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Geographic Information Systems

Sharing Maps

Previous: Constructing Maps

Following: Mapping Place-Name Data


There are a number of different ways to share maps depending on the purpose you have in mind. You can print on paper or a poster, create an image to embed in a document or a Web page, create a PDF, export to free applications like Google Earth or ArcReader, or upload to a cloud service like ArcGIS.com.

Topics

Procedures

  1. Creating a New Layout

  2. Adding a Map to a Layout

  3. Opening ArcToolbox

  4. Exporting a Layer to Google Earth

This tutorial will guide you through several ways that you can share the maps you create using ArcGIS Pro.


Getting the Tutorial Data

This tutorial assumes that you will be using an existing map that you've created, such as from the previous section on Constructing Maps. Follow the instructions there to download that data.


Preparing a Map for Sharing

Putting the final touches on a map can make the difference between one that is easily interpretable and one that is useless.


Cartography

Cartography describes the clear, elegant, and even artful design of a map.

With an appropriate choice of content, structure, symbology, and labels, a map can speak volumes while still being easy to read and understand. A map that is just thrown together may be helpful to the author, who knows what to look for, but could be confusing and quickly ignored by an intended audience.

Entire books have been written on designing good maps. In lieu of reading one of them, here are some important considerations to keep in mind when preparing your maps for sharing:

  • Color: Choose an appropriate symbology for your data and background for your maps that will enhance rather than detract from the visibility of your data.

    There are a number of color standards that people respond to perceptually, e.g. darker colors for larger numbers, and others that they expect, e.g. green for forest areas, etc.

    Colorblindness also prevents some people from distinguishing certain colors. So it’s a good idea to pick your color combinations carefully. Visit http://colorbrewer2.org/ for some ideas.

    Also note that many journals still only publish black-and-white maps, which may require simplification.
  • Contrast: More generally, the different elements of your map need to be distinguishable from each other. Pick symbols, labels, and graphic element backgrounds so that they are visible when they overlap.
  • Scale: Usually you will want to use a scale such that your data or important background elements have maximal magnification and are centered. If printing on paper or to PDF, orient the paper as portrait (width < height) or landscape (width > height) to match your data.
  • Projection: This is a topic that will be discussed later, but in most cases it’s important to use an appropriate projection that reduces distortion of shape and area over the region of interest, if possible.

Laying Out A Map

A well-designed map generally requires associated information, sometimes called metadata, to help interpret it. Putting this all together requires an “outer container” called a layout.

Procedure : Creating a New Layout

A layout is a way to organize your map together with other information such as titles, captions, legends, and even other maps. It is an important step in improving the understanding and use of your map.

  1. In ArcGIS Pro Icon ArcGIS Pro, select the menu Insert, and click on the menu item New Layout.
  2. A set of “paper sizes” will appear. When you publish your map to static formats, whether to paper, PDF, or digital images, you’ll need to define a size for the output, and these are the commonly used standard sizes. ANSI - Letter, size 8.5" × 11", is a good place to start and is good for most images; choose either the Portrait or Landscape orientation, as appropriate for your data. If you are planning to print a poster, you’ll want to start with the intended final size, e.g. Architectural E - Landscape, size 36" × 48". Click on the desired orientation+size.
  3. A pane showing a piece of paper surrounded by rulers, with another pane listing this layout.The new layout “paper” will appear in a tabbed pane next to your map, and the pane Contents will change to list the layout. The selected menu will also switch to the Layout ribbon, where basic tools for working with the layout will appear. For example, there will be rulers along the top and left sides (if the box Rulers is checked), and by default the tool Navigate will be selected, allowing you to drag around the paper (as well as added elements).
  4. In the ribbon section Page Setup, click the button Page from Printer, and in the resulting dialog verify the orientation and the destination printer (“Microsoft Print to PDF” is a good place to start, as the result can both be printed and shared). Click the button OK.
  5. In the layout pane, the navigation controls will change, and while they are similar to those provided for the map, they only refer to the layout:
    • Layout Navigate Button Navigate: Modal, lets you drag the layout around.
    • Layout Navigate Button Full Extent: Zoom to the full extent of the the layout.
    • Layout Navigate Button Page Width: Zoom to the full extent of the the layout.
    • Layout Navigate Button 100%: Zoom to a 100% (1:1) scale, where size on the screen is the same as on a printed version.
    • Layout Navigate Button Previous Extent: Zoom to the full extent of the the layout.
    • Layout Navigate Button Next Extent: Zoom to the full extent of the the layout.
 

