MapInfo Tutorial v9.0
MapInfo Tutorial v9.0
Professional
Version 9.0
Chapter 1: Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
What is MapInfo Professional? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .16
Mapping at a Glance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .16
Reviewing the MapInfo Professional Features. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .17
Getting Support . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .19
Using the Status Bar . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .19
Using the Help System. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .19
Getting Technical Support . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .20
Chapter 2: What’s New in MapInfo Professional 9.0 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
Before You Get Started. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .22
Changes to the Installer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .22
Licensing Support for MapInfo Professional . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .22
MapBasic Available Free of Charge on the Web . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .22
Major Features and Enhancements. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .22
Using Date- and Time-Based Data in Maps and Queries . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .23
Curved Labels Improve the Look of Your Maps. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .31
Using Universal Data Directly . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .34
Using Templates for Layouts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .40
Mapping – New Features and Enhancements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .55
Setting a Global Label Font . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .56
Creating Multiple HotLinks in a Map . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .56
Setting the New Default Layout Preferences . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .60
New Prompt Prevents the Loss of Work when Closing Windows . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .61
Improvements in Symbol Style Dialog Box and New Fonts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .62
Tool Enhancement . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .63
Setting the Window Size with the Window Manager Tool . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .63
Coordinate System and Datum Enhancements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .63
Updated Australian Victorian Coordinate System . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .64
Updated Danish Coordinate System Entries . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .64
Printing, Importing, and Exporting Enhancements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .65
Exporting to GeoTIFF (*.tif) Format . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .65
Database Enhancements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .69
Using the Find Command in Remote Tables . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .69
Using the Geocode Command in Remote Tables . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .70
Table of Contents
User Guide 5
Table of Contents
User Guide 7
Table of Contents
User Guide 9
Table of Contents
User Guide 11
Table of Contents
User Guide 13
Table of Contents
For example, MapInfo Professional can show which branch store is the closest to your biggest
customers. It can calculate the distances between customers and stores; it can show you the
customers who spent the most last year; it can color-code the store symbols by sales volume. What
makes it all come together is a visual display of your data on the map.
Mapping at a Glance
Huge quantities of information are available today, far more than ever before. Data abounds in
spreadsheets, sales records, and marketing files. Paper and disk store masses of information on
customers, stores, personnel, equipment, and resources. Thematic maps and graphs show
distribution of customers for a marketing campaign.
Nearly all of it has a geographic component. An estimated 85 percent of all databases contain some
sort of geographic information such as street addresses, cities, states, postal codes, or even
telephone numbers with area codes and exchange numbers.
Computer mapping can help you sort through all of this information, and using the geographic
components in your data, display your results on a map. This lets you see patterns and relationships
in the mass of information quickly and easily without having to pore over your database.
Windows Compatibility
MapInfo Professional is Windows XP Professional and Windows XP Home and Office compatible,
so you will feel right at home with its windowing environment. It is designed to fit smoothly into your
work environment, so it only changes the results you get, not the way you work.
Similarly, you can use any of thousands of maps available from MapInfo, everything from street and
highway maps to world maps. You can also create your own maps, either in MapInfo Professional or
with a drawing package. You can diagram anything — floor plans, flow charts, even brain anatomy
— can be treated as a map and entered into the product.
After you’ve organized your data visually, you’ll save the results to files, or send them to any of the
dozens of printers and plotters MapInfo Professional recognizes.
If you have your data on hand and you can read a map, you’re just about ready to begin. Soon, we’ll
show you an example of how easy it is to put MapInfo Professional’s power to work for you.
But first, install MapInfo Professional following the instructions in Installing MapInfo Professional
in Chapter 3 on page 85. If you are new to the product, or new to computer mapping, we suggest
you refer to The Basics of MapInfo Professional in Chapter 4 on page 153 for an overview of
basic mapping terms and concepts. Use the web-enabled tutorial to learn about its features, and
become accustomed to the more common tasks and functions.
For more product and service information, you can connect directly from MapInfo Professional to our
forum (on the Help menu, click MapInfo on the Web), or, consult our World Wide Web site
(http://www.mapinfo.com).
• Direct opening of files created with dBASE or FoxBASE, delimited ASCII, comma delimited CSV
files, ESRI® shapefiles, Lotus 1–2–3, Microsoft Excel, and Microsoft Access; importing of
graphics files in a variety of formats; a function for creating database files from within the
product.
• Multiple views of your data in Map, Browser, and Graph windows. Hot Views allow you to open
multiple views of the same data and update them when you change any one view.
• Live ODBC access to remote database data such as Oracle and SQL Server.
• Seamless map layers that allow you to handle several map layers as if they were one layer.
• Cartographic legends, enabling you to create and customize legends for any map layer.
User Guide 17
What is MapInfo Professional?
• Thematic maps to create analyses of your data with high visual impact, including grid surface
themes, 3DMaps, and Prism maps.
• Use raster underlay capabilities to enhance your work session.
• Querying capabilities ranging from simple data selections from a single file to complex SQL
queries from one or more files.
• Workspaces that save all your settings and views so you can start where you left off.
• HotLinks that let you launch files or URLs directly from a Map window.
• OLE embedding of Map windows into other applications.
• A comprehensive array of drawing and editing tools for customizing your maps.
• Thousands of ready-made maps and functions for creating your own maps.
• Crystal Reports, the industry-standard report-writing program, allows you to create reports of
your tabular data directly in the product.
• A layout window for preparing output.
• Printing and export capabilities for high-quality output
• The ability to change the projection of your map for display or digitizing.
• Object processing functions that help to correct errors in data, set node snap tolerances for
different objects, as well as thin nodes and polygons.
When it’s time to run MapInfo Professional, you’ll feel right at home with its windowing environment.
After you’ve organized your data visually, you’ll save the results to files, or send them to your printer
or plotter.
For tips to help you succeed in using MapInfo Professional, see Ensuring Your Success in the Help
System.
.http://www.adobe.com/products/acrobat/readstep2.html
Getting Support
Here at MapInfo Corporation, we are committed to your success and we provide a wide range of
support to assist you in getting the results you are working toward.
• Use the Help Contents screen to choose topics from “books”. Click a book to display its topics,
choose a topic from the list.
• Use the Search feature to search on a specific word. Type the word you want to search for in the
first field, select the matching word in the second, and then the topic in the third box. MapInfo
Professional displays the topic in the pane on the right.
• Use the Index feature to find a topic quickly. Type the first few letters of the word you are looking
for. The index entry that most closely matches your entry is highlighted. Click the index entry you
want to display.
• Use the Favorites tab to collect and store topics you want to refer to frequently.
User Guide 19
Getting Support
• Context-Sensitive Feature: Press the F1 key to receive more information on any menu command
or dialog box. The Help window for that item displays. Also click the Help button in the MapInfo
Professional dialogs to display information on the current dialog box.
• Quick Access to the MapInfo publications web site: Click the underlined MapInfo Corporation
name at the bottom of each topic page to go to the MapInfo web site. From here you have
access to product information, upcoming events, tech tips, and a complete set of documentation.
Technical Support is here to help you, and your call is important. This section lists the information
you need to provide when you call your local support center. It also explains some of the technical
support procedures so that you will know what to expect about the handling and resolution of your
particular issue.
Please remember to include your serial number, partner number or contract number when
contacting Technical Support.
Full technical support for MapInfo Professional is provided for the currently shipping version plus the
two previous versions.
Extended support options are available at each of our technical support centers in the Americas,
Europe/Middle East/Africa, and Asia-Pacific regions. See below for how to contact the office nearest
you.
• For technical support contact information for your geography, see the Getting Technical Support
topic in the Help System.
http://extranet.mapinfo.com/support/documentation/manuals.cfm
All of the data used in this documentation is available either from the data CD or from the trial data
on the MapInfo web site. To retrieve the trial data, go to:
www.mapinfo.com > Support and Training > Downloads > MapInfo Professional >
MIProTrialData.exe
and download this data to your computer. You must have Internet access to retrieve the trial data.
You may notice that we have shipped two disks for MapInfo Professional this time. One is your
familiar MapInfo Professional installation CD and the other is a data CD that contains new and
updated data you can use to improve the accuracy of geocoding and enhance the look of your
maps. For more information about this change see Data Enhancements on page 76.
These new data types have been added in many places throughout MapInfo Professional and show
up in the lists of your Query dialog boxes. However what is most important is that you understand
how this data is now interpreted when bringing it into MapInfo format.
2. Chose Table > Maintenance > Table Structure and select the table for which you want to
change the data type. The Modify Table Structure dialog box displays.
3. To change the ArrivalTime field from a character field to a Time field, click the Type drop-down
arrow and select the Time type.
User Guide 23
Major Features and Enhancements
where:
String Assumes the form String can be in the String can be in the form
yyyyMMdd or locale form HHmmssfff or yyyyMMddHHmmssfff or
settings for a date string can use the locale can use the locale settings
if Date format is "local" settings for a Time for Date and Time strings
or the U.S. form if Date string. ** separated by a space. ***
format is "US". *
Number Assumes the form Assumes the form Assumes the form
yyyyMMdd. If any HHmmssfff. If any yyyyMMddHHmmssfff. If
portion of the Date is portion of the Time is any portion of the DateTime
invalid the value is set to invalid the value is set is invalid the value is set to
null. May display this to null and display this null and display this error:
error: "Could not convert error: "Could not "Could not convert data."
data." convert data."
Date No conversion Sets value to null and Sets value to the specified
display this error: Date at midnight.
"Could not convert
data."
Time Sets value to null. May No conversion Sets value to current date at
display this error: "Could specified Time.
not convert data."
If the year is last in the current Date format, you can omit it and MapInfo Professional will assume
the current year. If the data specifies a two-digit year, MapInfo Professional assigns the century
based on the current Date Window. If the Date is invalid the value is set to null and MapInfo
Professional may display this error: "Could not convert data."
** to a Time
MapInfo Professional accepts both military and AM/PM forms. The data can specify the entire locale
in AM or PM strings or use just the first character of each. The data may omit the milliseconds,
seconds, and minutes if the lower-order portions are also omitted. If the Time is invalid the value is
set to null and MapInfo Professional may display this error: "Could not convert data."
*** to a DateTime
The conversion rules for Date and Time apply for the respective portions of the string. If the data
omits the Time portion, MapInfo Professional assumes midnight. If the DateTime is invalid the value
is set to null and MapInfo Professional may display this error: "Could not convert data."
If you have a lot of data and it is not in the format you require for your tasks, you can use one of the
MapBasic conversion functions to assist you with this process.
User Guide 25
Major Features and Enhancements
1. Open your data in MapInfo Professional Browser window. We use CrimeActivity.TAB from the
Introductory Data on your CD.
2. Choose Table > Maintenance > Table Structure to display the Modify Table Structure dialog
box.
3. Click Add Field and type a Date_Time label in the Name field.
5. Select Table > Update Column to display the Update Column dialog box.
7. Select the name of the new column you just created in the Column to Update drop-down list.
8. Select the table name again in the Get Value from Table drop-down list.
10. Use the Column drop-down list to create the following expression and click OK:
DateColumnName + TimeColumnName
For more about using math expressions with Time and Date information, see Using
the Arithmetic Operators with the New Data Types on page 29.
11. Click OK to update the new column with the Date and Time information.
Note: If your data is on a remote database, you may be interested in the New Time and DateTime
Data Type Support for Remote Databases on page 72.
1. Open your data in MapInfo Professional Browser window. Use the appropriate background map
to give your data perspective. Here we use the Great Britain data in the Introductory Data on the
data CD.
2. Choose Query > SQL Select to display the SQL Select dialog box.
3. Place your cursor in the from Tables field and select the table name that contains the DateTime
data in the from Tables drop-down list. For our example we used the CrimeActivity table.
4. To find out the location of crimes between April 10, 2003 and April 10, 2004 and between the
hours of 12 and 8 p.m., we entered this text in the where Condition box:
Crime_Date between "04/10/2003" and "04/10/2004" And Crime_Time between
"12:00:00 PM" and "08:00:00 PM"
User Guide 27
Major Features and Enhancements
5. Select the Browse Results and Find Results in Current Map Window check boxes to display
the results.
We used the UKCrimeExample data to create this map. This data is available in the
Introductory Data/World/Europe/UKCrimeExample folder of the Data CD that ships
with MapInfo Professional.
Time minus (-) Time Number The number represents the number of
seconds between two times as a floating
point number. The fractional part of the
result represents milliseconds.
DateTime minus (-) DateTime Number The number represents the number of
days between two DateTimes as a floating
point number. The fractional part of the
result is the fractional portion of a day, as
in today at noon minus today at midnight
equals one half day.
The "Between" operator works as expected for DateTime values. For Time values, we support wrap-
around comparisons. For example:
TimeValue Between "2:00 AM" And "10:00 PM" is true if the TimeValue is greater than or equal
to "2:00 AM" and less than or equal to "10:00 PM"
TimeValue Between "10:00 PM" And "2:00 AM" is true if the TimeValue is greater than or equal
to "10:00 PM" and less than or equal to "11:59:59.999" or greater than or equal to "12:00 AM"
and less than or equal to "2:00 AM"
User Guide 29
Major Features and Enhancements
Note: If you want to use both the Date and Time data from tables registered with earlier versions of
MapInfo Professional, you can re-register the tables.
Note: The Date fields in any of your existing MapInfo Professional files are still treated as Date
fields until you re-register them to use the new DateTime data type.
When you save a MapInfo table to Access format, MapInfo Professional writes Date, Time, and
DateTime fields as Access DateTime fields. The .tab file itself maintains the Date, Time, and
DateTime types so when you reopen the file, the Date, Time, or DateTime data displays. If you
attempt to open these .tab files using a non-MapInfo application, these fields display as DateTime.
When you save a new MapInfo table to dBase format, the .tab file maintains the Time and DateTime
types so that when you reopen it the data will displays as either Time or DateTime. If you attempt to
open these .tab files using a non-MapInfo application, these fields display as character fields.
Here there are curved labels on the Streets, Railroads, and WaterRivers layers.
3. Highlight the layer that contains the labels you want to change and select the AutoLabel check
box.
4. Click the Labels button to display the Label Options dialog box.
User Guide 31
Major Features and Enhancements
5. To ensure that the layer labels are visible, click the On button in the Visibility pane.
6. Click the Curve labels along segments option to display the layer’s labels along the curve of
the line. These labels are anti-aliased automatically to improve the display.
Note: If you use Anchor Points to set the label’s position, when you select:
Left, the curved labels are left-justified starting at the beginning of the arc/polyline
Center, the curved labels are centered on the midpoint of the arc/polyline
Right, the curved labels are right-justified at the end of the arc/polyline
Note: The length of the polyline(s) affect how the label is positioned. The longer the
polyline(s), the more predictably the labels display.
7. Click OK to save this option and OK again to display the new label(s).
You can use the Label tool on the Main toolbar to move curved labels. Make sure you have already
selected the Curve labels along segments option in the Label Options dialog box for the layer you
want to change. In these instructions, we use the term line to mean polyline or arc segment.
1. Click on the Main toolbar to display the Layer Control dialog box.
2. Highlight the layer you want to move the labels for in the list.
7. Click the new location for the label until the label displays as you want it to.
Note: If the segment you select does not have a label name associated with it in the data, no
label displays. If MapInfo Professional cannot edit the label, the Label tool beeps to
indicate an error.
For example, in street maps, the street can be made of several polylines or one long polyline. The
length and number of the polylines, the rules that govern whether a curved label can be created, and
the labeling options you choose, all affect which curved labels are created and where they display.
Some polyline and arc segments in your layer data may not contain label name entries. When this
occurs, MapInfo Professional cannot display labels for that segment.
• MapInfo Professional can only draw curved labels using TrueType fonts. If you select a non-
TrueType font, MapInfo Professional substitutes a comparable TrueType font, so, the label you
chose may display differently than you expect. Also, if you change a horizontal label using a non-
TrueType to a curved label, the new label may display differently due to the font substitution.
• Part of the label string must fit along the polyline/arc that it is labelling. If it cannot fit, MapInfo
Professional determines that the label is too long and throws it away
• MapInfo Professional cannot draw curved labels for polylines that are very jagged, however, it
depends on the curvature of the line
• Labels that curve onto themselves are thrown away and do not display
• Curved labels follow the same rules for overlap detection, duplicate text, and partial segment
labeling as non-curved labels. Each of these rules affect how and when MapInfo Professional
displays the labels
• You cannot drag curved labels as you can other labels
• You can create curved labels with the Label tool at any point along a polyline/arc
• You can reposition the curved auto labels with the Label tool
• Curved and non-curved labels persist for layers in the workspace
• The Labeler utility does not support curved labels, so you cannot transfer curved labels to the
Cosmetic layer
• The curved labels functionality supports double byte characters
• The Label Lines controls are disabled whenever you select the Curve labels along
segments option
• You cannot underline curved labels
User Guide 33
Major Features and Enhancements
MapInfo and Safe Software, a third-party partner, have worked together to provide this more direct
way to open and display universal data directly in MapInfo Professional.
Using Safe Software’s Feature Manipulation Engine (FME), you can access this data directly:
• ESRI ArcSDE
• ESRI Personal Geodatabase (*.MDB)
• AutoCAD.DWG/DXF
• Microstation Design (*.DGN)
• ESRI ArcInfo Export (*.E00)
• USGS Spatial Data Transfer Standard (*.CATD.DDF)
• VPF NIMA/NGA (*.FT)
Using the Open Universal Data feature of MapInfo Professional, you can open different types of data
stored in a variety of locations and:
• Combine data from multiple sources into a single run and join data from incompatible systems
• Extend the use of legacy systems
• Exchange data between CAD-based systems and GIS systems
• Perform quality assurance tests on spatial data
Additionally, if you have the FME Suite, which is available from Safe Software, you can use this
feature to open almost 150 formats within MapInfo Professional. For more information about
extending MapInfo Professional in this way, see Extending MapInfo Professional with FME Suite
on page 39. This feature is based on the FME 2007 release.
