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Switching to ArcGIS Pro from ArcMap
Switching to ArcGIS Pro from ArcMap
Switching to ArcGIS Pro from ArcMap
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Switching to ArcGIS Pro from ArcMap

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Take advantage of your ArcMap experience to get started now with ArcGIS Pro 2.9.

With the retirement of ArcMap coming soon, users need a tool to learn ArcGIS Pro quickly and efficiently—one that explains the new approach and improved functionality without bogging down. Experienced users don’t need an in-depth introduction but one that gets them up and running using ArcGIS Pro in their daily workflows.

Switching to ArcGIS Pro from ArcMap, second edition, is the concise yet comprehensive source for bringing existing ArcMap users up to speed with ArcGIS Pro. Updated and tested against ArcGIS Pro 2.9, this book introduces experienced ArcMap users to the ribbons, panes, and project-based structure of ArcGIS Pro. Covering the most common and important workflows required for most GIS work, this book concentrates on a project for Crater Lake in Oregon, so users will quickly become familiar with the data and be able to focus on learning the ArcGIS Pro UI in 10 chapters.

Written by an author with 20-plus years of experience writing textbooks using Esri software, Switching to ArcGIS Pro from ArcMap, second edition, takes any frustration out of making the switch to the premier professional desktop GIS application from Esri.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherEsri Press
Release dateJul 12, 2022
ISBN9781589487321
Switching to ArcGIS Pro from ArcMap
Author

Maribeth H. Price

Maribeth H. Price, PhD, Professor of Geology and Dean of Graduate Education for the South Dakota School of Mines and Technology, has been using Esri products since 1991, teaching college GIS since 1995 and writing textbooks using Esri software since 2001. She has extensive familiarity with both ArcMap/ArcCatalog and ArcGIS Pro, both as a user and in the classroom, as well as experience writing about GIS concepts and developing software tutorials. She teaches GIS workshops, having offered more than 100 workshops to over 1,200 participants since 2000.

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    Book preview

    Switching to ArcGIS Pro from ArcMap - Maribeth H. Price

    Preface

    Change is never easy, especially when an accustomed way of doing things is challenged by new methods. This book was written to help ArcMap™ users adjust to ArcGIS® Pro 2.9 software. Ten of its 11 chapters cover the most fundamental and commonly used aspects of geographic information systems (GIS). Each of the first 10 chapters includes an introductory discussion of the salient changes, followed by a set of practical hands-on exercises to lead the reader through the process of learning ArcGIS Pro.

    ArcGIS®, ArcMap™, ArcCatalog™, ArcInfo®, ArcGIS Online, and ArcGIS Pro are trademarks of Esri®. The trademark symbols have been omitted hereafter for ease of reading, but no infringement of rights is hereby intended or condoned.

    As the title indicates, this book is written for GIS professionals who already know ArcMap and have significant experience using it. It is not designed to teach beginning users of GIS as it assumes prior knowledge of the terminology, data structures, and procedures encountered by users of ArcGIS software. Rather than teaching each topic from the basics, it focuses on how ArcGIS Pro is different from ArcMap. It aims to quickly enable you to make the transition, and it can be completed in a few days of serious effort, although additional practice will be needed for the new program to become second nature.

    Even experienced users may find their knowledge of certain topics on the weak side. Consulting either ArcGIS Desktop Help for ArcMap or ArcGIS Pro Help for ArcGIS Pro will, in most cases, provide enough background to continue with the exercises.

    This book assumes that you have a license for ArcGIS Pro. An organizational account for ArcGIS Online is recommended, and usually an account will be integrated with a license for ArcGIS Pro. If not, an ArcGIS℠ Online Public Account may be used for the few exercises that require an account. It does not require access to any additional extensions such as ArcGIS 3D Analyst™ or ArcGIS Spatial Analyst™.

    The data used in the lessons is freely available and downloadable online and requires approximately 65 MB of space. All the data has been compiled from public sources and is redistributable with attribution to its creators. For information on how to download the data, go to objective 1.1 in chapter 1.