On a layout, a map is just one element amongst many.

Procedure : Adding a Map to a Layout

The various elements that you can add to your layout include one or more maps:

  1. A pane showing a piece of paper surrounded by rulers, with another pane listing this layout.To add your map to the layout:
    1. Menu Insert, and in the section Map Frames, click on the menu item Map Frame.
    2. A list of your maps will appear; click on the thumbnail of your map (rather than the “Default Extent”).
    3. Then, on the layout, imagine a rectangle of the desired size, e.g. extending from the upper left corner at (10", 0.5") down and right to (8", 3.5"), and click-and-drag out that frame. When you release, the map will appear within the frame.
  2. The map’s location within its frame may not be desirable, but it can be adjusted. The layout tools described previously cannot be used to reposition the map within its frame. For that, we instead need to activate the map:
    1. Menu Layout, and in the section Map, click on the menu item  Activate.
    2. The Map ribbon will reappear, and you can use all of its usual tools to drag the map around and zoom in and out.
  3. When you are finished rearranging the map within its frame, again menu Layout, and in the section Map, click on the menu item  Close Activation.
 

The map as displayed in the margins is the same one you’ve chosen in the data view, no matter how big or small the margins are. You can use the same tools in the toolbar Tools to change the relative size and position of the map within those margins. Important: in the Layout View, you should have access to the toolbar Layout, which provides similar tools that reference the paper rather than the map — with them you can zoom into the paper without changing the size of the map relative to the paper.


Standard Map Elements

Before sharing your map, it’s a good cartographic practice to add a number of additional elements that help explain the map, which only appear in the Layout View:

  • Legend: A list of the layers in the map and the symbols used to display them. The names of data layers will be visible in the legend, so make sure they are not the default abbreviated names. Click-pause-click to rename them (don’t double-click, since that opens the Properties dialog).
  • North Arrow or Compass Rose:
  • Scale Bar;
  • Titles and Captions: In most cases the map itself should also have a descriptive title.
  • Graphics: Other graphic elements are often useful, such as arrows to point out particular features, and can be added using the Draw toolbar.
  • Inset Map: For larger-scale maps, it can be helpful to include a small-scale map as an inset to provide a locational context within a more well-know geography, e.g. a particular region within New England.

a title, a legend to describe the different layers, a north arrow to show directions, and a scale bar to show the map scale:

  1. Go to the menu Insert and select the menu item Title, and a text box will appear near the top center of the screen. Enter a title and drag the box to an appropriate position.
  2. Next go again to the menu Insert and this time select the menu item Legend. Take all the defaults by clicking the button Next on each of the series of screens. Drag the legend to an appropriate place and resize it if necessary.
  3. Now menu Insert and select the menu item North Arrow...; choose your preferred style, click the button OK, and then move the arrow where you would like it.
  4. Finally menu Insert and then select the menu item Scale Bar...; choose your preferred style, click the button OK, and then move the scale bar where you would like it. Note that by default the scale uses whatever the map units are; you can change that by double-clicking on the bar and choosing a different one.

If necessary, resize the margins around the map to fit these new additions.

ArcGIS Pro can have multiple data frames defined in its Table of Contents, but only one of them can be displayed at a time in the Data View.

However, layouts can display the maps from all frames at once, for example to show an overview map in an inset box.


Saving a Map as an Image or Acrobat PDF

The most basic way to share maps is to save them in one of the file formats commonly found on the Internet.

Go to the menu File and choose the menu item Export Map.... Then navigate to the folder in which you want to save the map.

If your intent is to use the map on a computer, such as in a web page or a PowerPoint presentation, where printing is a secondary consideration:

  • If you have raster images in your map, select JPEG as the format; it will provide lossy but excellent compression.
  • Otherwise choose PNG, which produces good compressed files from vector graphics (it also does a reasonable job on raster graphics).

Choose an image resolution of about 100 dots per inch (dpi), good for display on most computers.

If your intent is to use the map in a paper or a poster that will be printed, for example with Microsoft Word or Adobe InDesign, you will want to save it in an image format that preserves lots of detail; TIFF works well. Choose a resolution of at least 300 dpi.