1. Choose File > Open Universal Data to display the Specify Input Data Source dialog box.
Use this dialog box to select the data you want to open and specify the name of the
dataset you want to display.
Some formats are file-based and for others you need to specify a data source. Here, a dataset is
defined as a set of data in the same format. Some data contains the coordinate system
information in it and others do not. You may need to specify the coordinate system projection for
the data you are attempting to open.
2. Beside the Format drop-down list, click the Ellipsis button to specify the data format you
want to open. The Formats Gallery displays.
From this dialog box you can select a format and import frequently used formats.
Note: Personal Geodatabase and ArcSDE always display in the Formats Gallery but they may
be grayed out if you do not have the appropriate client DLL or applications installed. See
Setting the ArcSDE Data Options and Setting the ESRI Personal Geodatabase Data
Options in the Help System for these details.
To obtain a free trial of the FME Suite and add more formats to this list, click More Formats.
Highlight a format in this list and click OK to return to the Specify Input Data Source dialog box.
3. Click the Ellipsis button beside the Dataset field to select the data you want to open.
To open a folder of data, click the + button beside the Ellipsis button. The Select Source Files
dialog box displays.
If you select a folder in this dialog box, MapInfo Professional opens all of the data of the specified
format it finds in this folder. If you select the Subfolders check box, MapInfo Professional also
opens all of the data with the specified format in the subfolders as well. This data is merged
together when you open it. To add:
Directory-Based Formats: Click Add Folder to browse for a specific directory name. Check the
Subfolders box to include all subfolders below that directory. Click OK. The new data appends
to the original data.
User Guide 35
Major Features and Enhancements
File-Based Formats: You can type directly in the Folder field, and use wildcards to include all
files of a specific format. For example:
*.dgn
merges all the .dgn files on your C drive. Check Identical Schemas if the files have the same
schema.
• Click Add Files to select individual files
• Ctrl+Left-click to select multiple files
• Click Remove to delete single or multiple files based on your selection
Click OK. The new data appends to the original data. The Specify Data Input Source dialog box
redisplays.
4. If the coordinate system for the data you selected is unknown, you need to specify it in the
Coordinate System field. Click the Ellipsis button beside the field to select the appropriate
projection and click OK. If you do not specify the coordinate system here, you will be prompted
later. For more about this feature, see Coordinate System Behavior and Universal Data on
page 38.
5. Click Settings to display the settings options for this file type. The options in these dialog boxes
depend on the format you selected. To learn more about these settings, see the these topics in
the Help System:
It is possible that a style option s will not show. If it's the case it means that the layer(s) in
question does (do) not have any geometry objects (only attributes).
6. When you have completed your settings, click OK to open the data you selected.
If you did not specify the coordinate system in step 4 and the coordinate system is unknown, the
Choose Projection dialog box displays, allowing you to select the projection for the data you are
opening. Select the appropriate projection for the data and click OK. The system defaults to your
Table Projection setting in the Map Window Preference if you do not select a projection here.
See Coordinate System Behavior and Universal Data on page 38 for more information. The
Select Layers dialog box displays.
MapInfo
Professional
opens all
layers with
the Open
check box
selected.
Use this box to specify the layers to open and then specify the layer display options.
To change the name of the layer, click it, type a new name in the File Name field and click Apply.
Use the Check All and Uncheck All buttons to select or deselect the Open check box for all of
the layers. Click the Back button to return to the Specify Input Data Source dialog box.
7. Now you are ready to select the layers to which you will apply the new display options. All layers
you select together will share the same display characteristics.
• To change the display options of all layers, click the layer name of the first layer, press the
Shift key, and click the layer name of the last layer
• To change the display options of some layers, click the layer name of the first layer, press the
Ctrl key, and click the other layers that require the same change
• To change the display options of one layer, click the layer name of the layer
8. Once you have selected the layer(s), use the display buttons to make the changes you require. If
the layer(s) you are changing contain:
• Point data, click the Symbol Style button to change the symbol options
• Line data, click the Line Style button to change the line options
• Region data, click the Region Style button to change the background options
• Text data, click the Text Style button to change the text options
Note: If you want to open maps based on data that is thematically related, assign the same
styles to the layers that contain that information.
9. Once you have completed your layer display options, consider the options that affect the whole
data source. You can select from these options:
• Use color information from data
• Do not open empty layers
10. Use the Directory field to specify the path to which you want to save the resulting data. Click the
Ellipsis button beside the field to navigate to the appropriate directory.
User Guide 37
Major Features and Enhancements
11. Select the viewing options from the Preferred View drop down box, as you would when opening
any other data.
12. When you have completed your selections, click OK to open the data according to the settings
you have specified. A status bar displays to indicate the progress and the data displays.
Note: For any terminology that might not be familiar to you, review the FME Suite Help System.
When you open universal data using this new feature, the data is stored locally temporarily so you
can reopen it faster the next time you use MapInfo Professional. For example, the temporary file
folder location for Windows XP is:
If you find that you are opening large files with many layers using this feature, these files can get
very large and may impact the performance of your system. If you see Out of Disk Space
errors, you may want to delete these files to see if this data is the cause of the error. Whenever you
delete temporary files, you will have to reopen that stored data to display it again.
Some of the universal data you are working with contains coordinate system information and some
do not. If you are opening Spatial Data Transfer Standard data and some of the ESRI data, the
coordinate system information entry is handled for you. Coordinate system information for AutoCAD,
Microstation Design and VPF data must be specified, although VPF data is usually in the
Longitude/Latitude WGS 84 projection.
1. The data you want to refresh must be open in the Map window.
2. Choose Table > Universal Data Table Refresh. The Select Tables dialog box displays.
3. Highlight the table(s) you want to refresh in the list and click Select. A status bar displays to
indicate the progress and the layers are refreshed.
• Make sure that the version of the FME Suite that you are using is the same version or later than
the that which has been integrated with MapInfo Professional. This means you must have FME
Suite 2007 or later. This works on a build number basis, so even a minor update to MapInfo
Professional or FME Suite could result in discrepancies between the products and could prevent
you from opening particular formats.
• MapInfo localizes the dialog boxes of the FME product that we use in MapInfo Professional.
However, when you extend MapInfo Professional with the FME Suite, this functionality is
effectively run from the FME Suite, using the FME Suite dialog boxes.
For example, if you are running the Japanese version of MapInfo Professional and you install the
English version of the FME Suite, the dialog boxes that display for this feature will be in English.
If you revert to the MapInfo Professional implementation of this feature, the translated dialog
boxes will display in Japanese.
Note: Raster/grid formats and MapInfo TAB/MIF formats are not available when you extend
MapInfo Professional with the FME Suite.
You must have a valid FME Suite License to extend MapInfo Professional to open additional data
source formats.
1. Choose Start > All Programs > FME > FME Administrator to display the FME Administrator
dialog box.
If you have extended MapInfo Professional and want to return to MapInfo Professional Universal
Data functionality only, click Revert. You might want to revert to MapInfo Professional if you have
the Base FME Suite and you want to work with ArcSDE data.
3. Click Close to close the FME Administrator.
User Guide 39
Major Features and Enhancements
A layout template is a user-defined workspace that contains a Layout window with placeholders for
maps, other windows, and additional elements in a specific arrangement for presentation. You can
create a layout from one of the templates that MapInfo Professional comes with, or from a template
that you create using Layout Templates.
The Layout Templates feature provides a set of tool buttons that enable you to create, edit, and save
layout templates. Configuration options enable you to keep layout templates organized and set the
default layout template.
You can create different layout templates to accommodate your map presentation needs. For
example, if you frequently use a combination of a map, browser, and legend in your layouts, you can
create a layout template that contains placeholders for each of those window types. You can then
create different layouts based on the same template without having to create each layout manually.
This section guides you through creating a layout template first and then shows you how to create a
layout from a template.
1. Close any open windows. You will be prompted to close open windows later if you do not close
them now. No windows can be open when you create or edit a layout template because the
windows would be written to the workspace when you save the layout template.
The About Creating Templates dialog provides important information about editing templates and
enables you to control the display of the About Creating Templates dialog box.
The Don’t show this dialog again check box is selected by default. Selecting the Don’t show
this dialog again check box prevents the About Creating Templates dialog box from displaying
every time you create a layout template.
4. Click OK.
The tool buttons in Template Tools enable you to add placeholders for the different elements in the
layout. These elements include the different types of MapInfo Professional windows (map, browser,
graph, and legend), a scalebar, and text objects. You can control each element’s size and its position
in the layout. Additional tool buttons enable you to save the layout template, and cancel the creation
of the layout template without saving it.
Add Map–Adds a map frame to the Add Graph–Adds a graph frame to the
layout template. layout template.
When you add a map element to the layout template, you are adding a frame that acts as a
placeholder for that specific element, rather than adding the element itself. The tools enable you to
specify which element you want the frame to represent in the template.
User Guide 41
Major Features and Enhancements
Each map element’s frame has a color fill to help you distinguish between each map element. The
window types are also labeled inside the frame. The color and fill for each map element is illustrated
below:
You can modify the borders of the placeholder frames, but you cannot modify the fill. Modifying the
fill of the placeholder frames will produce an error when you use the template.
You can modify the style of the placeholder labels (text objects), but you cannot modify the
placeholder text itself. Modifying the placeholder text creates unexpected results when you use the
template. The placeholder text does not appear when the template is used.
1. For the map element you want to add, click the corresponding tool button. For example, click the
Add Map tool to add a map frame; click the Add Browser tool to add a browser frame, etc.
2. Move your cursor over the Layout window. The cursor becomes a crosshair. Click on the Layout
window at the desired position for the map element and hold down the mouse.
4. When the frame reaches the desired size, release the mouse. A frame that represents the map
element you specified displays on the screen.
5. Using the Select tool in the Main toolbar, adjust the size and position of the frame.
Here is an example of a layout template with a map, browser, and legend added to the Layout
window.
Because you are working in the Layout window as you create the template, you can use any of the
Layout menu commands to adjust frame position, bring windows to the front or back, or specify other
Layout window options. Here is an example of the same layout template with the Map and Browser
window positions adjusted and the Map window brought to the front.
Adding Text
The Add Text tool button enables you to add text object placeholders to your layout template. The
text placeholder is a textual description of what the actual text should be. For example, the
placeholder might say “Map Title” to prompt you that the text should be the title of the map. You can
select text placeholders from a list of text categories, or you can define your own text placeholder.
2. Move your cursor over the Layout window. The cursor becomes a crosshair. Click on the Layout
window at the desired position for the text. The Add Text to Map Template dialog box displays on
the screen.
User Guide 43
Major Features and Enhancements
3. Select what you want the text placeholder to represent. Choose from the following text
categories:
• Map Title–Indicates the map title text.
• Map Scale–Indicates the map scale.
• Print Date–Indicates the date that the map was printed.
• Print Time–Indicates the time that the map was printed.
• User Text Prompt–Indicates a user-defined text category. You can define a category of text.
and create a placeholder in the layout template for it. This is useful if you have other text
annotations that you use regularly, but that do not fall into any of the pre-defined categories.
Click the button next to the text category you want to add, and then click Add.
• If you selected User Text Prompt, go to step 4
• If you selected any of the other categories, go to step 5.
4. If you selected User Text Prompt, the Enter User Text Prompt Name dialog displays on the
screen. Enter the text prompt you want to use in the box and click OK.
Be sure that your user text prompt is meaningful in terms of the map presentations you are going
to create with this template. There is a 200-character limit for user defined text.
5. When you select a text category, the text placeholder immediately displays in the Layout window
at the position you clicked.
6. Using the Select tool on the Main toolbar, adjust the position of the text.
7. Using the Text Style tool on the Drawing toolbar, you can adjust the size and other style features
of the text.
Here is an example of our earlier layout template, except it now has a map title added to it.
If you want to make the map title larger, using the Select tool from the Main toolbar, double-click on
the map title placeholder. The Text Object dialog box displays on the screen. Click the Style button to
change the size or other style elements of the text.
Drawn objects can be useful in a layout template if there is an object that you want to use in a
number of layouts. The template enables you to draw the object and adjust its position once, and
then reuse it as many times as you need to. You do not have to remember the object size, position,
or style attributes because the object is part of the template.
1. Click the Save Template tool. The Specify workspace file to save template as dialog box
displays on the screen.
2. In the Save in box, leave the folder as is. The layout template workspace must be saved to this
location. If you try to save the workspace to another location, you will get an error.
3. In the File name box, enter a filename for the layout template. The default filename is Layout.
4. In the Save as type box, select the .wor workspace type. The default type is .wor.
5. Click Save. A MapInfo dialog box displays on the screen. The dialog box asks you if you want to
add a new entry to the list of print templates.
6. Click Yes to add a new entry to the list of print templates. The Enter Description of Template
dialog box displays on the screen.
User Guide 45
Major Features and Enhancements
7. Enter a description for the template.This description identifies the layout template. The
description of the layout template appears in template lists when you perform the following tasks:
• Configure layout templates.
• Create a layout from a template.
Click No if you do not want to add a description of the layout template. The template will be
saved as a workspace, but it will not appear in the Templates lists for configuration and for
creating a layout from a template.
8. Click OK. The layout template is created, and the Layout window and the Template Tools close.
1. Click the Quit Template without saving tool. A MapInfo dialog box displays on the screen. This
dialog box asks you if you want to quit the layout template without saving it.
2. Click Yes. The Layout window closes without saving the layout template.
1. Close all open windows. No windows can be open when you create or edit a layout template
because the windows would be written to the workspace when you save the layout template.
2. Choose Tools > Layout Templates > Edit Template. The Edit Template dialog box displays on
the screen.
4. Click OK.
5. The Layout window opens using the selected layout template. The Template Tools toolbar also
displays on the screen.
7. Click the Save Template tool button when you are finished.
When you edit a layout template, you can use any of the Template tools to add additional windows, a
scale bar, or text. You can also use any of the drawing tools on the Drawing toolbar to add drawn
annotations to your layout such as geometric objects and additional text annotations. Finally, you
also have all the Layout menu commands at your disposal to make final adjustments to the
windows, create drop shadows, or change the zoom.
You can modify the borders of the placeholder frames, but you cannot modify the fill. Modifying the
fill of the placeholder frames will produce an error when you use the template.
You can modify the style of the placeholder labels (text objects), but you cannot modify the
placeholder text itself. Modifying the placeholder text creates unexpected results when you use the
template.
• Add a template.
• Remove a template.
• Reorder a template.
• Rename a template.
• Specify the default template.
You will see any configuration changes the next time you create a layout from a layout template. The
Create Layout from Template command in the Map menu displays the Configure Layout dialog box.
The Templates list in the Configure Layout dialog box reflects any configuration changes you made.
See Creating a Layout From a Template on page 52 for more information.
To configure layout templates, choose Tools > Layout Templates > Configure Templates. The
Configure Map Templates dialog box displays on the screen.
User Guide 47
Major Features and Enhancements
1. Click Add. The Select workspace file to add as new template dialog box displays on the screen.
2. In the File name box, enter the name of the workspace file (*.wor) that you want to add to the
Templates list.
3. Click Open. The Setup for New Template dialog box displays on the screen.
4. Enter a description of the layout template you are adding in the Description box. This
description identifies the layout template.
5. Click OK. The description of the layout template appears in the Templates list.
6. Repeat this procedure for each layout template you want to add.
7. Click Done in the Configure Map Templates dialog box when you are finished.
The next time you create a layout from a template, the additional template(s) will also appear in the
Template drop-down list in the Configure Layout dialog box.
Note: Removing a template does not delete the layout template workspace; it only removes the
layout template from the Templates list.
2. Click Remove.
3. A MapInfo message dialog box displays on the screen. This dialog box asks you if you want to
remove the selected layout template.
User Guide 49
Major Features and Enhancements
5. Repeat this procedure for each layout template you want to remove.
6. Click Done in the Configure Map Templates dialog box when you are finished.
The next time you create a layout from a template, the selected template(s) is also removed in the
Template drop-down list of the Configure Layout dialog box.
1. Click Reorder.
4. Use the Up and Down buttons to move the selected layout template up or down in the
Templates list. Each time you click either the Up or Down button, you move the selected
template up or down one place in the Templates list.
In this example, the Map Graph Legend template has been moved up several places in the
Templates list using the Up button.
5. Repeat this procedure for each layout template that you want to reorder.
6. Click Done in the Reorder Map Templates dialog box when you are finished.
7. Click Done in the Configure Map Templates dialog box when you are finished. The new layout
template order appears in the Templates list of the Configure Map templates dialog box.
The next time you create a layout from a template, the new template order will also be reflected in
the Template drop-down list of the Configure Layout dialog box.
2. Click Rename. The Enter new description for template dialog box displays on the screen. The
description of the selected template is displayed in the Description box.
User Guide 51
Major Features and Enhancements
4. Click OK. The new description of the selected layout template displays in the Templates list of
the Configure Map Templates dialog box.
5. Repeat this procedure for each layout template you want to rename.
6. Click Done in the Configure Map Templates dialog box when you are finished.
The next time you create a layout from a template, the new template name(s) will also be reflected in
the Template drop-down list of the Configure Layout dialog box.
3. Click Done in the Configure Map Templates dialog box when you are finished.
2. To activate the Map menu, make a Map window the active window. If your layout contains more
than one Map window, the frontmost Map window will be map 1 in the layout. You will be
prompted for maps 2, 3, and 4.
3. Choose Map > Create Layout From Template. The Configure Layout dialog box displays on
the screen. The Configure Layout dialog box enables you to specify the layout template to use,
enter the map title text, if any, and specify settings that control how map 1 will look in the layout.
Note: The Template drop-down list will reflect any layout configuration changes you might have
made prior to creating a layout. See Configuring Layout Templates on page 47.