    Acknowledgments

    The author thanks Esri for permission to use the screenshots of the ArcGIS Pro user interface, ArcGIS Pro Help and ArcGIS Desktop Help, and basemaps reproduced in the text. Used with permission. Copyright © 2018 Esri, Crater Lake National Park, National Park Service, ArcGIS, ArcGIS Pro, ArcMap, Geologic Map of the Edwards Aquifer Recharge Zone, US Geological Survey (USGS), INCREMENT P, © OpenStreetMap, US Geological Survey Scientific Investigations, EarthExplorer, contributors, and the GIS user community. All rights reserved.

    Early users of this book and workshop attendees have contributed to the book’s improvement.

    The author also thanks the South Dakota School of Mines and Technology for a career in teaching GIS and the many students who challenged me to continually find better ways to explain GIS concepts. Their dedication and enthusiasm have been a lifelong inspiration.

    Chapter 1

    Contemplating the switch to ArcGIS Pro

    Background

    ArcGIS Pro will seem both familiar and completely new to users of ArcMap and ArcCatalog. The arrangement echoes the design of ArcMap: the map in the middle, map layers on one side, the data catalog on the other, with menus above (figure 1.1). Much of the architecture and terminology will persist in the new paradigm: geographic data, maps, layouts, geoprocessing tools, tables, joins, and so on. However, the implementation and details of how these functions are accessed and manipulated takes a different approach in some cases. For users who know ArcMap well, the experience may initially be frustrating as you search for familiar tools and tasks that no longer appear in the same spot or as you get used to a new mindset for some tasks.

    Map of Crater Lake in Oregon.

    Figure 1.1. ArcGIS Pro showing a map of Crater Lake in Oregon.

    However, being open to a new way of doing things will have its rewards. New users unfamiliar with ArcMap seem to learn ArcGIS Pro more quickly as it follows modern software user interface (UI) conventions, using a ribbon with tabs and context-sensitive menus. In many aspects, it is more intuitive and more efficient. After some months of using ArcGIS Pro exclusively, I had to return to ArcMap for a month, and my immediate reaction was Oh my, how clunky. Hopefully after some practice, you, too, will grow to like the new software.

    System requirements

    ArcGIS Pro requires a 64-bit multiprocessor machine with at least a dual core, and a quad-core processor or higher is recommended. Unlike ArcMap, ArcGIS Pro operates in a multithreaded manner, enabling it to take full advantage of multicore computers, which ArcMap could not. Significant performance improvements should be expected in most cases. ArcGIS Pro operates better when more cores are available.

    ArcGIS Pro requires a minimum of 8 GB of RAM and a graphics card with at least 4 GB of RAM and 24-bit display color depth. For a complete description of system requirements, consult the Esri product website, links.esri.com/SysReqs.

    ArcGIS Pro is tightly connected with ArcGIS Online, a cloud-based system built to encourage sharing of GIS data, workflows, and other resources between organizations and users. It is strongly recommended that you have an ArcGIS Online organizational account, which provides access to significantly more data and tools. ArcGIS Pro is also designed to run with a fast internet connection. Although you can run the software offline, provided the data sources are stored on your local computer, you will temporarily lose access to basemaps and internet-provided map services. If you’re planning to use ArcGIS Pro offline regularly, such as on a field laptop, it makes sense to limit maps and tools to use only local data on the computer’s hard drive.

    Licensing

    Because ArcGIS Pro is designed to interact with ArcGIS Online, its recommended method of licensing is an ArcGIS Online organizational account. In this method, the administrator of an ArcGIS Online organization creates a user account and assigns an ArcGIS Pro license from among the total number allotted to the organization. Extensions may also be assigned if available. Figure 1.2 shows the screen the ArcGIS Online administrator uses to assign licenses and extensions to a user account. When starting ArcGIS Pro, you are asked to sign into ArcGIS Online using your account, which simultaneously licenses the software and provides you access to any content you have created within ArcGIS Online.

