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Texas A&M University Department of Civil Engineering Creating and Editing Features and Tabular Data Francisco Olivera, Ph.D., P.E. Srikanth Koka Lauren Walker Aishwarya Vijaykumar Keri Clary Department of Civil Engineering Texas A&M University April 21, 2014 Contents Goals of the Exercise ....................................................................................................................... 1 Computer and Data Requirements ................................................................................................. 2 Procedure ........................................................................................................................................ 2 1. Creating and Editing Feature Data ...................................................................................... 2 A. Creating a point shapefile and adding features to it ....................................................... 2 B. Creating a point shapefile using X and Y coordinates ..................................................... 5 C. Creating a line shapefile and adding features ................................................................. 7 D. Creating a polygon shapefile and adding features ........................................................ 14 2. Creating and Editing Tabular Data..................................................................................... 17 A. Creating a dbase table and a personal geodatabase table ........................................... 17 B. Editing tabular data ....................................................................................................... 18 Goals of the Exercise Introduction to: Creating shapefiles and adding features to them Editing existing features Creating tables and adding fields and rows to them Editing existing tabular data

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  • Texas A&M University Department of Civil Engineering

    Creating and Editing Features and Tabular Data Francisco Olivera, Ph.D., P.E.

    Srikanth Koka Lauren Walker

    Aishwarya Vijaykumar Keri Clary

    Department of Civil Engineering Texas A&M University

    April 21, 2014

    Contents Goals of the Exercise ....................................................................................................................... 1

    Computer and Data Requirements ................................................................................................. 2

    Procedure ........................................................................................................................................ 2

    1. Creating and Editing Feature Data ...................................................................................... 2

    A. Creating a point shapefile and adding features to it ....................................................... 2

    B. Creating a point shapefile using X and Y coordinates ..................................................... 5

    C. Creating a line shapefile and adding features ................................................................. 7

    D. Creating a polygon shapefile and adding features ........................................................ 14

    2. Creating and Editing Tabular Data ..................................................................................... 17

    A. Creating a dbase table and a personal geodatabase table ........................................... 17

    B. Editing tabular data ....................................................................................................... 18

    Goals of the Exercise Introduction to:

    • Creating shapefiles and adding features to them • Editing existing features • Creating tables and adding fields and rows to them • Editing existing tabular data

  • Texas A&M University Department of Civil Engineering 2

    Computer and Data Requirements To carry out this exercise, you need a computer that runs ArcGIS 10.2. You will be working with the following spatial datasets during this exercise. The data can be downloaded and unzipped from the course website: Streams.shp TXCountyInfo.dbf USGSGageStns.dbf

    Procedure

    1. Creating and Editing Feature Data In this part of the exercise, you are going to create shapefiles and add new features (i.e. points, lines, and polygons). You will learn how to start editing, how to sketch using the construction tools, how to snap features, and how to change the shapes of the features. Before starting this exercise, create a working folder and name it “EditData.” You will use this folder to store the results obtained during the execution of this exercise.

    A. Creating a point shapefile and adding features to it

    (1) You will now create a point shapefile and add features to it. Open ArcCatalog from the Windows Start menu. Browse down to your working folder, right-click on it, and then click on New/Shapefile.

    (2) In the box that appears, enter NewPt for Name making make sure that Point is chosen

    for Feature Type, and then click OK.

  • Texas A&M University Department of Civil Engineering 3

    (3) You will add some points in this shapefile. In order to do this you will have to add the

    shapefile you have created to an ArcMap document. Open a new empty map file in ArcMap.

    (4) Once the ArcMap document is opened, add the NewPt shapefile by using the Add

    Data tool. If a warning message appears, click OK to continue. To start adding point features to this shapefile, you should start editing.

    (5) Open the Editor toolbar, by clicking on Customize/Toolbars/Editor. (6) To start editing, click on Editor/Start Editing. You will see that the tools and drop

    down lists are activated in the Editor toolbar, that a Create Features dialog opens, and that NewPt is an entry in the Create Features dialog.

    (7) Click on NewPt in the Create Features dialog box.

    (8) You will add features to this shapefile using the tools under Construction Tools. Click on the NewPt label in the Create Features dialog and then the Point tool under Construction Tools and start clicking wherever you want on the map display.

  • Texas A&M University Department of Civil Engineering 4

    (9) Once you have finished adding features, the next step is to save the edits. To do this,

    click on Editor/Save Edits. To stop editing completely, you will have had to click Editor/Stop Editing.