4. In the Template drop-down list, select the layout template you want to use. The default template
is the first template in the list. You set the default template when you configure a layout template.
See Setting the Default Template on page 52.
5. Click the View Template button to open the selected layout template in a Layout window. For
example, here is the Template Preview of a user-defined layout template: s that comes with
MapInfo Professional: Standard Map (A4 Landscape).
Viewing the template is an optional step, but looking at the template can help to remind you of
what elements are in a particular layout template. If you change your layout template selection,
you must click the View Templates button again to see the new layout template selection.
6. If the layout template you selected has a Map Title text placeholder, enter the map title text in the
Map Title box. This text will appear where the Map Title text placeholder is in the layout
template.
7. In the Map Scale drop-down list, select the map scale. You can choose from a number of
different scale settings:
• Same zoom width as on map–The map will display in the layout at the same scale setting
that it does in the Map window. This is the default setting.
• 1: 1000–One inch is equal to 1000 miles (or the distance units you have specified in the Map
Options dialog box).
User Guide 53
Major Features and Enhancements
• 1: 2500–One inch is equal to 2500 miles (or the distance units you have specified in the Map
Options dialog box).
• 1: 5000–One inch is equal to 5000 miles (or the distance units you have specified in the Map
Options dialog box).
• 1: 10000–One inch is equal to 10000 miles (or the distance units you have specified in the
Map Options dialog box).
• 1: 25000–One inch is equal to 25000 miles (or the distance units you have specified in the
Map Options dialog box).
• 1: 50000–One inch is equal to 50000 miles (or the distance units you have specified in the
Map Options dialog box).
• 1: 100000–One inch is equal to 100000 miles (or the distance units you have specified in the
Map Options dialog box).
• User Defined Scale–The map in the layout will display at the scale setting you specify. When
you select User Defined Scale, you will be prompted for a scale setting after you click Next
in the Configure Layout dialog box.
8. In the Zoom Layers drop-down list, select the zoom layering you want in the layout. Choose one
of the following zoom layering settings:
• Maintain Zoom Layering Settings–The map displays in the layout using the zoom layering
settings of the layers in the Map window.
• Show Layers Currently Visible–The map displays in the layout showing the layers that are
visible in the Map window.
• Turn all zoom layering off–The map displays in the layout using no zoom layering for any
layer, regardless of the zoom layering settings of the layers in the Map window.
9. If you want selected objects in the Map window to be highlighted in the layout, select the
Highlight Current Selection on Layout check box. The highlighting is formed by objects drawn
in the Cosmetic layer of the Map window.
10. Click Next. MapInfo Professional creates a copy of the frontmost Map window and displays this
copy in the Layout window. Using a copy enables MapInfo Professional to manipulate the map
that appears in the layout without affecting the map in the Map window.
If you chose a standard scale setting and have only one Map window frame in your layout
template, you are finished. You can make final adjustments to your layout and then print it or
save it to a file.
If you elected to use your own scale setting or have more than one map in your layout template,
go to step 11.
11. If you selected the User Defined Scale option in step 7, the Enter Output Scale dialog box
displays on the screen. Enter the desired scale and click OK.
12. If you have more than one Map window frame in the layout template, the Select Mappers dialog
box displays on the screen.
13. Three Map drop-down lists enable you to select up to three additional Map windows to include in
the layout. You can have a maximum of four Map windows in a layout template.The number of
Map drop-down lists that are available corresponds to the number of Map window frames in the
layout template. In the Select Mappers dialog box shown here, one additional map is needed to
complete the layout. The Map windows available to choose from correspond to the Map windows
you have open.
Select the additional map or maps needed to complete your layout and click OK. The layout
displays on the screen.
User Guide 55
Mapping – New Features and Enhancements
We have added this Label preference to the Styles Preferences dialog box for your convenience.
1. Choose Options > Preferences > Styles to display the Styles Preferences dialog box.
2. Click the Text button to display the Text Style dialog box. The options you select in this dialog
box now also apply to labels.
For example:
1. With the Map window open, select to display the Layer Control dialog box.
2. Click the layer you want to add the hotlink to and click HotLink. The HotLink Options dialog box
displays.
The first time you open this dialog box, may be no column entries to display.
User Guide 57
Mapping – New Features and Enhancements
Note: The check box beside the Filename Expression indicates that the HotLink is active.
To disable the HotLink, clear the check box beside the Filename Expression.
3. To edit a HotLink definition, select the definition in the list and use the fields and buttons in the
Properties of selected hotlink definition section to set the values.
Note: To edit a HotLink option, make another selection in this dialog box and click OK.
Filename Expression
Use this drop-down list to select a field in the selected layer's table. You can also select the
Expression option to create an expression. We have created an example expression in the
first column
This option defaults to the first field in the table.
File locations are relative to table location
Use this check box to indicate whether the HotLink data you are specifying is in the relative
path of the open .tab file. This check box is cleared by default.
Activate HotLink on
Use these buttons to indicate which map feature the user can click to activate a HotLink.
Options include Labels, Objects, or Labels & Objects. The Labels option is selected by
default.
Note: When you select the same activation option for two different Filename Expressions, a
list of options displays for the user.
Save options to table metadata
Use this option to save the HotLink options you select in this dialog box to the metadata of
the .tab file. This option is cleared by default.
3. Click an area on the map with multiple HotLinks to see the list.
2. Select the layer that contains the HotLink you want to remove permanently.
1. Follow step 1through step 3 in the previous instructions to display the HotLink Options dialog
box.
2. Clear the check box beside the Filename Expression column of the HotLink you want to
disable.
3. Click OK to save this change.
4. Highlight the HotLink you want to move and use the Up and Down buttons to position the
HotLink in the proper order.
• If a HotLink definition has a Filename Expression value of none (that is, it is an empty string) the
Hotlink Options dialog box displays the Filename Expression as <undefined>.
• When you hover the cursor over a map feature that contains a HotLink, MapInfo
Professional displays a message in the Status bar describing the content of the HotLink. When
there is more than one HotLink for that map feature or the activation attributes overlap, the
phrase, Multiple active objects under cursor is displayed in the Status bar.
User Guide 59
Mapping – New Features and Enhancements
1. Choose Options > Preferences > Layout Window to display the Layout Window Preferences
dialog box.
Use this dialog box to set the preferences for Layout windows. Completing the entries
in this dialog box ensures that your layouts will have a uniform look and feel.
2. Complete the selections in this dialog box and click OK to save your Layout window preferences.
Show Rulers
Select this check box to display rulers in your Layout window. Rulers can be useful to help
you line up elements of your layout on the page. This option is selected by default.
Show Page Breaks
Select this check box to display the page breaks in your Layout window. Showing the page
breaks ensures that the elements of your layout are consistent from page to page. This
option is selected by default.
Show Frame Contents
The options in the Show frame contents box allow you to specify when the contents of frames
display.
Always
Allows you to have the contents of a frame display all the time even when it is not active.
For example, if you are changing the contents of a Map window that is also in the layout, you
might want the Always option. That way you can see the effect of the layout as you make
your changes. This option is selected by default.
Only when Layout window is active
Allows you to display the contents of a frame only when the Layout is the active window.
Never
Allows you to display only the file name and frame type, even when the Layout is the active
window. For example, choose Never when you are resizing and repositioning frames. That
way the contents of each frame will not redraw every time you make a change.
Once you set these preferences, MapInfo Professional sets these options automatically whenever
you create a new Layout window. To reset these options for a particular layer locally, select Layout >
Options to display the Layout Display Options dialog box. This dialog box also allows you to set
height and width restrictions and an autoscroll option.
Note: The instructions for setting this prompt for Layout windows are described inSetting the New
Default Layout Preferences on page 60 topic.
To prevent the loss of work, we have added a new prompt option to the Layout Window Preferences
and the Legend Window Preferences dialog boxes. This prompt allows you to choose to save the
contents of the windows you are working in to a workspace before closing. You can also choose to
discard these changes.
To set the new prompt when you close Map windows with open Legend windows:
1. Choose Options > Preferences > Legend Window to display the Legend Window Preferences
dialog box.
2. Select the Prompt Save Workspaces Prior to Close check box to display the prompt when
closing all or closing map windows.
User Guide 61
Mapping – New Features and Enhancements
Once you have set these preferences and click the button on the Standard tool bar or you
select File > Close All while you are in a Layout or Legend window, this prompt displays:
Here you can choose to save your current work or discard it. Click Save to save all of the work you
have completed in all your open windows or Discard to lose all of the changes you have made since
the last save.
When close a Map window that has layouts and legends associated with it, this prompt displays:
The same rules apply here. Click Save to save all of the work you have completed in all your open
windows or Discard to lose all of the changes you have made since the last save. The prompt only
displays if there are changes to the open Layout and Legend windows or these windows are new.
Many users have indicated that the font names have been difficult to distinguish because the width
of the Font drop-down list is too narrow.
We have added new standard fonts prepared by the Office of Homeland Security for use in your
MapInfo maps. These fonts were developed to standardize the way emergency circumstances and
industries are depicted in maps. These TrueType fonts are listed using the format “ERS V# symbol
type” for clarity. Specifically the new symbols are:
• ERS v2 Damage - Use these fonts to create your own symbols. These fonts include circles,
squares, and rectangles of various complexity.
• ERS v2 Incidents - Use these fonts to show various hazardous circumstances such as fires,
police activity, and other dangers.
• ERS v2 Infrastructures Stage 01 - 04 - Use these fonts to show various industrial environments
including farms, factories, financial businesses etc. in a wide variety of complex frames to
indicate severity
• ERS v2 Natural Events - Use these fonts to show areas of natural disasters such as hurricanes,
tsunamis, volcanoes and other natural events
• ERS v2 Operations Stage 01 - 04 - Use these fonts to show various emergency circumstance
symbols such as ambulances, biohazard, and Red Cross-type symbols in a wide variety of
complex frames to indicate severity
Tool Enhancement
Added Bosnia-Herzegovina Coordinate Systems. We have added the following projections to the
PRJ file:
• Bosnia-Herzegovina (Zone 5)
• Bosnia-Herzegovina (Zone 6)
• Bosnia-Herzegovina (Zone 7)
Added Luxembourg Projections. We have added the following Luxembourg projection to the PRJ
file:
Units:- meters
User Guide 63
Coordinate System and Datum Enhancements
Added Swedish Coordinate System. We have added the following projection to the PRJ file.
• ST 74
Updated EPSG Aliases for Swedish Coordinate Systems. We have added two new EPSG
aliases for Swedish coordinate systems to the PRJ file to maintain consistency with the latest update
to MapXtreme:
• EPSG:2326
• EPSG:3152
Updated Hong Kong EPSG Code. We have added the following EPSG code entry to the PRJ file:
Map Windows
When you export a Map window to GeoTIFF format, the file is saved in the current projection of the
Map window.
You cannot use the Save Window As command to save the Map window to a different projection. To
use a different projection, you must change the Map window projection before you use the Save
Window As command.
GeoTIFF is not available as an export format for other types of windows (Browser, Graph, Legend,
Redistricter, 3DMap) or Map windows that use unsupported projections.
Supported Projections
For GeoTIFF export the Map window projection must have an EPSG code.
You can see whether a projection has an EPSG code in the Choose Projection dialog box.
The Choose Projection dialog box is available from the Map Options dialog box. With a Map window
open, choose Map > Options. In the Map Options dialog box, click the Projection button.
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Printing, Importing, and Exporting Enhancements
The MAPINFOW.PRJ file entries that use EPSG codes contain a “\P###” code. For more
information see the MapInfo Professional User Guide, Chapter 14: Working with Coordinate
Systems and Projections.
Image Rotation
In Map windows that contain a raster or grid image, the image must not cause the map projection to
rotate the coordinates if you wish to create a GeoTIFF for this Map window. Rotation can occur if the
image is not registered precisely. To work around this, you can force Image Reprojection to be
enabled by setting Map > Options > Image Processing > Reprojection Using > Always. If Image
Processing is set to Always, then it is possible to use raster layers for GeoTIFF export
1. Open the desired layers in a Map window, if you do not have your map open already.
3. Choose File > Save Window As. The Save Window As dialog box displays on the screen.
4. In the Save in box, select the destination folder of the exported file.
5. In the Save as type drop-down list, click the arrow to see the file format choices. Select GeoTIFF
(*.tif).
6. In the File name box, enter a name for the exported file.
Click Save and continue with the normal Save Window As process.
Unsupported Projections
If you attempt to export a Map window using a projection that is not supported by the GeoTIFF
format, that is, a projection that does not have an EPSG code, the GeoTIFF format will not be
available as an export format. In addition, the Save Window As dialog box displays the following
message at the bottom of the dialog box:
Note: GeoTIFF option not available when Current Map Projection does not have an EPSG code. In
order to save to GeoTIFF, you’ll need to change your map projection to one that has an
EPSG code.
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Printing, Importing, and Exporting Enhancements
Note: GeoTIFF option not available when Map projection is rotated due to raster or grid images. Try
turning on Image Reprojection (Map > Options > Image Processing > Reprojection >
Always).
1. Choose Map > Options. The Map Options dialog box displays on the screen.
2. Click Image Processing. The Image Processing dialog box displays on the screen.
Database Enhancements
The following are the database enhancements for this version of MapInfo Professional:
If the selected column in the search table does not have an index, an index will be created when you
click OK in the Find dialog. For native tables and linked remote tables, this newly created index is
permanent. For live remote tables and read-only native tables, the index is temporary.
User Guide 69
Database Enhancements
If the selected column in the search table does not have an index, an index will be created when you
click OK in the Geocode dialog. For native tables and linked remote tables, this newly created index
is permanent. For live remote tables and read-only native tables, the index is temporary.
Additional Notes
The Find and Geocode dialog boxes both contain the following design elements:
• Indexed tables and columns are shown with an asterisk at the end of their names in the Search
Table and for Objects in Column drop-down lists. There is a reminder in each dialog box about
what the asterisk means.
• The tables in the Search Table drop-down list are listed in alphabetical order.
• The width of the list boxes adjusts dynamically to fit the longest table or column name.
Some customers objected to the Find Selection zoom functionality for multiple objects as well.
Others wanted the option of zooming or not zooming in different situations, so we have created a
Map window preference so you can set the functionality that works best for you.
1. Choose Options > Preferences > Map Window > Editing tab to display the Editing Map
Preferences dialog box.
Use the Find Selection Options to specify the behavior when you are performing a
Find Selection.
2. Select the Zoom on Find Selection option to zoom to the selection each time you perform a
Find Selection for single and multiple objects. Clear this check box to prevent zooming when
performing a Find Selection.
3. Select the Find Selection after Paste option to turn on the Find Selection feature in the Map
window only after you Paste an object. If you have an active Browser, and the selection is in that
Browser window, the browser still scrolls to the selection. Clear this check box to prevent
zooming after pasting an object.
4. Click OK to save your preferences and OK again to return to the Map window.
User Guide 71
Database Enhancements
New Time and DateTime Data Type Support for Remote Databases
The new Time and DateTime data types (see Using Date- and Time-Based Data in Maps and
Queries on page 23) address a long time issue with many remote databases. Because MapInfo
Professional only had a date data type, and most remote databases and servers have Date and
DateTime data types, data read from servers would often be truncated or lost in the process.
With the addition of these new Time and DateTime data types, the server DATE, TIME, and
DATETIME/TIMESTAMP match up with the MI Date, MI Time, and MI DateTime more closely. If you
create a new table with DateTime or Time data in it, the .tab file (both live and linked) you create is
marked as version 900 file.
To preserve backward compatibility, when you open an existing live .tab file (linked .tab files are
really native tables with a local table definition), the behavior depends on the version of the .tab file.
If the tab file is marked as version 900 or later, MapInfo Professional treats the server DATE as MI
Date, the server DATETIME or TIMESTAMP as MI DateTime, and server TIME (if any) as MI Time. If
the version number is earlier than 900, MapInfo Professional matches the behavior of previous
releases, that is, the server DATE and DATETIME or TIMESTAMP values are converted to MI Date
and server TIME to MI Char. In addition the Informix DATETIME type is opened as MI Date but is
marked read-only. This is true of live tables only because linked tables have already been defined.
MapInfo
Professional From Oracle From MS From MS
Data Type From Informix (OCI) Access SQL Server
*Backward compatibility depends upon the .tab file version as described above.
**If you use ODBC, the Oracle DATE type is returned as TIMESTAMP. The driver issue causes an
inconsistency with OCI.
When you commit table data from MapInfo Professional to these remote database servers, MapInfo
Professional updates the server table with the value that the user provides in the browser. MapInfo
Professional may apply some restrictions during the input time.
In MapInfo To MS To MS SQL
Professional To Informix To Oracle Access Server
*The MapInfo Professional data type will be extended on the servers. When the same data returns to
MapInfo Professional it becomes the data type identified on the server. This mismatch is caused by
a mismatch between the data types in the server and MapInfo Professional.
As you can see from the previous table, there may be conversion issues involved depending on the
local type and the type of database server you are communicating with. To make the data type
conversion clearer we have added some messages to inform you of the details of the conversion
when you are creating a new table or saving a copy of a table data to a remote database. When you
use the Create New Table or Save Copy of Table as dialog boxes, red messages display at the
bottom of the dialog box to inform you of the Date, Time, and DateTime conversion details.
If you create a new table with Date, Time, and DateTime data using MapBasic statement, the
notification is a little different. If you use the Server Create Table statement, keep in mind that the
statement only supports the types that are also supported by the server. Therefore, Time type is
prohibited from this statement for Oracle, IBM Informix, MS SQL Server and Access servers and the
Date type is prohibited for MS SQL Server and Access servers. You should replace unsupported
types with DateTime to create a table that contains Time information on a column.