If you would like the map to be a stand-alone document, then the Acrobat format PDF is a good choice. These files can be easily displayed by most people with the Adobe Reader software, and it’s readily downloaded by web browsers. PDF will preserve more of the details of the map, and so it’s a good way to distribute it if it will later be printed. A PDF map even provides some degree of interactivity, e.g. turning layers on and off. Important: make sure you click on the tab Format and then choose the checkbox Embed All Document Fonts; this will help keep the document readable by everyone.

Experiment: Try producing all three of these file formats, and compare them. In the PDF document, note the tab on the left called Layers; click on it and then click on the “eye” icon next to one of your layers, and observe what happens.



Saving a Layer for Google Earth

The free application Google Earth has become very popular, as it provides imagery of the Earth’s surface (taken from airplanes or satellites) in an easy-to-access format — if you have an internet connection.

It’s also a lot of fun to use, as you can zoom around the Earth and view it from different perspectives, including terrain and buildings in 3D!

ArcGIS is a useful program to create additional layers that can be viewed in Google Earth.

Exporting to Google Earth makes use of a special geoprocessing tool, an extra program that transforms geographic data into new formats from which additional information can be extracted.

Geoprocessing tools are stored in a collection called ArcToolbox.

The next two procedures are preliminary steps useful for most geoprocessing activities.

ArcToolboxProcedure : Opening ArcToolbox

The majority of geoprocessing tools can be found in ArcToolbox, a large collection of “plug-ins” for ArcGIS.

  1. In the standard toolbar, click on the button  ArcToolbox, which will open it up.
  2. Note the large variety of tool groups available; clicking on any one of them will reveal subgroups of tools, inside of which you will find individual tools.
  3. You may want to “pin” the ArcToolbox window to the right edge of the ArcGIS Pro window, which will keep it out of the way until you need it:
    1. Begin to drag the edge of the window  ArcToolbox, and a set of “pinner” buttons will appear; move the cursor on top of the Winder Right Edge Pinner right-edge pinner and release.
    2. ArcToolbox TabClick the button Auto Hide at the top of the window, so that it will go away automatically when you aren’t pointing at it.
    3. To reopen ArcToolbox, simply point at the sideways tab along the right edge, shown here:

ArcToolbox ToolsProcedure : Exporting a Layer to Google Earth

Google Earth uses a geographic format known as Keyhole Markup Language, KML for short, which is sometimes compressed to a smaller size using ZIP compression to produce a KMZ file. ArcToolbox provides tools to export both individual layers as well as entire maps.

  1. In ArcGIS Pro Icon ArcGIS Pro, open  ArcToolbox as described in the previous procedure.
  2. Click on  Conversion Tools, then on  To KML, and finally on Layer to KML.
  3. In the dialog  Layer to KML, there are a number of fields that let you specify the items you want to process and any information that may be required.

    Note the button Show  Help >>, which opens the right-hand panel to provide an explanation of the purpose of the tool and, when you click on each item, what it is expected:

    Layer to KML Dialog

    In the field/menu  Layer, select a layer or map to export, e.g.  USA Major Rivers.
  4. In the menu  Output File, choose the output path of the file you want to create, e.g.  rivers.kmz; it’s usually easiest to click on the button Document Open Browse to choose a folder and the name and type of the file.
  5. Click the button OK; when geoprocessing is run in the foreground, a dialog will appear describing the process and listing any errors that occur:

    Layer to KML Processing

    When geoprocessing is run in the background, to see the results or any errors you must menu Geoprocessing, then select the menu item Results.
  6. Click the button Close to dismiss the dialog.
  7. Navigate to the folder where you stored the KMZ file, and double-click on it to open it in Google Earth.

    When the layer appears in Google Earth, you should be to see the labels when you zoom in far enough, and an information balloon should appear when you click on any feature. Note that the labels are stored as a separate layer from the features, so you can click them off if you want to.
  8. The KMZ file can also be displayed in the World-Wide Web site Google Maps by first putting it in own your Web site, copying its Web address (URL), and then visiting http://maps.google.com/ and pasting the URL in the field  Search.

    The button  Link will provide a URL for the Google map with your layer added, allowing you to share it.

Interactive Maps

It is also possible to export your map to ArcGIS Online, where it provides an interactive map that lets the viewer explore it by zooming and viewing attributes, very similar to what you have been doing already with ArcGIS Pro.

Unlike the static maps you’ve created here, you will need to design it to work at multiple scales.

Learn more about how to do that in the ESRI course, Creating a Web Map in ArcGIS Pro.


Previous: Constructing Maps

Sharing Maps

Next: Mapping Place-Name Data

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