    (10) To move points from their positions, you will need to start editing again using

    Editor/Start Editing. Click on the Edit Vertices tool . To move a point, click on the point, and once the cursor changes, drag it where you want. Repeat this procedure for several points. Once you have moved points, stop editing by clicking on Editor/Stop Editing. Save edits if asked to do so.

  • Texas A&M University Department of Civil Engineering 5

    B. Creating a point shapefile using X and Y coordinates

    When X and Y coordinates of points are given, creation of a dataset containing the corresponding features can be automated using the Add XY data tool. For this section, you will need to use the downloaded data or continue using the same document from Part 1A. (1) Using Add Data tool, add USGSGageStns.dbf to the map. This dbf file contains latitude

    and longitude information for all USGS gauging stations. Other information included is the station name, the station number, the website URL for the stations, and the HUC ID.

    (2) You can observe this information by right clicking on the file and selecting Open. You

    will use the latitude and longitude fields to create a new shapefile that will contain corresponding USGS gauging stations as points. Close the Attributes Table.

    (3) In ArcMap, click Data Management Tools/Layers and Table Views/Make XY Event

    Layer. In the wizard that appears, select USGSGageStns as the XY Table, LONDD for X Field and LATDD for Y Field. Click OK

  • Texas A&M University Department of Civil Engineering 6

    (4) A shapefile is created containing points with coordinates taken from the USGSGageStns.dbf table. (NOTE: You may need to zoom to USGSGageStns layer)

  • Texas A&M University Department of Civil Engineering 7

    C. Creating a line shapefile and adding features

    a. Creating a line shapefile

    (1) You will create a line shapefile and add features to it in this part of the tutorial. Using ArcCatalog, browse down to your working folder, right-click on it, and then click on New/Shapefile.

    (2) In the wizard that appears, enter NewLine for Name, make sure that Polyline is

    chosen for Feature Type, and click OK. b. Drawing lines

    (1) You will now add lines to this shapefile. In order to do this, you will have to add the

    shapefile you have created to an ArcMap document. To start drawing lines to the new layer, you need to start editing. Open the Editor toolbar, by clicking on Customize/Toolbars/Editor.

    (2) To start editing, click on Editor/Start Editing. You will see that the tools and drop

    down lists are activated in the Editor toolbar, that a Create Features dialog opens, and that NewLine is an entry in the Create Features dialog.

    (3) You will add features to this shapefile using the tools under Construction Tools.

    Click on the NewLine label in the Create Features dialog and then the Line tool under Construction Tools and draw a line as shown in the figure below. After drawing the last segment, double-click to stop drawing.

  • Texas A&M University Department of Civil Engineering 8

    (4) Once you have finished constructing the shapefile, the next step is to save the edits. Do this by clicking on Editor/Save Edits. Note that as you are going to edit this layer, you will save the edits rather than stop editing. Remember that the line layer has only one line feature up to this point.

    c. Splitting lines

    The next step is to split the line feature in your layer into two features. You can split the feature manually (do not perform this now, but test it later as you are going to do this automatically) by first selecting the feature using the Edit Tool, then clicking on the Split

    Tool located on the Editor Toolbar and finally clicking on the line where you would like it split. The automatic way of splitting is by specifying the split distance as a length or as a percentage. (1) First, select the feature using the Edit Tool and then click Editor/Split. A window

    appears where you should choose Percentage as the option for Split an enter 50 in the text box.

  • Texas A&M University Department of Civil Engineering 9

    (2) Let From Start Point of Line be selected for Orientation and click OK. To save the

    edits, click on Editor/Save Edits. Once this is done, the feature you have selected will be split into two new features. You should not be able to see the features split clearly on the map, but you can see that in the attribute table the number of rows has increased to two.

  • Texas A&M University Department of Civil Engineering 10

    (3) Open the attribute table and select the two rows separately. Observe the corresponding features being selected on the map. Do not stop editing yet because you are going to do more editing operations. If you have stopped editing, start editing by clicking on Editor/Start Editing.

    d. Merging lines

    The next step is to merge the lines you have split into one feature. You can merge features using the Merge Tool. (1) First, select the features to be merged by holding shift and clicking on both sections

    of the split line. Then go to Edit Tools and click on Editor/Merge. Select OK in the Merge Window that appears. You can now stop editing by clicking on Editor/Stop Editing.