If you create a copy using a MapBasic statement and the source table contains Time or Date type
columns, these columns will be converted to DATETIME or TIMESTAMP depending on whether the
server supports the data types or not and the parameters you pass in. You can control this behavior
using the ConvertDateTime clause. If the source table does not contain Time or Date data type, this
clause is not operational. If ConvertDateTime is set to ON (which is the default setting), Time or Date
type columns will be converted to DATETIME or TIMESTAMP. If ConvertDateTime is set to OFF the
conversion is not done and the operation will be cancelled if necessary. If ConvertDateTime is set to
INTERACTIVE a dialog box will pop up to prompt the user and the operation will depend on the
user's choice. If the user chooses to convert, then the operation will convert and continue; if the user
chooses to cancel, the operation will be cancelled. The Time type requires conversion for all
supported servers (Oracle, IBM Informix, MS SQL Server and Access) and the Date type requires
conversion for MS SQL Server and Access database servers.
Note: For MS SQL Server and Access database servers, this restriction could be an backward
compatibility issue. In previous releases, we did the conversion without explaining it. In this
release, we suggest you use the DateTime data type instead of Date data type. If you still use
the Date data type, the conversion operation will fail.
User Guide 73
Miscellaneous Enhancements
Miscellaneous Enhancements
The following changes are additional significant enhancements to the MapInfo Professional product:
• New Time and DateTime Data Type Support for Remote Databases on page 72
• Envinsa Routing and Geocoding Constraints Change on page 74
• New TrueType Font Behavior on page 74
• Improved Character Set Conversion on page 74
• MapBasic Help Available from MapBasic Window on page 75
Another difference you may see is that a particular quantity of address batches, times or distances
may work for one server but not for another.
These changes should improve the performance of your connection to the server in that MapInfo
Professional is not sending more information to the server than it can handle.
When you use the Text Style dialog box, you may notice that only TrueType fonts display in the Font
list by default. If you have used a non-TrueType font in an old workspace or table, this font appears
in the Font list. If you use a non-TrueType font in an existing workspace or .tab file and begin using
the curved labels feature, MapInfo Professional substitutes the font you are using with a TrueType
font.
If characters in your data display incorrectly or display as an _ (underscore), your character set
conversion routine or tables may be to blame.
We have found that these Microsoft Windows conversion tables and routines more adequately meet
our customers’ needs. Therefore, MapInfo Professional now relies on the character set conversion
routines supplied by the Windows operating system. Most modern systems have all these internal
tables already configured. If a situation occurs where those tables are not installed, you can easily
install them, if you have administrative rights.
See http://www.microsoft.com/resources/documentation/windows/xp/all/proddocs/en-
us/int_pr_install_code_page.mspx?mfr=true for details.
To access the MapBasic Language reference features available in the MapBasic window:
When you find a function or statement you think is particularly useful, you can save it to
the Favorites tab for later reference.
• Open the MapBasic window and select F1. The MapBasic Window topic displays:
From this help topic you can access the Language Reference or learn more about working in the
MapBasic window.
User Guide 75
Data Enhancements
Data Enhancements
To provide more room for data in the future, we have decided to ship a separate data CD with
MapInfo Professional.
Here is the directory structure and data presentation for the introductory and sample data that is
shipped with MapInfo Professional. We use the term Introductory Data to describe the data you can
use to geocode locally and to enhance the maps you create in every session. The Sample Data
folder provides examples of other types of data that are available from MapInfo Corporation.
NorthAmerica
USA
Canada
Mexico
World
[files]
Europe
Asia
Africa
Australia
World_WMS
workspcs
The Sample Data is designed to give you a taste of the other kinds of data products you have
available to you. The SampleData directory is structured as follows:
Geographic
AirPhotoUSA
StreetPro Samples
Industry_Data
Business Points
Insurance
TelcoData
Weather
We have added more industry-specific sample workspaces and updated the samples that ship with
the MapInfo Professional application to enhance your maps and geocoding. To make space for this
new data, we have removed the indexes from all of the data except the USZIPBDY.TAB,
US_ZIPS.TAB, and the US_CNTY.TAB files. You need the indexes for these files to maximize your
ability to geocode to ZIP code boundaries and centroids and county centroids.
• Place the Data CD in the CD drive and follow the prompts that display according to the needs of
your implementation of MapInfo Professional.
CAUTION: If you want to install this data in addition to your existing product data, you need
to specify a new directory to ensure that your current data is maintained.
User Guide 77
Data Enhancements
This chapter helps you install and set the basic preferences for MapInfo
Professional®. In addition, there are instructions for fixing problems that come
up as part of the installation process. We also cover starting and exiting the
product.
System Requirements
Below are the guidelines for minimum and recommended system requirements. Please note that
hardware requirements do vary based on your use of the product and your system. In general, a
higher processor speed, larger memory (RAM) and industry leading graphics cards provide a better
user experience and result in better responses from MapInfo Professional. These are the minimum
system requirements for MapInfo Professional 9.0:
Windows 2000 128 MB of RAM Application 103 MB 16- or 24-bit Color 800x600 Display
Professional SP 4 with a minimum
Data 450 MB
Windows Vista * of a Pentium PC
Windows XP Professional 64 MB of RAM Application 103 MB 16- or 24-bit Color 800x600 Display
SP 2 with a minimum
Data 450 MB
of a Pentium PC
Windows XP Home SP 2
These are the recommended system requirements for MapInfo Professional 9.0:
Windows 2000 256/512 MB of Fast EIDE 2 or SCSI Mid to High 2D/3D Greater than
Professional SP 4 RAM with a Interface with 2GB card with 128MB or 1024x768
minimum of a or better better resolution or
Windows XP
Pentium PC or better
Professional SP2 Data 450 MB
better
Windows XP Home
SP2
Windows 2000 Server Same, PLUS Fast EIDE 2 or SCSI Server: Same Greater than
SP4 memory Interface with 2GB 1024x768
Client: Choose
sufficient to or better resolution or
Windows 2003 Server based on
support each better
SP 1 with Terminal Data 450 MB resolution/speed
connected user
Services/Citrix requirements
Note: For Windows 2003 Server Users: Keep in mind that some of the options you choose for the
server can limit the options available to the client system.
MapInfo has exhaustively tested MapInfo Professional under the following Microsoft Windows
Desktop Operating Systems:
The key aspects of Windows 2000 support with regard to MapInfo Professional are:
• Supporting multiple users on a single machine, each having their own application settings.
• Supporting use of MapInfo Professional on a secure Windows 2000 computer (one where users
have very limited access rights).
• Using an installer based on the Windows Installer Service.
In order to support these requirements, we have changed the location of many application data files
(for example, files containing information used by MapInfo Professional during execution (for
example, the projection file, mapinfow.prj). The installer places the files under the current user's
Application Data folder. Likewise, some registry entries have been moved from
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE to locations under HKEY_CURRENT_USER. In both cases the current
User Guide 81
MapInfo Professional and Operating System Support
user is guaranteed to have write access to the folder or registry key. Also, since the files and registry
entries are stored in user specific locations, each user of the computer has their own application
data files (e.g. each has their own copy of the preference file, mapinfow.prf).
Note: The changes described above apply to all versions of Windows supported by MapInfo
Professional. The exact location of the Application Data folder varies depending on the
version of Windows:
We recommend that you consult with your Citrix administrator in the Citrix configuration guidelines
PDF. That document includes both questions and answers about RAM and CPU requirements. This
document is available by clicking this link.
http://support.citrix.com/servlet/KbServlet/download/4257-102-
11011/Load_Manager_Guide.pdf.
We have tested MapInfo Professional with a standard install of Citrix v3.0 and Microsoft Terminal
Services 2003. We verified the testing of MapInfo Professional on CITRIX v3.0. MapInfo
Professional does not require any client side technology, however, Citrix requires the Citrix Client to
be installed. We tested against Version 6.20.985 of the client.
We have modified our installation process to ensure that MapInfo Professional operates successfully
in a Terminal Services/Citrix environment. When the installer detects that the user is installing locally
in a system running Windows 2003 Server with Terminal Services through Citrix, the installer adds
the necessary files and components to that machine. Once the user connects for the first time to the
Terminal Services/Citrix computer and runs MapInfo Professional, a user configuration process
begins to copy the per-user files needed to run MapInfo Professional. This works in the same way
for Windows 2003 Server/Citrix clients as any other MapInfo Professional windows client.
During the installation process, if you decide that the default installation locations are not appropriate
for your implementation, you can change these locations using the MODE.INI file. For more
information about constructing a custom MODE.INI file, see Controlling the Location of
Application Data Files During Installation on page 114.
The recommended RAM amount is based on the general guidelines from Citrix and uses this
formula:
Note: While we expect to work with ODBC and OCI technology on Citrix, we recommend that your
Citrix administrator consult with database vendor documentation to configure their respective
drivers on Citrix.
• Oracle 9iR2
• Oracle 10G
• MS Access XP
• MS SQL Server 2000/2005
• Informix 9.4
For more about working with remote database information, see Accessing Remote Data and Setting
your Database Connection Preferences in the Help System.
User Guide 83
Before You Install MapInfo Professional
MapInfo Professional supports the changes in the MS SQL Server 2005 schema concept. Microsoft
has enhanced SQL Server 2005 to use schemas to organize database objects into namespaces. In
the past the schema was part of the owner/user construct, so when you deleted a user, you deleted
the objects associated with that user.
Using SQL Server 2005, objects are associated with a schema, which can be associated with many
users and each user can be associated with many schemas.
Server.Database.User.Object.
The new fully qualified name of the object is:
Server.Database.Schema.Object
If you leave out the server and database name identifiers, MapInfo Professional uses the current
server and database names. If you do not explicitly specify a schema for a user, the server assumes
any unqualified object names are in the default schema. Therefore, if you are accessing a SQL
Server 2005 database, you need to update any features/functions, tools, and test scripts accessing
the objects, including the metadata in the MAPCATALOG, to use the new fully or partially qualified
object name.
To make this version of SQL Server work, you must have this 8.5.1 (or later) version of MapInfo
Professional. There is a work around for MapInfo Professional 8.5 and earlier versions that
accesses a server table with the form, Database.Owner.Object. Review the MapInfo Professional
8.5 User Guide for these instructions.
If the MapInfo Professional installer detects a current version of the product, 6.0 or earlier, or detects
that the product had been installed at some time, the installer copies the MAPINFOW.WOR,
STARTUP.WOR and MAPINFOW.PRF from the operating system's system directory to <user profile
root>\Application Data\MapInfo\MapInfo.
Application data (appdata) files are the non-executable data files that MapInfo Professional uses
during operation.
To use a silent installation procedure, see Silent Installation Procedures for System
Administrators on page 105.
• Install Products: From this option you can install MapInfo Professional (including DBMS
support and translators), free data, access to the documentation, and Install Utilities,
including: ECW Compressor and GPS.
• What’s New: Display a list and description of new and enhanced features.
• Online Reference: MapInfo Professional provides the following online reference documents:
The MapInfo Professional Supplement, MapBasic Reference, Crystal Reports User’s Guide,
the MapInfo Professional Printing Guide, as well as the Adobe Acrobat Reader. The MapInfo
Professional and Crystal Reports documentation are copied into the Documentation
subfolder of your installation directory during the installation process.
• Run MapInfo Tutorial: From this option you can access the MapInfo Tutorial from the MapInfo
web site to learn more about the basic features of MapInfo Professional.
• Other Products: Display information about MapBasic, MapInfo Discovery, and MapInfo Pro
for SQL Server.
• Contact Information: Where ever you are, MapInfo is there to help you. Contact us at any of
these locations or visit us on the world wide web at www.mapinfo.com!
• Register Online: We have simplified the registration process. Simply click this entry and the
wizard walks you through the registration process quickly.
• Browse CD: From this option you can review the contents of the CD. There are additional
utilities that may be useful to you that are only available when you browse.
• Exit: From this option you can close the CD Browser application.
You must have Administrator rights to run the Installer on Windows XP.
If your Windows Start menu does not have a MapInfo program folder, the installation process
creates this folder. If your Windows Start menu already has a MapInfo program folder, this process
creates a new MapInfo icon within that folder.
MapInfo Professional provides its application data files to each user. Called a Per-User install, this
functionality runs the first time you run MapInfo Professional or MapInfo Professional client on a
machine, and each time the MapInfo Professional Installer is run thereafter. The application data
files include, among others, the Pen Styles file, Custom Symbols files, Graph Support files, and
Thematic Legend templates. These files allow different users to have custom settings.
Note: The Installer requires that your TEMP variable be set to a valid directory.
User Guide 85
Installing MapInfo Professional
1. On the Launcher menu, click Install Products from the MapInfo Professional CD Browser.
2. Click MapInfo Professional Installer. The Install Shield Wizard dialog box displays. Click Next
to continue the process and display the License Information dialog box and accept the terms of
the agreement.
4. Type your name, organization name, serial number, and access code in the corresponding fields.
The serial number and access code are listed on the Product Activation Information Card in the
product box and are used to activate your product. Click Next to continue.
5. Do one of the following:
• If your organization purchased node-locked licenses, the third character of your serial
number is "N". Skip step 5 and go to step 6. For more information, see Node-Locked
Licenses on page 92.
• If your organization purchased concurrent licenses, the third character of your serial number
is "S". In those cases, the License Server Name and Port dialog box displays on the screen.
If you know the license server name and port number, enter them here. If you do not, you can
continue with the installation without filling in the license server name and port number. You
will have another opportunity to supply this information when you start MapInfo Professional.
For more information, see Concurrent Licenses on page 101. Click Next.
6. Review the following installation types and determine which instructions are appropriate. Click
one of the following and click Next to continue:
• Typical Workstation Installation. Click this option if you will be using MapInfo Professional
as a desktop application including remote database access and connectivity. See Typical
Workstation Installation on page 88 to continue these instructions.
• Custom Workstation Installation. Click this option to restrict the components that are
installed by the installation program. For example, you can prevent the installer from adding
the help system and tools. See Custom Workstation Installation on page 88 to continue
these instructions.
• Network Installation. Click this option if you are installing or upgrading to a MapInfo
Professional network product. See Network Installation on page 90 to continue these
instructions. These instructions are for network administrators only. After you install MapInfo
Professional on the network, follow the instructions for installing MapInfo Professional on
client equipment in Setting Up Client Workstations on page 92.
User Guide 87
Installing MapInfo Professional
CAUTION: Make sure you have completed the directions in Installing MapInfo Professional
on page 85 before beginning these instructions.
1. In the Setup Type dialog box, click Typical Workstation Installation; the Destination Folder
screen displays. If you have an earlier version (or versions) of MapInfo Professional installed and
you do not want to overwrite that version, create a new directory name in the next step.
3. Click Install to begin. A progress bar indicates the status of the process.
4. When the InstallShield Wizard Complete screen displays, choose Finish to return to the Install
Products screen.
Note: When you open MapInfo Professional for the first time, the final installation and configuration
process takes place automatically. See MapInfo Licensing and Activation on page 92
before you begin using MapInfo Professional.
CAUTION: Make sure you have completed the directions in Installing MapInfo Professional
on page 85 before beginning these instructions.
1. In the Setup Type dialog box, click Custom Workstation Installation; the Custom Setup dialog
box displays. A feature description, and the space required for the feature and its sub-features
displays in the Feature Description area.
2. In the Custom Setup dialog box you decide what components are to be installed and the
directory you want them to install to. Click the feature icon to select the feature for installation.
• Help Files
• Documentation
3. To select a feature, click the Down Arrow beside it; a menu displays.
4. For each feature you want to install, select one of the following:
• This feature will be installed on local hard drive.
• This feature, and all subfeatures, will be installed on local hard drive
• This feature will not be available
Note: For some features, there are additional options pertaining to the use of the feature from
the network. Choose the option that describes your systems implementation of this
feature.
When you select the first or second options in the bullets described above, the feature installs on
your local hard drive in the default folder. This path displays in the Install To: entry below the
Custom Setup list pane. To specify another path, select Change button. When you do the
Current Destination folder dialog box displays allowing you to choose a new path.
To see if you have enough space on your hard drive or other mapped resources, click the Space
button. The Disk Space Requirement dialog box displays the disk size, the amount of available
space, and the amount of space the selected install would take.
Note: To avoid installing a subfeature, select This feature will not be available.
5. After you select all the custom options click Next to display the Ready to Install the Program
dialog box.
6. Click the Install button to begin the installation of MapInfo Professional with the features you
selected. The Installing MapInfo Professional screen displays with a progress bar indicating the
status.
7. At the end of the installation, the prompt: “Would you like to check our web site for any current
updates to our product?” displays. If you have an Internet connection, click Yes to access the
MapInfo Corporation web site containing information about product updates.
8. When the InstallShield Wizard Complete screen displays, choose Finish to return to the Install
Products screen.
Note: When you open MapInfo Professional for the first time, the final installation and configuration
process takes place automatically.
Setting up MDAC
When installing MapInfo Professional, you can choose whether or not to install MDAC (Microsoft
Data Access Components). Microsoft Data Access Components include various components:
ActiveX Data Objects (ADO), OLE DB, and Open Database Connectivity (ODBC). If you are unsure
User Guide 89
Installing MapInfo Professional
whether or not to install the MDAC, consult with your network administrator. This choice allows IT
administrators to manually install their own replacement modules for the MDAC. You must have
MDAC, or a replacement, to connect to any databases.
You must have the OCI and ODBC drivers installed for MapInfo Professional to connect to remote
databases. If you see the following messages, then you have installed the MapInfo DLLs for these
features correctly but the drivers are missing:
Network Installation
Installing MapInfo Professional 9.0 on a network involves two separate procedures:
• Installing the product on a network drive (presumably done by the Network Administrator).
• Setting up users with program manager icons, etc. (presumably done by the user).
Make sure you have completed the directions in Installing MapInfo Professional on page 85
before beginning these directions.