    Assigned software and extensions for an ArcGIS Online account.

    Figure 1.2. Configuring an ArcGIS Pro license for a user’s ArcGIS Online account.

    For continuity with previous licensing methods, Esri also offers a concurrent licensing model and a single-use license model, both previously used for ArcMap licensing. In the concurrent model, a license manager program runs on a server and allocates licenses at a user’s request. This model is often called a floating license because it is assigned and then taken back when the user is finished, allowing a fixed number of licenses to be shared across many computers. In the single-use model, the license is tied to a specific computer.

    Capabilities of ArcGIS Pro

    Although it is different in many ways, ArcGIS Pro has the equivalent capabilities of ArcMap and more. ArcGIS Pro 2.9, the latest version of the software at the time of publishing this edition, represents another milestone with ongoing improvements.

    ArcGIS Pro integrates the functions of ArcMap, ArcCatalog, ArcToolbox, ArcScene, and ArcGlobe™ within a single interface so that 3D data visualization and analysis no longer require opening a separate program. ArcGIS Pro retains the Python and ModelBuilder™ customization modules. Certain aspects that users are accustomed to using as separate features, such as COGO or Maplex™, are now integrated directly into the program. The familiar extensions, such as ArcGIS Spatial Analyst™ or ArcGIS 3D Analyst™, continue to be available and work in much the same way as additional licensed tools in ArcToolbox.

    However, users should be aware that the design of ArcGIS Pro precludes certain familiar aspects of ArcMap from working in precisely the same way. In ArcGIS Pro, the design criteria specify that most actions are geoprocessing events (taking advantage of the multiprocessor computer). Tools have replaced some of the common right-click commands.

    TIP Can’t find something? Try searching for a tool.

    When should I switch?

    Several factors will affect your decision of when to switch to ArcGIS Pro.

    Reasons for making the switch include:

    Improved performance that takes advantage of multicore architecture

    Seamless integration of 2D and 3D visualization, analysis, and editing

    Improved flexibility in creating dynamic labels

    Creating multiple layouts based on the same map or maps

    Tight integration with ArcGIS Online, making it easier to share maps and map services

    A more modern and intuitive UI

    Expanded use of defaults that can make life easier for inexperienced users

    The product life cycle of ArcMap (see the Esri Support Product Life Cycles website, links.esri.com/ProductLife)

    ArcMap users may dispute the more intuitive interface claim when encountering ArcGIS Pro for the first time. In truth, the UI is probably more difficult to learn if you are accustomed to certain ways of doing things in ArcMap. In general, new users find the ArcGIS Pro UI easier to learn. Over time, you get used to it.

    The software also implements reasonable defaults more than ArcMap, hiding complications from beginners. This feature has both benefits and pitfalls. For example, ArcGIS Pro does not automatically warn you when two geographic coordinate systems (datums) are used in the same map (although this warning can be turned on). This choice makes little difference unless you’re working at very large scales with precise data, and in many situations, the issue can be safely ignored. However, it can cause difficulties later if inexperienced users compile data for a project without being aware that the feature classes and rasters use multiple datums.

    ArcMap will continue to be available and people can continue to use it, but it will no longer be updated. A similar process occurred when ArcInfo Workstation and ArcView became ArcGIS Desktop.

    Several other factors must also be considered when making the switch:

    ArcGIS Pro does not recognize personal geodatabases or ArcInfo coverages.

    The organization and structure of maps and layouts are different.

    Data management in ArcGIS Pro has complications not seen in ArcCatalog.

    Absolute/relative paths are now fixed by default and have less flexibility.

    Custom scripts and tools may need to be updated.

    Third-party extensions may not yet be supported.

    As discussed in the next section, even though the data format is consistent (the geodatabase), the way that files are organized is altered and not as flexible. To switch to ArcGIS Pro, you must learn different ways of doing things. You no longer

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