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ArcGIS Pro 2.x Cookbook

You're reading from   ArcGIS Pro 2.x Cookbook Create, manage, and share geographic maps, data, and analytical models using ArcGIS Pro

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Product type Paperback
Published in Feb 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781788299039
Length 704 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Tools
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Author (1):
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Tripp Corbin, GISP Tripp Corbin, GISP
Author Profile Icon Tripp Corbin, GISP
Tripp Corbin, GISP
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Table of Contents (21) Chapters Close

Title Page
Dedication
Packt Upsell
Contributors
Preface
1. ArcGIS Pro Capabilities and Terminology FREE CHAPTER 2. Creating and Storing Data 3. Linking Data together 4. Editing Spatial and Tabular Data 5. Validating and Editing Data with Topologies 6. Projections and Coordinate System Basics 7. Converting Data 8. Proximity Analysis 9. Spatial Statistics and Hot Spots 10. 3D Maps and 3D Analyst 11. Introducing Arcade 12. Introducing ArcGIS Online 13. Publishing Your Own Content to ArcGIS Online 14. Creating Web Apps Using ArcGIS Online 1. Other Books You May Enjoy Index

Joining features spatially


So in the previous recipes, you have seen how you can link external data to layers or other tables using a Join or a Relate. However, what if you want to transfer data from one layer to another but there is no key field to use to link the data. Maybe the two layers in question overlap one another, or are next to one another, or share some other spatial relationship, surely there should be some way to link or join the two layers together based on a spatial relationship.

You can join two layers together based on a spatial relationship. This is called a Spatial Join. A Spatial Join creates a new feature class which adds the attributes from the joined feature class to the target feature class based on a spatial relationship you define when you run the tool. It is not required that the target and joined feature classes be the same type. You can spatially join lines with polygons, or points with lines, or points with polygons, as well as those of the same feature type...

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