Choose this installation ONLY if you are a Network Administrator and have full rights to the network.
2. When you select a feature, a menu displays allowing you to choose to install and/or run the
feature and its subfeatures from various locations, including your local hard drive or from CD.
• If you select the hard drive option, the feature will be installed in the path indicated; on your
local hard drive in the folder indicated; to specify a different location, choose Change to
display the Current Destination folder screen.
• If you choose to install an option to your hard drive, the Space button is enabled; choose this
button to display the Disk Space Requirement dialog box.
Note: You can choose to not install a feature by skipping it.
See Installing MapInfo Professional on a Network Drive in the Help System for additional details.
3. After the installation is complete, the prompt: “Would you like to check our web site for any
current updates to our product?” displays. If you have an Internet connection, check Yes to be
connected to the page of the MapInfo Corporation Web site containing information about product
updates.
4. When the InstallShield Wizard Complete screen displays, choose Finish to return to the Install
Products screen.
Note: When your users open MapInfo Professional for the first time, the final installation and
configuration process takes place automatically. See MapInfo Licensing and Activation on
page 92 for information on licensing.
User Guide 91
MapInfo Licensing and Activation
3. Run SETUP.EXE from [MapInfo install directory]\AddClient. The MapInfo Professional Client
Welcome screen displays.
5. Click “I accept the terms of the license agreement” and select Next. The Customer
Information screen displays with the network install values as the default.
9. Open MapInfo Professional and begin the product activation process. See MapInfo Licensing
and Activation on page 92.
• Node-locked
• Concurrent
The serial number and access code that you enter during the installation indicates to MapInfo
Professional what type of license you have. Depending on the license type, MapInfo Professional
will guide you through activating the product (if your organization purchased node-locked licenses)
or connecting to a license server (if your organization purchased concurrent licenses).
Node-Locked Licenses
Node-locked licenses enable you to run MapInfo Professional on a specific computer. If you
purchased node-locked licenses, your installation of MapInfo Professional must be activated before
you can use it. Activation is the process of acquiring a license from MapInfo. This section explains
the activation options available for node-locked licenses.
Product Activation
MapInfo uses the serial number and access code you supplied during the installation to activate the
product. If you need to refer to these numbers again, the serial number and access code are located
on the product box and on the Product Activation Information Card.
1. Install MapInfo Professional, if you haven’t already, and start the product. When you start
MapInfo Professional for the first time after installation, the Activation Wizard launches. The
MapInfo Professional Activation dialog box displays on the screen.
2. Select when you want to activate MapInfo Professional. Select one of the following:
• Activate Now–Select this option to start activation now.
• Activate Later–Select this options to start a 30-day courtesy period in which you can use
MapInfo Professional without activating the product.
3. Click Next.
If you selected Activate Later, the Activation Wizard closes and the courtesy period begins. The
courtesy period enables you to use MapInfo Professional immediately and active the product at
a time that is convenient for you. Each subsequent time you start MapInfo Professional, a dialog
box displays informing you of the time remaining in the courtesy period and giving you the
opportunity to activate the product.
You must activate MapInfo Professional sometime during the courtesy period to avoid
interrupting your work. When the courtesy period ends, you will not be able to use MapInfo
Professional until you activate it.
4. If you selected Activate Now, the Select Activation Method dialog box displays on the screen:
User Guide 93
MapInfo Licensing and Activation
:
6. Click Next.
If you selected Automatic Activation, the Activation Wizard takes a few moments to transfer the
activation credentials to MapInfo and perform the activation. A MapInfo Activation message
displays on the screen to tell you that the activation was successful.
Click OK. The Activation Wizard closes, and MapInfo Professional is ready to use. You are
finished.
7. If you selected Email Activation, the Verify Activation Credentials dialog box displays on the
screen:
Double-check that your serial number and access code are correct. Click Edit if you need to
make any corrections.
8. Click Next. The Specify location to save Activation Request file dialog box displays on the
screen:
Select a folder in which to save the Activation Request file. Click the Browse button to navigate
to the desired location. Click OK. The path and filename of the Activation Request file appear in
the box. The Activation Request contains your serial number and access code, plus information
that identifies the computer you are activating on.
9. Click Next. The Save this important Information dialog box displays on the screen.
User Guide 95
MapInfo Licensing and Activation
This dialog box provides the information to send your Activation Request file to MapInfo. The full
path and filename of the Activation Request file is displayed in the Activation Request File box.
The email address to send the file, [email protected], is displayed in the Email address
box.
Take a few moments to write down the location of the Activation Request file and email address
to send the Activation Request file.
CAUTION: Please do not edit the Activation Request file in any way. If you do, MapInfo may
not be able to process it and your activation will be delayed.
10. Click OK. The Activation Wizard closes and the courtesy period automatically starts.
You can finish email activation when you receive an Activation Response file from MapInfo. You
should receive the Activation Response file within one business day.
1. Copy the Activation Response file you received from MapInfo to an accessible folder on your
computer and make note of the location.
2. Open MapInfo Professional. If MapInfo Professional is already open, exit and restart the
program. A dialog box displays asking you if you want to finish activating MapInfo Professional.
3. Click Yes. The Process Email Activation Response dialog box displays on the screen.
4. Click Browse to navigate to the location of the Activation Response file. Click Open in the
Locate Response file dialog box when you have located the file.
5. The path and filename of the Activation Response file appear in the box.
6. Click Next.
7. A MapInfo Activation message displays on the screen to tell you that the activation was
successful. Click OK. The MapInfo Professional Activation Wizard closes, and MapInfo
Professional is activated and ready to use. You are finished.
Note: Once you have seen the confirmation message stating that your product has been activated,
you can delete the email response file from your system.
To check the status of your activation, choose Help > About and review the contents of this dialog
box.
Each time you open MapInfo Professional subsequent to initiating email activation, a dialog box
displays asking if you want to finish activating MapInfo Professional. When you receive the
Activation Response file from MapInfo you are ready to finish activation.
User Guide 97
MapInfo Licensing and Activation
2. A dialog box displays on the screen that provides information about the courtesy period and asks
you how you would like to proceed.
• Use MapInfo Professional–Select this option if you have not received an Activation
Response file yet and you want to use MapInfo Professional under the courtesy period.
• Start Activation Over–Select this option if previous activation attempts have failed.
If you selected Use MapInfo Professional, click Finish. The Activation Wizard closes and
MapInfo Professional is ready to use under the courtesy period. You can finish the activation at a
later time.
If an earlier attempt to activate MapInfo Professional failed, and you selected Start Activation
Over, click Next. The Activation Wizard restarts, giving you the opportunity to try the activation
again.
Note: Your organization is limited to two license transfers per year, regardless of the number of
licenses.
2. Choose Help > Licensing > Transfer license. The MapInfo Professional License Transfer
dialog box displays on the screen.
3. Click Yes. The Select Transfer Method dialog box displays on the screen.
If you selected Automatic Transfer, the License Transfer Wizard takes a few moments to
transfer the license to MapInfo. When this process is finished, a message displays on the screen
informing you that the transfer was successful.
5. Click OK. MapInfo Professional closes and can no longer be run from this computer. The license
is now available for you to activate MapInfo Professional on another computer.
6. If you selected Email Transfer, the Save Transfer Request File dialog box displays on the
screen.
User Guide 99
MapInfo Licensing and Activation
Select a folder in which to save the Transfer Request file. Click the Browse button to navigate to
the desired location. Click OK.
7. Click Next. The Save this important information dialog box displays on the screen.
This dialog box provides the information to send your Transfer Request file to MapInfo
Customer Service.
The full path and filename of the Transfer Request file is displayed in the Transfer Request File
box. The email address to send the file, [email protected], is displayed in the Email
address box.
Take a few moments to write down the location of the Transfer Request file and email address to
send the Transfer Request file.
CAUTION: Please do not edit the Activation Request file in any way. If you do, MapInfo may
not be able to process it and your activation will be delayed.
8. Click OK. MapInfo Professional closes and can no longer be run on this computer unless you
activate it again.
[email protected]
10. MapInfo Customer Service will send you an email reply confirming that the transfer was
successful. You should receive this confirmation within one business day.
The license is now available for you to activate MapInfo Professional on another computer.
If you intend to install MapInfo Professional on another computer, transfer the license to MapInfo so
that the license is available. When you install MapInfo Professional on the desired computer, you will
be prompted to activate the product.
If you intend to reinstall MapInfo Professional on the same computer, do not transfer the license.
When you reinstall, you can reuse the same license without activating.
When you begin an uninstall of MapInfo Professional, the Transfer LIcense Now? dialog box
displays on the screen:
• Click Yes to transfer the license to MapInfo. The License Transfer Wizard will start and guide you
through the transfer process. See Transferring Your License to Another Computer on
page 99
• Click No to keep the license on this computer. The uninstall operation continues. When you
reinstall MapInfo Professional, you can reuse the license without activating.
Concurrent Licenses
Concurrent licenses enable you to install MapInfo Professional on any number of computers. A
license server, installed and maintained by your organization, limits the number of computers that
can run MapInfo Professional at any given time to the number of concurrent licenses purchased by
your organization.
In the concurrent licensing scheme, you must connect to a license server on your network to check
out a license before you can run MapInfo Professional. Checking out a license is the process of
obtaining a license from the license server. You will need to supply the license server machine name
and port number to connect to the license server. You can do this either during installation or the first
time you run MapInfo Professional. After you have established a license server connection, the
check out occurs automatically.
A license server administrator from your organization installs and maintains the license server. The
license server administrator must also perform the following tasks:
• Activate the license server to make licenses available for check out.
• Inform users of the license server machine name and port number.
To connect to the license server, MapInfo Professional must have the license server name and port
number. Your license server administrator will provide you with this information.
If you do not have this information at the time you install MapInfo Professional, the installation
program will enable you to continue with the installation without filling in the license server name and
port number. You will have another opportunity to connect to the server when you start MapInfo
Professional.
1. Start MapInfo Professional. The Connect to License Server dialog box displays on the screen.
If you have the license server name and port number, proceed with these instructions. If you do
not, see Starting the Courtesy Period on page 103.
4. Click Connect. MapInfo Professional takes a few moments to connect to the license server and
check out a license.
When the license is checked out, the Connect to License Server dialog box closes. You are finished.
MapInfo Professional is licensed and ready to use. After you successfully connect to your license
server once, a license will be checked out automatically when you start MapInfo Professional.
2. Click Courtesy Period. A MapInfo Activation message displays telling you that the courtesy
period started successfully.
3. Click OK. MapInfo Professional is ready to use under the courtesy period.
You can connect to the license server and check out a license when you receive the license server
name and port number from your license server administrator.
Connection Failures
Failure to connect to the license server can occur for several reasons.
First, although you may know the license server name and port number, the license server
administrator may not have had an opportunity to install it yet. In this case, MapInfo Professional
cannot find the license server you specified. To use MapInfo Professional, you can start the courtesy
period, and then connect when you know that the license server has been installed and is running.
Failures can also occur if the license server has been moved to a different computer. In this case,
you were previously able to connect to the license server, but the license server was moved since
the last time you used MapInfo Professional. MapInfo Professional is looking for the license server in
its previous location. If MapInfo Professional cannot connect to the license server at startup, the
Connect to License Server dialog will display on the screen. See Connecting After Installation on
page 102 for information. See your license server administrator for the correct license server name.
Finally, if all licenses have been checked out, you will not be able to run MapInfo Professional. You
are able to connect to the license server, but you cannot check out a license because they are all in
use. You will need to wait until a license becomes available before you can check out a license.
When you borrow a license, be sure to specify a borrow period that gives you sufficient time to use
MapInfo Professional before the license expires. If the license expires before you have an
opportunity to return it, the license is automatically returned to the license server. MapInfo
Professional is unusable until you can connect to your network again and check out a license.
To borrow a license, the computer that you want to put the borrowed license on must have MapInfo
Professional installed and be connected to the license server.
To borrow a license:
2. Choose Help > Licensing > Borrow license. The Borrow MapInfo Professional License dialog
box displays on the screen.
3. Specify the number of days that you want to borrow the license. You can specify from one to 365
days.
4. Click Borrow License. After a few moments, MapInfo Activation message displays on the
screen to tell you that the license was borrowed from the server successfully.
5. Click OK.
You can use MapInfo Professional on this computer while not connected to your network for the
borrow period that you specified.
2. Open MapInfo Professional. A dialog box displays to tell you on what date the borrowed license
is going to expire.
3. Click OK.
4. Choose Help > Licensing > Return borrowed license. The Return borrowed license to license
server dialog box displays on the screen.
6. A MapInfo Activation message displays on the screen to tell you that the license has been
returned to the license server.
7. Click OK.
The MapInfo Professional installation setup.exe indicated in the steps below can be found on the
installation CD (d:\) in this directory:
\Install\MI_PRO\DISK1
For example:
"\Install\MI_PRO\DISK1\setup.exe /s /v"/qb
INSTALLDIR=\"[PathTo]\MapInfo\OtherThanStandard\Professional 9.0\"
USERNAME=\"MyUser\" COMPANYNAME=\"MyCompanyName\"
PIDKEY=\"MySerialNumber\" ACCD=\"MyAccessCode\""
For concurrent licenses the parameters for the license server name and license server port number
must also be included:
For example:
"\Install\MI_PRO\DISK1\setup.exe /s /v"/qb
INSTALLDIR=\"[PathTo]\MapInfo\OtherThanStandard\Professional 9.0\"
USERNAME=\"MyUser\" COMPANYNAME=\"MyCompanyName\"
PIDKEY=\"MySerialNumber\" ACCD="MyAccessCode"
LSNAME=\"MyLicenseServerName\" LSPN=\"MyLicenseServerPortNumber\""
Look for the type of installation you want to perform from the options below and follow the
corresponding instructions. In each of the install scenarios described below, the serial number and
access code parameters are given in the following format:
• PIDKEY=MI##############
• ACCD=######
Substitute the appropriate serial number and access code when you perform the silent install.
• LNAME="LicenseServerName"
• LSPN="LicenseServerPortNumber"
Substitute the appropriate license server name and port number when you perform the silent install.
For concurrent licenses, the license server name and port number parameters must be included:
• LNAME="LicenseServerName"
• LSPN="LicenseServerPortNumber"
Substitute the appropriate license server name and port number when you perform the silent install.
For concurrent licenses, the license server name and port number parameters must be included:
• LNAME="LicenseServerName"
• LSPN="LicenseServerPortNumber"
Substitute the appropriate license server name and port number when you perform the silent install.
For concurrent licenses, the license server name and port number parameters must be included:
• LNAME="LicenseServerName"
• LSPN="LicenseServerPortNumber"
Substitute the appropriate license server name and port number when you perform the silent install.
Silent Install that Installs Both the Oracle and ODBC Library Lists
To initiate a silent install that installs the Oracle and ODBC DLLs:
• LNAME="LicenseServerName"
• LSPN="LicenseServerPortNumber"
Substitute the appropriate license server name and port number when you perform the silent install.
For concurrent licenses, the license server name and port number parameters must be included:
• LNAME="LicenseServerName"
• LSPN="LicenseServerPortNumber"
Substitute the appropriate license server name and port number when you perform the silent install.
• LNAME="LicenseServerName"
• LSPN="LicenseServerPortNumber"
Substitute the appropriate license server name and port number when you perform the silent install.
For concurrent licenses, the license server name and port number parameters must be included:
• LNAME="LicenseServerName"
• LSPN="LicenseServerPortNumber"
Substitute the appropriate license server name and port number when you perform the silent install.
Installing Data
To help you get started, MapInfo provides you with some United States-based and world-wide maps
you can use as a background to your data. Use these instructions to install this free data.
2. Choose Free Data to display the MapInfo Professional Data screen. In this screen, you can also
review the data specifications, access new data over the web and learn about what data is
available from MapInfo Corporation.
5. Choose Yes to accept the terms of the agreement and to continue the installation process. The
Choose Destination Location screen displays.
6. Select the product for which you will be installing the data and click Next to continue:
• MapInfo Professional
• MapInfo Run Time
7. Specify the directory where the data will be installed. Use the Browse button to select a directory
if necessary or accept the default directory. Click Next to continue.
9. The Select Program Folder screen displays if you chose to set up Workspace icons. Select the
program folder where the icons will be created. Choose Next.
10. The Start Copying Files screen displays. Review the selections you have chosen and click
Back to return to any screen to change your selections. When you are ready to begin the
installation, click Next.
2. Choose ECW Compressor. The Welcome screen displays. Choose Next to continue the
installation process.
3. The Software License screen displays. Choose Yes to accept the terms of the agreement and to
continue the installation process.
4. The Choose Destination Location screen displays. Specify the directory where ECW
Compressor will be installed.
5. The Select Program Folder screen displays. Select a folder. Choose Next to continue.
6. The Setup Complete screen displays: choose to display the ReadMe file and/or create a shortcut
on your desktop. Choose Finish.
Document Scrolling: In the Map, Layout, Browser, and MapBasic windows, hold down the Ctrl key
and move the wheel to scroll the document vertically; the effect is the same as clicking on the arrow
at the end of the scroll bar.
Document Panning: In the Map and Browser windows, hold down the Wheel button on the
IntelliMouse™ and move the mouse to pan the document. Release the button to end the panning.
There are three panning speeds. The speed of the panning is based on the cursor’s distance from
the starting point, indicated by the origin mark. In the Map window, the distance moved at each
speed is a percentage of the zoom distance.
For example, the amount to move at slow speed is. 005 * ZoomDistance, medium speed is. 01 *
ZoomDistance, and super speed is .1 * ZoomDistance. In the Browser, the window is scrolled by 1,
3, and 7 lines or columns for slow, medium and super speeds. When the cursor is within 15 pixels of
the starting point, there is no panning.