    (2) The two features you have selected should now be merged into one feature. You

    cannot see the features merged clearly on the map, but you can see that the number of rows in the attribute table has decreased from two to one. Open the attribute table and select the one row. Observe the corresponding feature being selected on the map.

    (3) Another similar tool is the Union Tool. This merges the features instead of replacing

    them, which creates a new feature. The newly created feature will coincide with the

  • Texas A&M University Department of Civil Engineering 11

    features that were involved in the union. For example, after unioning an object, you can relocate it to a new location and the original object will remain in the original place. Though you may skip union for this exercise, you can do it by selecting the features first, then clicking on Editor/Union.

    e. Snapping lines

    Snapping is used to move a feature to a precise location in relation to another feature. In this part of the exercise, you are going to move a line so that its end (To-node) coincides with start of another line (i.e., From-node). For this exercise, you are going to use the stream network of the Bull Creek watershed located near Austin, Texas. In a stream network, all lines are connected. It has been observed, in this shapefile, that a line (bearing attribute value of FID=17) is disconnected from the network in which you will connect to its downstream line. (1) Open a new ArcMap document. To the data frame in this document, add the

    Streams.shp from the downloaded data as a layer using the Add Data tool. (2) To see each line with a different color, change the layer’s symbology to Unique

    values. Do this by right clicking on the streams layer. In the drop down menu, click on Properties.

    (3) The Layer Properties wizard opens. In this wizard, select the Symbology tab and

    click Categories/Unique values in the Show: list box. Click on the Add All Values button, uncheck all other values, and finally click OK to change the symbology.

  • Texas A&M University Department of Civil Engineering 12

    (4) Now open the attribute table of this layer by right clicking on the layer and then clicking Open Attribute Table in the drop down menu.

    (5) Move down in the table until you see the row containing a value of 17 in the FID

    field. Select this feature to see where it is located and zoom to the junction where this line meets the next line (which is downstream to it) using the Zoom In tool. If you zoom in enough you will see that this line is not connected to the network.

    (6) To correct this error you can move the line towards the downstream line, but they

    may not coincide exactly at the junction. To move the line perfectly, you must use the snapping feature. Start editing by clicking on Editor/Start Editing. Select the unconnected segment if it is not already selected.

    (7) Next, you will set the snapping environment. Click Editor/Snapping/Snapping

    Toolbar. In this toolbar, ensure that the End Snapping button is selected. (8) Using the Edit Tool , double-click on the line so that the vertices are visible as

    shown below in the first image. Observe that the vertex in red is the To-node of the line. Drag this To-node towards the junction.

  • Texas A&M University Department of Civil Engineering 13

  • Texas A&M University Department of Civil Engineering 14

    (9) Once you have done this, you can and stop editing and save, by clicking on

    Editor/Stop Editing. You can zoom closer to see that they are now perfectly connected.

    D. Creating a polygon shapefile and adding features

    a. Creating a polygon shapefile

    (1) You will now create a polygon shapefile and add features to it. In ArcCatalog, browse down to your working folder and right-click on it.

    (2) Click on New/Shapefile. In the wizard that appears, enter NewPGon for Name,

    make sure that Polygon is chosen for Feature Type, and click OK.

    b. Drawing polygons (1) Add the newly created shapefile to ArcMap using the Add Data tool. Click OK if

    necessary in the warning box.

    (2) To start drawing lines to the new layer, you need to start editing. Open the Editor toolbar, by clicking on Customize/Toolbars/Editor.

    (3) To start editing, click on Editor/Start Editing. You will see that the tools and drop down lists are activated in the Editor toolbar, that a Create Features dialog opens, and that NewPGon is an entry in the Create Features dialog.

  • Texas A&M University Department of Civil Engineering 15

    (4) You will add features to this shapefile using the tools under Construction Tools. Click on the NewPGon label in the Create Features dialog and then the Polygon tool under Construction Tools. Draw 3 or 4 polygons of any shape in the map display. Double-click in place to end the drawing of each polygon.

    (5) Click on Editor/Save Edits. It is not necessary to select Stop Editing because you will

    continue to edit this layer.

    c. Cut polygons (1) The next step is to cut a polygon into two. First, select the feature you want to cut

    using the Edit Tool.

    (2) In the Editor toolbar, click the Cut Polygons tool . Then, draw a line across the polygon as shown in the figure below. Double-click in place to end the line.

