and the labels use those fields as well. Using a parcel fabric takes care of that for you if you want to go that route. Thanks for commenting!
Here’s a video I made showing how I enter a subdivision in the parcel fabric. ArcGIS Pro Parcel Fabric - Subdivision Entry ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-BRmpVtpdgWU.html
The process is very similar. It’s outlined in this help document in the “Georeference an image to x, y coordinates” section pro.arcgis.com/en/pro-app/latest/help/data/imagery/georeferencing-a-raster-entering-x-y-coordinates.htm You use the add control points tool, click the known location in the source image, then right click to enter the coordinates.
I have this video that shows you how to georeference an image - Georeference an Image in ArcGIS - ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-IrUT2o8r8iQ.html
Sorry, just realized you were commenting on the video for which I gave you the link. You need to convert the pdf to a tif using the new pdf to tiff tool I demonstrate in this video - ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-1geLBK3_8jU.html Then georeference it.
Great refresher! Do you have any recommendations for good books for GIS? I just picked up an internship with the city and want to brush up on the basics
I have been reading “Getting to Know ArcGIS Pro”. It covers the basics. The trouble with books is they go out of date so quickly. This book is the 2nd edition and covers Pro 2.3 - we have 2.7 now.
GIS Chops I’m looking to move into a city planning role! So I’m going to be the planning intern for a city near LA. My current job as a GIS tech is letting me drop my hours to make it work so it’s going to be a nuts year
I use a locator that I have created using my local data - centerlines and address points. Then I right click my table with address data and select Geocode Table. If your table has coordinates then you would right click the table in the contents pane and select Display XY Data.
This was really helpful! Thank you. Is it possible to geo reference multiple images on the same map? Let’s say you wanted to add another image to the street below.
Can we make architectural drawing over an orthomosaic photo on ArcGIS ? In archaeology we unearth building remains of ancient sites. For the documentation, we must draw accurate drawings of these building remains.
Do you mean create a drawing instead of georeference an existing drawing? Do you have access to an accurate GPS receiver? You could get coordinates for two different locations on your site, then for each corner of the building you could measure its distance from both of those locations, then use the Distance Distance edit sketch tool to put it on the map in ArcGIS Pro.
@@GISChops Thank you for your message. We have a total station in our research project. With the target points on the archaeological trench, I want to georeferance the 3D model that I created in Metashape. After this process I want to transfer georeferanced orthomosaic image to ArcGIS pro. On orthomosaic image, I think that I can draw 2D archaeological remains of the trench area. Instead of using AutoCad, I want to use ArcGIS to draw 2D building remains. They want us to make a 2D building documentation.
I don't know too much about this (that's why I'm here). But to make the tiff's white areas transparent, you can set, in Appearance, the Effect's "Layer Blend" to "Multiply"... it'll make non-white stuff a bit darker and white stuff transparent. and you can then bring down the transparency so you can look through the TIFF to georeference. Now to remember how to trace and edit a new feature class. Thanks for your helpful video!
Thanks for the video, my follow up question to this would be is there a way to quickly convert the lines from the picture to a shape file (vectorization?) I found this video ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-0bqK0XPs_HA.html for Arcmap but there is no audio and it appears to be from awhile ago, I was wondering if there may be a video for ARcPro? Thank you
There used to be a tool called ArcScan that had that capability, but it has been retired. I guess Esri feels there are 3rd party solutions that vectorize plats. I feel like that would give me the lines, but I would still have to attribute those lines with their bearings and distances. I may as well do that through the traverse tool.
@@GISChops Yes, I've been finding a lot of blogs/videos about ArcScan, but as you mentioned it is not in ArcPro just ArcMap and as ArcPro seems to be the way of the future, I am still looking. As far as adding the attributes, I am willing to do that, not having to draw out all the lines would still save a lot of time. One user recommended learning more about Deep Learning Modules... which seemed like a really good thing to learn, though perhaps a bit overkill for what I am currently trying to do. I'm not familiar with the traverse tool, have you made a video about that (about to search right now)?
I have done a video where I use the traverse tool - ArcGIS Pro Parcel Fabric - Subdivision Entry ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-BRmpVtpdgWU.html It adds the lines and the attributes at the same time. I’m not manually digitizing the lines.