AutoScroll: In the Map and Browser windows, click and release the Wheel button to activate
AutoScroll. When the mouse cursor is moved away from the starting point the document starts to
scroll in whatever direction you move the mouse. When the cursor is returned to the starting point,
scrolling stops. AutoScroll is turned off by any mouse click or key stroke. AutoScroll is also turned off
when MapInfo Professional loses the focus, for example, when you Alt-Tab to another application.
Zoom: In the Map and Layout windows, move the wheel forward to zoom in on the document. Roll
back the mouse wheel to zoom out on the document. The wheel has a series of settings; each “click”
is the same as one click with a zoom tool. The mouse wheel does not recenter the view. There are
other keyboard commands that allow you to zoom in and out more precisely.
1. From the CD menu, click Install Products and then Free Utilities.
2. Click Install GPS Support. You will be prompted to exit all applications before installing. Choose
OK.
4. The Select Destination Location screen displays. Specify the directory where GPS will be
installed.
5. The Software License screen displays. Choose YES to accept the terms of the agreement and to
continue the installation process.
6. The Add to the Start Menu dialog box displays: click Yes to add a shortcut to the Start menu.
7. The ReadMe displays; choose OK to exit the ReadMe.
Note: If you have any questions about the use of the Acrobat Reader, contact Adobe support at
www.Adobe.com.
To remedy this situation, map your network drive to a specific drive letter:
1. In Windows Explorer, right-click the shared directory or CD-ROM that contains the MapInfo
Professional SETUP.EXE and select Map Network Drive.
3. Run the Installation Program again from the newly mapped drive letter.
2. Click MapInfo Professional. The Welcome screen displays. Choose Next. The Program
Maintenance screen displays.
For information on node-locked license transfer options at uninstall, see Uninstall Transfer
Options on page 101
For example, MapInfo Professional has a Dynamic Data Exchange (DDE) time-out setting, which
controls how long MapInfo Professional tries to communicate with other applications during DDE
communications. If you run a MapBasic application, and that application encounters time-out errors
during DDE, you may want to increase the DDE time-out setting. To modify one of MapInfo
Professional’s advanced system settings (such as the DDE time-out setting), use this procedure.
CAUTION: Be very careful when editing the registry; damaging the registry can cause
serious problems in your operating system.
For example, to set MapInfo Professional’s Dynamic Data Exchange (DDE) time-out setting, locate
the following key in the registry:
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\MapInfo\MapInfo\Common
Within that key, edit the DDeTimeout value. If there is no value by that name, create a new value of
type string, and assign the name DDeTimeout to the value. Set the value’s data to be a number,
representing the number of milliseconds (for example, enter 30000 to specify a time-out of 30
seconds). For more on editing the registry, see the online help for REGEDIT or REGEDT32.
DDeTimeout = number
This setting controls MapInfo Professional’s time-out setting in DDE conversations where MapInfo
Professional is the client (the application that initiates a conversation). The number represents
milliseconds. The default value is 10,000 milliseconds (ten seconds). If you run a MapBasic
application that attempts to initiate a DDE conversation, but the conversation fails because the
server application does not respond within the time-out period, you may need to increase the
DDeTimeout number.
OffscreenBitmap = number
The number is 0 (zero) or 1 (one). A value of 1 (the default) indicates that MapInfo Professional will
process off-screen bitmaps when drawing a map. This means that if you cover a Map window, and
then bring the Map window to the front again, the map redraws instantly. If you set this setting to
zero, MapInfo Professional will not process off-screen bitmaps. This means that when you bring a
Map window to the front, MapInfo Professional will redraw the map. If you are using a video driver
that is problematic, and encounter video problems with Map windows, you may eliminate those
problems by setting the OffscreenBitmap number to 0.
MaxFiles = number
This setting must be an integer from 10 to 100, indicating how many files MapInfo Professional can
open simultaneously. This setting does not limit the number of tables you can open, but it does limit
the number of tables you can edit at one time (the number of tables that have unsaved edits). The
default value is 29. If you need to work with more files simultaneously, set number to 100.
MaxORACLETILES = number
A value from 0 = unlimited tiles to infinity.
To solve this problem, create a setting file, MODE.INI, to specify the location of application data files
prior to installing MapInfo Professional.
4. Edit MODE.INI, modifying the code associated with the application data file/folder whose location
you wish to change.
The following is a list of predefined locations for application data files supported by MapInfo
Professional, and the corresponding numeric code to be used in MODE.INI.
The following is a list of application data files/groups and their default locations:
GraphSupport = 3
CustSymb = 1
ThmTmplt = 1
MAPINFOW.CLR = 1
MAPINFOW.FNT = 1
MAPINFOW.PEN = 1
MAPINFOW.ABB = 4
MAPINFOW.PRJ = 4
MAPINFOW.MNU = 4
• For more information, see Removing MapInfo Professional from your System using the CD
Browser in the Help System.
System Settings – Controls what information is copied to the clipboard, color defaults, aspect ratio,
paper and layout units, the number of Undo objects permitted, how symbol types used prior to
version 4.0 are drawn, and how MapInfo Professional handles 2-digit years.
Map Window – Sets the default Map window options; moving duplicate nodes; snap tolerance; units
for distance and area; display of scroll bars in the Map window; display of degrees in either decimal
or degrees, minutes, seconds form; and the display of InfoTips.
Layout Window - Sets the Layout window preferences to display Rulers, Page Breaks, and to
determine the display options of frame contents.
Startup – Controls whether the program saves the MAPINFOW.WOR upon exiting and loads it upon
start up; whether queries are saved in workspaces; and the display of the Quick Start dialog box
upon startup.
Address Matching – Controls the house number placement when specifying street addresses.
Directories – Specifies default directories for opening and saving tables, workspaces, MapBasic
programs, import files, ODBC SQL queries, theme templates, graph support files, saved queries,
new grids, and Crystal Report files. Also specifies the directories MapInfo Professional searches for
tables without fully qualified paths referenced in workspaces or MapBasic programs.
Output Settings – Controls the on-screen display of a raster file, the printer output, and exporting
choices.
Printer – Controls which printer information is used for all new windows. This printer can be the
Windows default printer, or a printer you designate as your MapInfo Preferred printer. This choice
can be overridden on a per window basis using either the Print or Page Setup dialog boxes.
Styles – Sets the default object styles for region, line, symbol, and text objects.
Web Services – Sets refresh, timeout values, server options and other default settings for Proxy
Servers, WMS, WFS, Geocode Servers, and Drivetime server web services.
Image Processing - Sets the rules for raster reprojection allowing you to choose whether
reprojection is allowed, when, and allows you to select resampling options.
1. On the Options menu, click Preferences to display the Preferences dialog box.
2. Click one of the preference buttons to display the specified preferences dialog box.
3. Set your preferences in that dialog box and click OK to save them and return to the Preferences
dialog box.
What follows in this section are details to assist you in setting your preferences.
1. On the Options menu, point to Preferences and click System Settings to display the System
Settings Preferences dialog box.
2. Select the appropriate system preferences for your implementation of MapInfo Professional.
Click OK to save them.
The default is 10 objects. You can set it from 0 to 800. Setting the number of objects to 0
deactivates the system. After you use the Undo option, the system toggles to Redo.
• Memory Size for Undo — Type the number of bytes of memory you want to set aside for the
Undo feature. This entry is set to 1,000,000 bytes by default. You can enter up to 10,000,000
bytes into this field. Increasing this entry may result in slower response time.
Setting the Color Defaults
Select one of the Color Defaults preferences described below to control how MapInfo
Professional shades thematic map layers.
• By default, Monitor Setting is selected. MapInfo Professional uses the color settings of the
monitor to shade the map when this option is selected.
• Click the Black & White radio button if you are using a color monitor and want to shade your
thematic map in gray-scale.
• Click the Color radio button if you are using a black and white monitor and want to print a
thematic map in color on a color printer.
Display Pre-Version 4 Symbols using the True Type font — Select this check box to indicate
how you want to draw symbols from early versions of MapInfo Professional (before 4.0). Select
this check box to draw vector symbols with characters from the MapInfo Professional Symbols
font. By default, vector symbols are drawn.
Window Export and Clipboard Resolution — To set the image resolution for exporting and
Clipboard purposes, type the resolution in this field. MapInfo Professional uses this preference
whenever you copy windows to the Clipboard, export your work to metafile and raster formats
and the Save Window As export process as well. If you do not set this resolution manually, the
product assumes 96 DPI. The maximum setting for this field is 1200 DPI.
Display Vertical Mapper grd files as — Use this option to determine how to display Vertical
Mapper GRD files within MapInfo Professional. These options allow you to display your Vertical
Mapper GRD maps as grid files and not as raster files. Vertical Mapper creates GRD\TAB files
that display using the raster handler. This preference contains a Grid option, so that Vertical
Mapper grid files use the Info tool and displays file information in 3D windows.
• Click Grid to display GRD files as grid files and get the added support of the MapInfo
Professional toolbar features.
• Click Raster to display the GRD files as raster images.
• Click Default to treat the GRD files as rasters or grids depending on existence of the
Rasterstyle 6 1 code in the TAB file. If the code does not exist, the file opens as a raster file,
if the code does exist, the file opens as a grid file.
Date Window for 2 Digit Years — Select the appropriate Date Window for 2-Digit Years option
for your purposes:
• Click the Turn date windowing off radio button to use the current century for all 2-digit
years. This option is selected by default.
• Click the Set date window to radio button to refer to dates in both the current century and
the previous century. You need to use this setting if your data uses dates in the 1900s.
For example, if you type the number 30 in the Set date window field, 2-digit years from 00–
29 are set in the 21st century (2000-2029), and 2-digit years from 30–99 are set in the 20th
century (1930-1999).
1. Choose Options > Preferences > Map Window to display the Map Preferences dialog box.
check box to clear the Replace Layer Style check box by default. Clear this check box to
select the Replace Layer Style check box by default.
• Automatically Open Default Theme — This option saves the theme to the table’s metadata
so that the theme displays each time you open the table. This check box is cleared by
default.
• Enable Hardware Acceleration for 3DMap Windows — Select this check box to use your
video card acceleration capability to display 3DMaps. Clear the box to display the 3DMap
without using your video card acceleration capability. Turning the acceleration off reduces
performance, but it avoids failure with certain graphic adapters and drivers.
• Handler for New Grids — Select the output grid file format. By default, MapInfo Professional
uses the MapInfo Professional handler (*.MIG). The available formats depend on which grid
handlers are installed. When you change the grid file format, the file extension on the grid file
name changes to reflect the selected format.
3. In the Editing tab, select from these options:
• Set the Warn Prior to Loss options to display warning messages before you leave the currently
open map window and lose cosmetic objects, map labels, and thematic layers you have created.
After the warning, you can save these objects, labels and layers as part of a table or workspace.
These boxes are selected by default.
You can turn off the display of these warning messages by clearing the desired check boxes
from the Warn Prior to Loss of group.
• Select the Move Duplicate Nodes in settings to specify whether MapInfo Professional will move
duplicate nodes when you use the Reshape command (on the Edit menu, click Reshape) to edit
objects that are adjacent to each other, such as regions. Select one of these options:
• Select the None of the Layers button to prohibit the product from moving duplicate nodes.
This is the default setting
• Select the Same Layer button to move duplicate nodes that are in the same layer when one
of the connected nodes is moved.
• Digitizing Options include:
• Display Snap Radius — Select this option to set the Snap Tolerance and Auto Node
Tolerance to make the snap radius larger or smaller. If you clear the Display Snap Radius
option, the radius does not display when the snap mode is turned on.
Type the appropriate Snap Tolerance and Auto Node Tolerance settings to specify the default
tolerance in pixels within which Snap to node and Auto Node features operate. You use these
settings when you draw objects (click the S key to turn Snap to node on). The default is 5 pixels.
Enter a smaller value to obtain a tighter tolerance, and avoid snapping to other objects’ nodes as
you draw. Enter a larger value to obtain a looser tolerance, when you want to snap to a node
even though you are relatively far away from it.
For more information about Snap Tolerance, see Using “Snap To” to Select Nodes and Centroids
in the Help System.
• Find Selection Options include:
• Zoom on Find Selection — Select this option to zoom to the selection each time you
perform a Find Selection for single and multiple objects. Clear this check box to prevent
zooming when performing a Find Selection.
• Find Selection after Paste — Select this option to turn on the Find Selection feature in the
Map window only after you Paste an object. If you have an active Browser, and the selection
is in that Browser window, the browser still scrolls to the selection. Clear this check box to
prevent zooming after pasting an object.
4. In the Projection tab, select from these options:
• Table Projection — To set the default projections for the current map, designate a default
table projection for creating new tables, importing GML 2.1, MIF, MBI, and IMG files, and for
Choose Projection options in dialog boxes.
Note: You can override the table projection defaults by accessing the Choose Projection
button throughout MapInfo Professional except when you use the Universal Translator,
ArcLink, or when you import DXF files.
• Session Projection — To set the option to designate a default MapBasic projection for
returning coordinate values using a MapBasic window or Update Column. Compiled
MapBasic applications are not affected by this preference.
• To change the format in which coordinates display, select one of the options in the Display
Coordinates group. You can select only one:
• Decimal Degrees — By default, MapInfo Professional displays coordinates in decimal
degrees. MapInfo Professional displays coordinates of objects in the Object Info dialog
boxes, and of the cursor location in the status bar if that display option is selected.
• Degrees, minutes, seconds — Choose this option to display your Map using the degree,
minute, seconds format.
• Military Grid Reference System — Choose this option to display your Map using the
Military Grid Reference System format. Coordinates are converted to the Military Grid
Reference System format using the World Geodetic System (WGS) of 1984 Ellipsoid.
To override this preference in individual maps, use the Map Options dialog box (on the Map
menu, click Options). Overrides to the default coordinate setting will be saved to your
workspace.
Selected in either the Map window preferences or the Map Options dialog boxes, the format
will display in the status bar, but not in the Object Info dialog boxes. If you display any Object
Info dialog box for an object on a map that uses the Military Grid Reference System, the
coordinates will be displayed in decimal degrees.
5. Select the Distance/Area using settings to specify the default type of distance/area calculation
that MapInfo Professional uses for new Map windows.
• Spherical — The Spherical calculations measure distance according to the curved surface of
the Earth. Spherical is the default. The data is first converted to Latitude/Longitude and then
a calculation is produced. Lat/Long data will always use spherical calculations.
• Cartesian — The Cartesian method performs calculations on data projected onto a flat
plane. Cartesian coordinates (x,y) define the position of a point in two-dimensional space by
its perpendicular projection onto two axes which are at right angles to each other. Long/Lat
projections cannot use Cartesian calculations.
Note: To specify a calculation method for the currently active Map window, use the Map Options
dialog box (on the Map menu, click Options).
6. Click OK to save these settings and return to the Preferences dialog box.
• For more information, see Scrolling through a Map, Specifying Options in a Map, Changing the
Default or Preference Setting for Calculations, Centering a Map Using Military Grid Reference
System (MGRS) Coordinates, and Setting Default Clip Region Options topics in the Help
System.
1. Choose Options > Preferences > Layout Window to display the Layout Window Preferences
dialog box.
Use this dialog box to set the preferences for Layout windows. Completing the entries
in this dialog box ensures that your layouts will have a uniform look and feel.
2. Complete the selections in this dialog box and click OK to save your Layout window preferences.
Show Rulers
Select this check box to display rulers in your Layout window. Rulers can be useful to help
you line up elements of your layout on the page. This option is selected by default.
Show Page Breaks
Select this check box to display the page breaks in your Layout window. Showing the page
breaks ensures that the elements of your layout are consistent from page to page. This
option is selected by default.
Show Frame Contents
The options in the Show frame contents box allow you to specify when the contents of frames
display.
Always
Allows you to have the contents of a frame display all the time even when it is not active.
For example, if you are changing the contents of a Map window that is also in the layout, you
might want the Always option. That way you can see the effect of the layout as you make
your changes. This option is selected by default.
Only when Layout window is active
Allows you to display the contents of a frame only when the Layout is the active window.
Never
Allows you to display only the file name and frame type, even when the Layout is the active
window. For example, choose Never when you are resizing and repositioning frames. That
way the contents of each frame will not redraw every time you make a change.
Prompt to Save Workspace Prior to Close
When this check box is selected, MapInfo Professional prompts you to save before you close
windows with layout changes. Clear this check box if you do not want to be prompted to save
your changes. This option is selected by default to prevent accidental loss of information.
Note: The prompt only displays if there are changes to the open Layout and Legend
windows or when the Layout and Legend windows are new.
Once you set these preferences, MapInfo Professional sets these options automatically whenever
you create a new Layout window. To reset these options for a particular layer locally, select Layout >
Options to display the Layout Display Options dialog box. This dialog box also allows you to set
height and width restrictions and an autoscroll option.
1. On the Options menu, point to Preferences and click Legend Window to display the Legend
window preferences.
2. Use the options in this window to set the Legend Frame Defaults.
• To set the Title Pattern, type the text that you want to display at the top of each legend frame
in this box.
By default, the Title Pattern is “# Legend”, where ‘#’ is the name of the layer on which the
frame is based. So, if the frame is based on the States layer, the default pattern title would be
“States Legend.” You can change this pattern to “Legend of #” or simply “#.” To have no
default pattern, leave the box blank.
Choose a title pattern default that suits your needs. The # character can be used in any of the
pattern text boxes as a shortcut key for the layer name.
• To set the Subtitle Pattern, type the subtitle text you want in this box. The entry in this box is
blank by default, but you can set your own default title pattern for subtitles.
• To set the Style Name Pattern, type the text you want to display beside each symbol in this
box. The default pattern is the ‘%’ character. The Style Name is the text that describes each
symbol in a legend frame. The % character is used as a placeholder for the type of object the
legend symbol corresponds to: point, line, or region.
You can type in your own default Style Name Pattern, either using the % character or not.
