Data that is spatial in nature is not always stored in a spatial data format. For example, street addresses and latitude-longitude coordina...
Data that is spatial in nature is not always stored in a spatial data format. For example, street addresses and latitude-longitude coordinates identify geographic locations but are often stored in spreadsheets, databases, or text files. If you have geographic information stored as a table, ArcGIS Pro can display it on a map and convert it to spatial data.
In this tutorial, you'll create spatial data from a table containing the latitude-longitude coordinates of huts in a New Zealand national park. Huts in New Zealand are equivalent to cabins in the United States—they may or may not have sleeping bunks, kitchen facilities, electricity, and running water. The table of hut locations is stored as a comma-separated values (CSV) file (.csv). CSV files are a common, nonproprietary file type for tabular data.
In this tutorial, you'll create spatial data from a table containing the latitude-longitude coordinates of huts in a New Zealand national park. Huts in New Zealand are equivalent to cabins in the United States—they may or may not have sleeping bunks, kitchen facilities, electricity, and running water. The table of hut locations is stored as a comma-separated values (CSV) file (.csv). CSV files are a common, nonproprietary file type for tabular data.
Learn the Basics of ArcGIS Pro:
ArcGIS Pro 01: Introducing ArcGIS ProArcGIS Pro 02: Create a project in ArcGIS Pro
ArcGIS Pro 03: Navigate maps and scenes in ArcGIS Pro
ArcGIS Pro 04: Add data to a project in ArcGIS Pro
ArcGIS Pro 05: Explore your data in ArcGIS Pro
ArcGIS Pro 06: Create a project template in ArcGIS Pro
ArcGIS Pro 07: Import an ArcMap document into ArcGIS Pro
ArcGIS Pro 08: Convert a map to a scene in ArcGIS Pro
ArcGIS Pro 09: Symbolize map layers in ArcGIS Pro
ArcGIS Pro 10: Label map in ArcGIS Pro
ArcGIS Pro 11: Share a web map in ArcGIS Pro
ArcGIS Pro 12: Make a layout in ArcGIS Pro
credit : esri
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