  • Texas A&M University Department of Civil Engineering 16

    (3) To save these edits, click on Editor/Stop Editing. You can now see that the polygon

    feature is cut into 2 polygons. In the next part of the exercise, you will merge these two features back into one feature again.

    d. Merging polygons

    (1) You can merge the polygon features using the Merge Tool. Before going into

    merging polygons make sure that no features are selected. If some are, then clear the selection by clicking on Selection/Clear selected features.

    (2) Start editing by going to Editor/Start Editing in the Edit Toolbar. Select the two

    features that resulted due to the cut polygon operation done previously by using the Edit Tool by pressing shift. Click on Editor/Merge and select OK in the Merge box if necessary.

    (3) You can stop editing by clicking on Editor/Stop Editing. Two features you selected

    are now merged into one feature.

  • Texas A&M University Department of Civil Engineering 17

    (4) Another similar tool is the Union tool. This merges the features instead of replacing them, which creates a new feature. The newly created feature will coincide with the features that were involved in the union. For example, after unioning an object, you can relocate it to a new location and the original object will remain in the original place. Though you may skip union for this exercise, you can do it by selecting the features first, then clicking on Editor/Union.

    2. Creating and Editing Tabular Data

    A. Creating a dbase table and a personal geodatabase table

    In this part of the exercise, you will create a dbase table and add a field and a row to it.

    (1) In ArcCatalog, right-click on your working folder and then click New/dBase Table. (2) Change the name of the table from the default to NewTab. Preview the table by

    selecting the Preview tab. Note that the table has two fields – one by the name OID and the other by the name Field1.

    (3) You will now add a new field to this table. In the lower part of the table, click

    Options/Add Field. In the wizard that opens, enter NewFld as Name: Long Integer as Type: and then click OK to add the field. To add rows to this table you will have to start editing, which is the next part of the exercise.

  • Texas A&M University Department of Civil Engineering 18

    B. Editing tabular data

    In this part of the exercise, you will correct field values, add a field, and use a map calculator to populate it. (1) In a new empty ArcMap document, add the table named TXCountyInfo.dbf from the

    downloaded data to the table using the Add Data tool. If the table name is not visible

    in the Table of Contents, change the view from Display to Source in the table of contents. Once the table is made visible, right-click on it and click Open to open the table.

    (2) In this table, you will see the following fields: OID, NAME, POPULATION, and

    AREA_SQ_MI. These fields are self-explanatory by the names. The value ARMSTRONG is misspelled as AMSTRONG for the NAME field in a row. You need to change the corresponding row value. Arrange the entries of the NAME field in ascending order by right clicking on the NAME field and then clicking on Sort Ascending in the drop down.

    (3) Scroll down the table until you find AMSTRONG in one of the rows for the NAME field

    and start editing by clicking Editor/Start Editing. (4) Now click on AMSTRONG, delete, and type ARMSTRONG. Once you have done this,

    stop editing by clicking on Editor/Stop Editing. In the message box, click Yes for Do you want to save changes.

  • Texas A&M University Department of Civil Engineering 19

    (5) You will add a new field to this table and populate it with population density using the population and area values given in the other fields. To add a new field, click on Options/Add Field at the bottom of the table.

    (6) In the wizard that opens, enter POP_DENS for Name:, select Float for Type: and

    click OK. To populate this field with population density values, right-click on this new field name and then click on Field Calculator.

    (7) The Field Calculator wizard should open. Click yes if a warning box appears. Click

    in the text box of the wizard so that the cursor lies inside it. Then double click on

  • Texas A&M University Department of Civil Engineering 20

    POPULATION in the Fields text box, click / sign and double click on AREA_SQ_MI in the Fields text box. Use all other default options and then finally click OK to populate the population density field.

  • Texas A&M University Department of Civil Engineering 21

    These materials may be used for research and educational purposes only. Please credit the

    authors and the Department of Civil Engineering, Texas A&M University. All commercial rights reserved. Copyright 2014: Texas A&M University.

    Goals of the ExerciseComputer and Data RequirementsProcedure1. Creating and Editing Feature DataA. Creating a point shapefile and adding features to itB. Creating a point shapefile using X and Y coordinatesC. Creating a line shapefile and adding featuresD. Creating a polygon shapefile and adding features

    2. Creating and Editing Tabular DataA. Creating a dbase table and a personal geodatabase tableB. Editing tabular data