For example, in a legend frame based on the States layer, a Style Name Pattern that reads
“% of #” will display as “Region of States” next to the symbol in the legend. The % character
can only be used in the Style Name Pattern box.
• To set the Border Style, select this check box to place a border around the legend and select
the appropriate style by clicking the Border Style button.
3. To change the defaults of the style attributes for the titles, the style name, or the legend frame
border, click the desired style box to display the corresponding style dialog box and make your
changes.
4. Click OK to save these settings and return to the Preferences dialog box.
1. On the Options menu, point to Preferences and click Startup to display the startup
preferences.
.
2. Select the following boxes to enable the indicated functionality; clear the check box to disable
this functionality. You may select all that apply.
• Save MAPINFOW.WOR when Exiting MapInfo — Select this check box to save your setup
to the MAPINFOW.WOR workspace when you exit MapInfo Professional. When you clear
this check box, MapInfo Professional does not save the MAPINFOW.WOR unless you save it
explicitly.
• Load MAPINFOW.WOR when Starting MapInfo — Select this check box to display
MAPINFOW.WOR when you enter MapInfo Professional.
Note: To enable this check box, you must clear the Display Quick Start Dialog check box.
• Save Queries in Workspaces — Select this check box to save the queries you create
during a mapping session in the workspace. If you do not select this check box and the
selected map has only one layer based on a query, the query is not saved and the application
writes a map definition with an empty layer list. MapInfo Professional cannot support
subselects in queries. The operators Any and All are not supported in the MapXtreme 2004
versions of MapInfo SQL and, therefore, subselects are not supported either.
Note: MapInfo Professional cannot map selections with Group Bys, so Group By clauses are
ignored. MapInfo Professional only translates the Order By clause.
• Save Printer Information into Workspaces — Select this check box to save the printer
information in the workspace.
This check box saves the printer name, paper orientation, paper size, and the number of
copies from your printer settings into the workspace. This also includes any overrides you
might have made to the default printer settings in the Printer preferences. We recommend
that you leave this preference on.
• Restore Printer Information to Workspaces — Select this check box to restore printer
information from a workspace. When you open the workspace, the printer name, paper
orientation, paper size, and the number of copies are restored. This is useful if you are
sharing workspaces with other MapInfo Professional (6.0 or later) users who are also using
the same printers.
Note: If this preference is turned off, or if the printer indicated is not available, the printer
settings for the workspace revert back to the default printer set in the Printer preferences.
• DBMS Connection — Select this check box to save a default DBMS Connection, specify a
DBMS connection that will be opened each time you begin a MapInfo Professional session.
Click Set to set this connection.
• Display Quick Start Dialog — Select this check box to display the Quick Start dialog box
automatically when you start MapInfo Professional. This check box is selected by default.
Clear the Display Quick Start Dialog check box to prevent it from displaying when you start
subsequent MapInfo sessions.
3. Click OK to save these settings and return to the Preferences dialog box.
To set default DBMS Connections, see Setting up your Database Connection Preferences in the
Help System.
To create a workspace:
1. Open the tables and windows you want in your workspace. Size and position them as you
please.
3. Name your workspace “Startup” and save the workspace into your “home” directory. By
“home” directory we mean your private Windows directory.
When you run MapInfo Professional, MapInfo Professional does the following in the order shown:
1. On the Options menu, point to Preferences and click Address Matching to display the
Address Matching Preferences dialog box.
2. Click OK to save this preference and return to the Preferences dialog box.
1. On the Options menu, point to Preferences and click Directories to display the Directory
Preferences dialog box settings.
2. To set a preferred directory for each type of file, highlight the file dialog type and click the Modify
button. The Choose Directory dialog box displays.
3. Select the appropriate directory for the file type you highlighted and click OK.
4. Repeat this process until you have specified all of the directories you need to.
5. Click OK to save these settings and return to the Preferences dialog box.
Use this setting to specify the default directories that display in the File menu dialog boxes when you
open or save different files. You can specify directories for:
• Tables
• Remote tables
• Workspaces
• MapBasic programs
• Import files
• DBMS SQL queries
• Theme templates
• Saved queries
• New grids
• Crystal Report files
• Graph support files
• Shapefile tables
When you click Open, you can select an icon from the MapInfo Places Bar. Click the Workspace
Directory icon to display the workspace directory you designated in this preference.
Additionally, use this preference to search for raster and grid tables. If you open a *.tab file for a
raster or grid image and the image file cannot be found an attempt is made to find the image in the
same location as the .TAB. If the image file is not found, it will then use the Search Directories.
Use the Search Directories for Tables and Workspaces to specify search paths that MapInfo will use
to look for tables referenced in workspaces or MapBasic programs that do not have fully qualified
paths.
1. To specify a search path, in Search Directories for Tables group, click Add.
Note: You can use the Add and Remove buttons to add or remove paths from the list.
2. Specify a drive and directory in the Choose Directory dialog box and click OK.
You can set up to four paths. Use the Up and Down keys to change the search order.
3. Click OK to save these settings and return to the Preferences dialog box.
You can override the settings in the Output settings preferences in the Advanced Printing dialog box.
These preferences represent the default settings used in the Advanced Printing dialog box. These
settings can then be saved in a workspace.
Note: You can get additional printer advice in the MapInfo Professional Printing Guide in the
Documentation subfolder of your installation directory.
1. On the Options menu, point to Preferences and click Output Settings to display the Output
Preferences dialog box.
2. The Display tab sets the on-screen display options for raster or grid files. Click the appropriate
output settings based on your output requirements.
These entries explain the display settings, the printing options, and window export options in this
dialog. Some of the options appear in more than one dialog so we have grouped all of the like
explanations together.
• Display Raster in True Color When Possible — Click this check box to display your 24-bit
raster or grid file images in true color (make sure your display settings are set to greater than
256 colors). Clear this check box if you only want your images to display using 256 colors.
This box is checked by default.
• Dither Method — Dithering is a technique that blends pixels electronically to improve the
look of an image. Click a dither method when you are converting a 24-bit image to 256
colors.
Dithering creates the illusion of complex colors by using a pattern of finite (fixed) color dots.
For example, to create the color green using dithering, the color would consist of a pattern of
yellow and blue dots.
Halftone dithering calculates a series of half tone differences in color between high- contrast
elements in your image to create a smooth transition of color. This option is selected by
default for display, print, and export options.
Error diffusion dithering calculates an interim color between contrasting colors and shades
the surrounding pixels to blend evenly toward that interim color.
Note: You can select dither method options in the display, printing, and exporting sections of
this dialog box. The same definitions apply to each area.
3. Click the Printing tab to set the printing options for Map windows, Layout windows and all other
output file types. Select the appropriate printing settings based on your output requirements.
Remember that resetting these printer options locally overrides these preferences.
• Output Method/Print Directly to Device — Click this option to print your image file directly
from MapInfo Professional as you did when you were using MapInfo Professional 6.0 or
earlier. This check box is checked by default.
• Output Method/Print Using Enhanced Metafile — Click this option to generate an
enhanced metafile of your MapInfo Professional image before sending it to the printer. This
setting takes advantage of current printer technology to shrink the spool size and print your
file quicker without sacrificing quality.
Note: You must use this setting if you are printing a map containing a translucent raster or grid
layer. If you do not use this setting, the image will not print translucently.
• Print Border for Map Window — Click this check box to print a black border around the
image you are printing. Clear this check box to leave the image unbordered. This check box
is checked by default.
• Internal Handling for Printing Transparent Vector Fills and Symbols — Special
programming has been added to handle transparent fill patterns and bitmaps for vector
images when printing or exporting. Click this check box to use this functionality or clear it to
let the printer or Windows export functions to handle this. This check box is checked by
default.
• Scale Patterns — Select this check box to match the non-transparent fill patterns in your
print output to more closely match what you see on your screen. This check box is checked
by default. Clear this check box to let the printer driver have exclusive control over rendering
the pattern fills.
Note: The Scale Patterns check box does not affect transparent fill patterns because
transparent fill patterns are always scaled.
• Use ROP Method to Display Transparent Raster — Click this check box to allow the
internal ROP (Raster Overlay by Pixel) to manage the transparent pixel display and printing
in raster images. Since the ROP Method is largely a display method, not all printers, plotters,
and export programs can use it. We recommend that you either check with the printer
manufacturer before using this setting or try a few test prints or exports to get the results you
want. This check box is cleared by default.
Using the ROP method may not produce problems unless you print the metafile.
• Print/Export Raster in True Color When Possible — Click this check box to print and
export your 24-bit raster or grid file images in true color (make sure your printer settings are
set to greater than 256 colors). Clear this check box if you are not working with a color
printer. This check box is checked by default.
Note: See the Dither Method setting above for details about this option.
4. Click the Exporting tab settings to set the export options for Map windows, Layout windows and
all other output file types. Select the appropriate window export settings based on your output
requirements. Remember that resetting these options locally overrides these preferences.
• Export Border — Select this check box to include a black border on images you are
exporting. Clear this check box to export the image without a border. This check box is
checked by default.
Note: The preference setting definitions for Internal Handling for Transparent Vector Fills and
Symbols, Use ROP Method to Display Transparent Raster, Print Raster in True Color
When Possible, and Dithering Methods are the same for export as for printing.
• Use Anti-Aliasing— Select this check box to apply the anti-aliasing options available in
MapInfo Professional.
5. Click OK to save these settings and return to the Preferences dialog box.
Note: You cannot anti-alias images you are exporting to .EMF or .WMF format, because these are
not true raster formats.
There are three smoothing options you can use to customize your raster image:
1. Smooth using a Filter value. You can set a flag that selects one of six filters that allow you to
choose the direction the filter is applied to the image from.
2. Smooth using a Mask value. You can select a value that indicates the size of the area you want
to smooth. For example, to create a 3x3 pixel mask value, you would enter a 3 in this field. This
would limit the amount of change in the color of the pixels. Typically mask sizes would be 2-3
pixels when exporting at screen resolution. If you are exporting at a higher resolution, a larger
mask might be appropriate.
3. Smooth using a Threshold value. You can select a threshold value to indicate which pixels to
smooth. Each pixel in an image has a value based on its color. The smaller the pixel value, the
darker the color. Select this option to smooth all of the pixels above the threshold you enter in
this field. When you set this value to 0, MapInfo Professional will smooth all of the pixels.
You must either set a global preference for these anti-aliasing options or set them locally during the
export process (using the Advanced button).
• For more information, see Recommendations for Effective Pattern Scaling in the Help System.
Note: You can get additional printer advice in the MapInfo Professional Printing Guide, which is
located in the Documentation subfolder of your installation directory.
1. On the Options menu, point to Preferences and click Printer to display the Printer Preferences
dialog box.
4. Click OK to confirm your selections and set your MapInfo Professional default printer options.
Note: If you selected Save Printer Information to Workspaces in the Startup preferences,
MapInfo Professional saves the printer information and settings to the workspace.
To set this preference, make changes in the Startup Preferences dialog box.
5. Click OK to save these settings and return to the Preferences dialog box.
If you select the Windows Default printer, MapInfo will always use the printer that is currently set as
the default in Windows. The settings for that printer will display in the MapInfo Preferred Printer
Setup group. You will not, however, be able to change them in the Printer Preferences dialog box.
To change the Windows default printer, go back to the Windows Control Panel.
To use a printer other than the one indicated in the Printer preferences, choose either:
• On the File menu, click Print. You can change the printer you are using in the Print dialog box,
overriding the default printer settings.
• On the File menu, click Page Setup. In the Page Setup dialog box, click the printer to display the
Preferences dialog box for the default printer. Select a different printer in the Name drop-down
list. This will override the default printer set in the Printer preferences.
Note: The printer override applies only to the window you are currently printing. To change the
default settings, go back to the printer preferences and specify a new default printer.
• For more information, see Selecting a Printer and Error Message Displays when Print Output is
Too Large topics in the Help System.
1. On the Options menu, point to Preferences and click Styles to display the Styles Preferences
dialog box.
When you set the text styles you are also setting the label styles.
Default Object Styles — Click the Region, Symbol, Line, and Text buttons to set these style
options. These selections will serve to create the default settings for these style elements.
Note: Text styles apply to text objects and labels.
Highlight Control — Click this button to specify the Line, Region, and Multipoint styles of
selected and target objects, as well as highlighting specifications in the Map window.
Additionally, specify the style of selected and target multipoint objects. The default settings are
shown in the Style boxes of the Highlight Control group. click one of the boxes to display the
corresponding style dialog box and change its settings.
Symbol — Click this button to set the default symbol style for Query > Find tasks. In the Symbol
Style dialog box, select the new symbol style and click OK to save them.
2. Click OK to save these settings and return to the Preferences dialog box. Click OK to close the
Preferences dialog box.
• For more information, see Changing the Find Symbol Style Locally and Inserting Styles into
Tables in the Help System.
Note: You can set per-server defaults based on particular WFS and WMS servers in the Override
Timeout Values section of the Server Information dialog box.
1. Choose Options > Preferences > Web Services to display the Web Services Preferences
dialog box.
2. Select the tab you want to set the options for and click OK to save the options you select.
2. Select the preferences appropriate for your server and click OK to confirm them.
Use System Settings
Click this option to use the LAN settings in the system registry. This is the default preference.
You can review the current LAN settings by clicking Start > Control Panel > Internet
Options > Connections Tab > LAN Settings.
Use Direct Connection
Click this option to override the system LAN settings and try to connect directly to the Internet
(not through a proxy server).
Use Proxy Server
Click this option to set and use the proxy server settings to connect to the Internet.
Settings
Click this button to set the proxy server options. See Setting the Custom Proxy Server
Preferences on page 143 for instructions on completing these settings.
2. Select the preferences appropriate for your server and click OK to confirm them.
WFS Refresh
You use the WFS Refresh option to retrieve updated GML information from the web feature
service pertaining to the current layers.
Update Mapper Filters with Current Mapper
Select this check box to use the current filter settings to refresh the Map window. If you select
this check box and the table has already been refreshed, the current bounds of the front-
most map window are used. If the check box is cleared and the table is refreshed, the
bounds of the map window (at the initial WFS request) are used.
Note: The original map bounds are used, regardless of the current map window bounds.
WFS Timeout Values
In this section you set the default WFS timeout values (in seconds) for the WFS servers you
use. You can set per-server defaults based on particular WFS servers in the Override
Timeout Values section of the WFS Server Information dialog box.
Connect Timeout
Indicates the amount of time (in seconds) allowed to establish an Internet connection request
to a Web Feature server. If the request takes longer than this value, a timeout occurs. The
default connect timeout is 60 seconds.
Send Timeout
Indicates the amount of time (in seconds) allowed to send an Internet request to a Web
Feature server. If the request takes longer than this value, a timeout occurs. The default send
timeout is 60 seconds.
Receive Timeout
Indicates the amount of time (in seconds) allowed to begin to receive a response from a
request from a Web Feature server. The download can take longer than the timeout, but the
response has to occur within the timeout setting. The default receive timeout is 300 seconds.
Maintain Servers List
Click the Servers button to display the WFS Servers List, where you can add, edit, and
delete WFS servers.
2. Select the preferences appropriate for your server and click OK to confirm them.
WMS Timeout Values
In this section you set the default WMS timeout values (in seconds) for the WMS servers you
use. You can set per-server defaults based on particular WMS servers in the Override
Timeout Values section of the WMS Server Information dialog box.
Connect Timeout
Indicates the amount of time (in seconds) allowed establish an Internet connection request to
a Web Map server. If request takes longer than this value, a timeout occurs. The default
connect timeout is 60 seconds.
Send Timeout
Indicates the amount of time (in seconds) allowed to send an Internet request to a Web Map
server. If the request takes longer than this value, a timeout occurs. The default send timeout
is 60 seconds.
Receive Timeout
Indicates the amount of time (in seconds) allowed to begin to receive a response from a
request to a Web Map server. The download can take longer than the timeout, but the
response has to occur within the timeout setting. The default Receive Timeout setting is 300
seconds.
WMS GetMap Pixel Limits
The GetMap Pixel Limits option represents the maximum number of pixels (in width/height)
that a map request is limited to. The GetMap request is designed to retrieve the highest
resolution map image as is necessary to render the image on the screen, for a printer, or for
an export file. This option prevents the request from going higher than the specified values.
Different servers have different limits, so you can set the limit that works best for your
environment.
Note: You can set per-server defaults for GetMap Pixel Limits in the WMS Server Information
dialog box.
Unfortunately, servers do not report their limits to us, so if the GetMap request fails, it means
that you have entered a value that is too large.
Typically, large GetMap requests occur when you are printing or exporting windows
containing WMS images. This happens because printing and exporting occurs at larger sizes
and/or higher resolutions than on-screen display requires.
Note: You can also use this option to shorten the WMS map retrieval time, but remember that
the resulting image will display at a lower resolution.
Max Width
Max Width specifies the maximum number of pixels for a GetMap request in the X direction.
Max Height
Max Height represents the maximum number of pixels for a GetMap request in the Y
direction.
Maintain Servers List
Click the Servers button to display the WMS Servers List, where you can add, edit, and
delete WMS servers.
1. From the Options menu, click Preferences and then Web Services and then Geocode tab to
display the Geocoding server options. This tab sets the geocoding server timeout and
maintenance options.
2. Select the preferences appropriate for your server and click OK to confirm them.
Select All Dictionaries - Select this option to use both the user and address dictionaries.
Address Dictionary Only - Select this option to use only the service’s address dictionary
and not the user’s dictionary.
User Dictionary Only - Select this option to use only the user’s address dictionary and not
the service’s address dictionary
Prefer Address over User - Select this option to use the service’s address dictionary before
the user’s address dictionary.
Prefer User over Address - Select this option to use the user’s address dictionary before
the service’s address dictionary.
Number of Addresses to Batch
Use this option to specify how many addresses you want to send to the geocoding service at
a time. The number of addresses you send at a time can affect performance. If you are using
the EOLS, the batch size can also affect billing of geocoding transactions if you cancel a
geocoding operation during processing.
Default Timeout Values
Use these timeout values to set the communication parameters for the geocoding service.
You can override these defaults on a per-service basis locally by editing the service in the
Services list and specifying the override.
Note: When you set the time out values locally, you may want to keep in mind the size of your
request. The more complicated your request, the more time may be required for
connection/sending/receiving.
Connect Time Out
Use this setting to indicate the amount of time allowed establish an Internet connection to the
geocoding service. If the request takes longer than this value, a timeout occurs. The default
connect time out is 60 seconds.
Send Time Out
Use this setting to indicate the amount of time allowed to send an Internet request to the
geocoding service. If the request takes longer than this value, a timeout occurs. The default
send time out is 60 seconds.
2. Select the preferences appropriate for your server and click OK to confirm them.
To set up your web service preferences to use a different proxy server than those provided in your
system LAN settings:
1. From the Options menu, click Preferences and then Web Services. The Web Services
Preferences dialog box displays.
2. In the Proxy Server Settings box, click the Use Proxy Server button and click the Settings
button. The Web Services Proxy Settings dialog box displays.
Use these options to configure the proxy server for your internet and intranet use.
3. Enter the IP address of your computer and the port number in the fields provided. If you do not
know this information, check the IP Config settings or consult your system administrator.
4. To access local addresses without going through the proxy server, select the Bypass proxy
server for local addresses check box.
5. To exclude some non-local IP addresses from the proxy server, enter the IP addresses in the text
area provided, using a semicolon to separate the addresses.
As a result of these settings, you are prompted for a user name and password when you are
attempting to access the Internet to use the Web Map Service or the Web Feature Service features.
To set the raster reprojection options for all registered raster files:
1. From the Options menu, choose Preferences and Image Processing to display the Image
Processing dialog box.
You can also access these options using the Image Processing button in the Map
Options dialog box.
The Resampling Method options are enabled when you select Always or Optimized. Never is
the default reprojection option and reflects the vector reprojection only behavior.
2. Select the reprojection option that suits your raster reprojection needs. Select:
• Never to prevent raster reprojection. This is the default setting which preserves the pre-
version 8.5 MapInfo Professional behavior.
• Always to ensure that reprojection is always performed, that is, MapInfo Professional
calculates the image’s coordinates based on a precise formula and then the pixels are
resampled using Cubic Convolution or Nearest Neighbor options.
• Optimized to determine the reprojection of a raster image based on the look of the
destination rectangle (a selection of the image) after transformation into the source image
space. If it looks as a rigorous rectangle (two sides are parallel to x-axis and two sides
parallel to y-axis), then the standard Windows functions stretch the source image in both
directions, as it was in pre-version 8.5 MapInfo Professional. If the image fails the rigorous
rectangle test, the reprojection is performed using the resampling options.
3. If you select Always or Optimized, you can decide how best to resample the image from these
options:
• Cubic Convolution provides the best restoration of pixel values because of their
separateness. Using this option, a pixel in the destination image is calculated based on the
pixel values in a 4x4 pixel window centered at the original pixel in the source image. The
coordinates of the original pixel are calculated for every pixel of the destination image based
on a special optimized procedure. Pixels are then weighted based on the basic pixel
coordinates. In general, we recommend you use the Cubic Convolution resampling method
for aerial images and satellite rasters to get a better image quality. The Cubic Convolution
algorithm used in MapInfo Professional is based on the work of S.K. Park and R.A.
Schowengerdt, Computervision, Graphics and Image Processing (1983, Volume 23. Pages
258-272).
• Nearest Neighbor replaces the pixel value in the reprojected image with the original pixel
value from the source image. This resampling method takes less time to render than the
Cubic Convolution method, but may be less precise. In general we recommend you use
Nearest Neighbor resampling for raster maps, grids, and scanned maps to get faster results.
Note: When you are reprojecting 8-bit palette raster images, such as color .TIFF or .BMP
images, MapInfo Professional uses the Nearest neighbor resampling option without
regard to the resampling method you choose.
When you choose the Always or Optimized reprojection options, the reprojection process runs in
the background, so there is nothing to see, but you can see the differences that the Cubic
Convolution and Nearest Neighbor resampling options make in the way the raster displays.
Note: The data used in this instruction set ships with the product. You can retrieve this data from
the data CD.
Before you can access a MapMarker or Envinsa geocoding service, you need to connect MapInfo
Professional to its server. This process gives MapInfo Professional all the information it needs to
access the geocoding service. You need to enter this information only once per service.
2. From the Table menu, choose the Geocode Using Server option to display the Geocode using
Server dialog box. If you have not added any geocoding servers yet, the Configure Service
dialog box displays.
After you add geocoding servers to MapInfo Professional, this box displays your
default server.
4. Click Servers to display the Geocoding Servers List dialog box.
This list is empty by default until you add a geocoding server either using the Servers
button in the Geocode Using Server dialog box or in the geocoding web services
preferences.
Note: When you have entered a server that you will use most frequently, highlight it in the list.
Click Set Default. A check mark displays to indicate that the server you selected will
open by default.
5. To add a new server, click Add. The Geocoding Server Information dialog box displays.
6. Type the service URL and description in the fields provided. You can connect to either a
MapMarker or Envinsa geocoding service by making a selection in the Type of Service drop-
down list.
When you select an Envinsa service, enter a user ID and password in the fields provided. Select
the Remember Password check box to save the password in encrypted format in the server list.
This option is selected by default. If you prefer to enter the password each time you access this
server, clear this check box.
CAUTION: Anyone knowing this password will be able to use the Envinsa geocoding
service.
7. Consider whether the default timeout settings are appropriate for the service you are adding.
The default settings that display in each field are set in the geocoding web services preferences.
You can change these global defaults using the instructions in Setting the Geocoding Server
Preferences on page 140.
To reset these entries for the current server, select the Override Default Values check box and
enter new timeout settings using these definitions:
Connect Timeout
Indicates the amount of time (in seconds) allowed to establish an Internet connection request
to a geocoding service. If the request takes longer than this value, a timeout occurs. The
default connect timeout is 60 seconds.
Send Timeout
Indicates the amount of time (in seconds) allowed to send an request to a geocoding service.
If the request takes longer than this value, a timeout occurs. The default send timeout is 60
seconds.
Receive Timeout
Indicates the amount of time (in seconds) allowed to begin to receive a response from a
request from a geocoding service. The download can take longer than the timeout, but the
response has to occur within the timeout setting. This default timeout is 300 seconds.
If the default timeout settings are appropriate for the new service, clear this check box.
8. When you have completed these entries, click Test URL to ensure that the connection is made.
When you click Test URL and MapInfo Professional can connect to the service, the Geocoding
Server Details dialog box displays.
If the URL is valid, the Engine Info list displays the service’s available, country data, the
supported geocoding types (Street, Postcode, Geographic), and the version information. Click
the column headings to sort the entries alphabetically. Click Close to return to the Geocoding
Server Information dialog box.
Note: If you select Test URL and no service connection is found, an error message displays.
9. When all of these fields and options are complete, click OK to save the new geocoding server.
1. From the Options menu, choose the Preferences option and then select Web Services. Click
the Routing tab to set the web service preference options.
2. To add a new routing server, click Servers to display the Routing Servers List dialog box.
MapInfo Professional supports server-side and proxy server authentication. If you use a proxy
server for Internet access and your routing server also requires user/password authentication,
you authenticate with the proxy server first. As a result, the Connection dialog box displays twice
-- once for the proxy server and once for the routing server.
4. Type the server URL, the server description, the default user name and password in the fields
provided. Click the check box to remember the password when you enter the correct user name.
5. Consider whether the default timeout settings are appropriate for the server you are adding. The
default settings display in each field. The options you select in this dialog box determine the
Routing server’s default settings. To change these entries, select the Override Default Values
check box and enter new timeout settings using the same definitions.
Note: When you have entered a server that you will use most frequently, highlight it in the list.
Click Set Default. A check mark displays beside the server you selected.
6. When you have completed these entries, click Test URL to ensure that the connection is
available. The Routing Server Details dialog box displays.
If the URL is valid, the Countries list displays the server’s available country data. Click Close to
return to the Routing Server Information dialog box.
Note: If you select Test URL and no server connection is found, an error message displays.
7. When these fields and options are complete, click OK to save the new routing server.
Here you can choose how you want to start your mapping session. The Quick Start dialog box
displays every time you start MapInfo Professional, but you can change this behavior in the
Startup preferences (On the Options menu, point to Preferences and click Startup) using
instructions in Setting the Startup Preferences in the MapInfo Professional Help System. In the
Startup Preferences dialog box, clear the Display Quick Start dialog box to deactivate the display
of the Quick Start dialog box.
If you are returning to MapInfo Professional, you can return to the previous mapping session by
choosing Restore Previous Session or use last workspace. If this is your first look at MapInfo
Professional, choose the Open a Table option to begin. The Open dialog box displays.
CAUTION: If you made changes to a table and did not save them a prompt appears asking
you if you want to save the changes. Unless you choose Save, the changes are
lost.
• For more information, see Leaving MapInfo Professional using the MAPINGOW.WOR
Workspace in the Help System.
Using the Universal Translator, you can import these file format types:
• DWG/DXF: AutoCAD
• E00: ESRI ArcInfo format
• SHP: ESRI Shapefile format
• MID/MIF: MapInfo file formats
• TAB: MapInfo .TAB files
• DGN: Microstation Design files
• CATD.DDF: Spatial Data Transfer Standard (SDTS)
• FT: Vector Product Format (VPF)
You can import the following file types into MapInfo Professional using Table > Import:
• MIF: MapInfo Professional Interchange Format. MapInfo Professional’s data interchange format
(ASCII file format).
• DXF: The graphic/data interchange format for AutoCAD and other CAD packages.
• MBI: MapInfo Professional Boundary Interchange format. An ASCII file for MapInfo DOS
boundary files.
• MMI: MapInfo DOS MMI
• IMG: A file format for MapInfo Professional for DOS image files.
• GML: OS MasterMap format.
• GML/XML: Geographic Markup Language 2.1 (*.gml, *.xml)
Note: You can download raster handlers for NIMA formats such as ADRG, CADRG, ASRP, CIB,
USRP, and NITF formats from the MapInfo website or get them from the Installation CD.
MapInfo Professional imports graphics and textual information from MapInfo Professional
Interchange Format, DXF, MBI, and MMI files. MapInfo Professional imports only graphics from IMG.
These are the Raster image file formats MapInfo Professional supports:
• MrSID: The MrSID raster handler allows you to open and display raster images compressed in
the MrSID format.
• BMP -- Windows Bitmap. Windows format only: Monochrome: 8 Bit Color, 24 Bit Color
• GIF -- Graphics Interchange Format
• GIF89a Format (non-interlaced only): Monochrome, 8 Bit Color
• JPEG-2000 -- Joint Photographic Experts Group: MapInfo Professional supports creating
JPEG 2000 files using Save Window As and viewing JPEG 2000 files using the LeadTools raster
handler.
• JPEG -- Joint Photographic Experts Group
• JFIF V1.02 (JPEG File Interchange Format): 8 Bit Gray, 24 Bit Color, No Subsampling, 24 Bit
Color, YUV422 Subsampling, 24 Bit Color, YUV411 Subsampling
• PCX -- ZSoft Paintbrush
• PCX File Format Version 5 (Paintbrush Version 3.0): Monochrome, 8 Bit Gray, 8 Bit Color, 24
Bit Color
• SPOT -- Satellite Pour l'Observation de la Terre -- Spot Image Formats 1.5 and 4.0: 8 Bit
Gray, Format 1.5, 8 Bit Gray, Format 4.0, 24 Bit Color, Format 1.5, 24 Bit Color, Format 4.0
• TGA -- Truevision TGA Truevision File Format Specification 2.0: 8 Bit Gray, 8 Bit Color, 24
Bit Color
• TIFF -- Tagged Image File Format: TIFF Revision 5.0, Monochrome (Class B),
Uncompressed, Monochrome (Class B), PackBits Compression, 8 Bit Gray (Class G),
Uncompressed, 8 Bit Color (Class P), Uncompressed, 24 Bit Color (Class R), Uncompressed
• PNG – Portable Network Graphics Format
• PSD – Adobe Photoshop Version 3.0
• WMF – Windows Metafile: The raster handler will load a rasterized version of the WMF file.
• ECW – Enhanced Compression Wavlet by ER Mapper
• GRD/GRC – MapInfo Vertical Mapper: GRD files can be treated as either a grid or raster
image. If the associated .TAB file contains a RasterStyle 6 entry, the file will be treated as a grid.
• ASRP – ARC Standard Raster Product to 1.2
• ADRG – ARC Digitized Raster Graphic
• CADRG- Compressed ARC Digitized Raster Graphic
• NITF – National Imagery Transmission Format (version 2.x)
• CIB – Controlled Image Base
• GIF – Graphics Interchange Format
• TIFF LZW– Tagged Information File Format LZW
• TIFF CCITT Group 4– Tagged Information File Format CCITT Group 4
• GeoTIFF
To reshape the toolbars, click and drag on their borders. Drag the title bar to move them. To dock a
toolbar, drag it to the area directly underneath the Main menu bar. The toolbar changes shape and
positions itself directly under the menu bar. You can easily change it back to the floating view by
clicking the background area of the toolbar and dragging it away from its position. The toolbar retains
the same shape as it had before you docked it.
You can also dock and undock a toolbar from the Options menu.
1. On the Options menu, click Toolbars, and in the Toolbar Options dialog box.
3. Choose Save as Default to save your arrangement. To remove a toolbar from the screen, click
its Ctrl box.
Print Cut
Copy Paste
Marquee Accesses the Marquee Select tool so you can select and search for
Select map objects within a given rectangle (marquee box).
Radius Select Accesses the Radius Select tool so you can select and search for
map objects within a circular region.
Polygon Select Accesses the Polygon Select tool so you can select objects within a
polygon.
Boundary Accesses the Boundary Select tool so you can select and searches
Select for map objects within a given region.
Unselect All Accesses the Unselect All tool so you can clear all of your object and
record selections. Performs the same operation as Unselect All.
Invert Selects all objects or records not included in the current selection, and
Selection cancels the current selection.
Zoom-in * Accesses the Zoom-in tool to get a closer area view of a map or
layout.
Zoom-out * Accesses the Zoom-out tool so you can get a wider area view of a
map or layout.
Change View * Accesses the Change View dialog box so you can specify settings for
Map window width, map scale, resizing, and centering.
Graph Select Accesses the Graph Select tool. As you click graph objects, such as a
riser bar, pie slice, column, etc., this tool selects the corresponding
records from the table.
Grabber * Accesses the Grabber tool so you can reposition a map or layout
within its window.
Info tool * Accesses the Info tool so you can view the tabular data that is
associated with a map object.
HotLink Accesses the HotLink tool, so you can launch active objects such as
files or URLs from your Map window.
Label Accesses the Label tool so you can label objects with information from
the related database.
Drag Map Accesses the Drag Map Window button to drag an MapInfo
Window * Professional map into an OLE container application.
Layer Control Accesses the Layer Control dialog box so you can specify how the
various tables in a Map window are layered and displayed.
Ruler Accesses the Ruler tool to determine the distance between two points
and the length of some path.
Statistics Accesses the Statistics window to tally the sum and average of all
numeric fields for the currently chosen objects or records.
Set Target Sets the target district from the map during a Redistricting session.
District from
Map
* These tools are also available when you access your MapInfo .TAB map within a container
application such as MS Word, PowerPoint, etc.
Add Node Accesses the Add Node tool, which allows you to add a node to regions,
lines, or polylines when you are in Reshape mode.
Arc Accesses the Arc tool, which allows you to draw an arc the size and shape
of one quarter of an ellipse.
Ellipse Accesses the Ellipse tool, which allows you to create elliptical and circular
objects.
Frame Accesses the Frame tool, which allows you to create frames in the Layout
window to display maps, graphs, browsers, and legends.
Line Accesses the Line tool, which allows you to draw straight lines.
Line Style Accesses the Line Style dialog box where you can change the style, color,
and width of line objects.
Polygon Accesses the Polygon tool, which allows you to draw polygons (a closed,
connected sequence of lines).
Polyline Accesses the Polyline tool, which allows you to draw polylines (an open,
connected sequence of lines).
Rectangle Accesses the Rectangle tool, which allows you to draw rectangles and
squares.
Region Accesses the Region Style dialog box where you can change the fill
Style pattern, color, and background, plus the border style, color, and width of
region objects.
Reshape Toggles in and out of Reshape mode. Reshape allows you to edit regions,
polylines, lines, arcs, and points by moving, adding, and deleting nodes that
define them.
Rounded Accesses the Rounded Rectangle tool, which allows you to draw rounded
Rectangle rectangles and squares.
Symbol Accesses the Symbol tool, which allows you to place point symbols on
your map like “push pins.”
Symbol Accesses the Symbol Style dialog box where you can change the style,
Style color, and size of a symbol object.
Text Accesses the Text tool, which allows you to add titles, labels, and
annotation to maps and layouts.
Text Style Accesses the Text Style dialog box where you can change the font
typeface, size, style, color, and background of text objects.
Open DBMS Table Accesses the Open dialog box, which allows you to access a
Button remote database. If a connection has not been established, you
are prompted to open one. This button is also found in the
Open dialog box if DBMS is installed.
Make DBMS Table Accesses the Make DBMS Table Mappable dialog box, which
Mappable Button allows you make a table linked to a remote database mappable
in MapInfo Professional.
Refresh DBMS Table Accesses the Refresh DBMS Table dialog box, which allows
Button you to refresh a MapInfo Professional linked or live table with
the most recent data residing on the remote database for that
linked or live table.
Unlink DBMS Table Accesses the Unlink DBMS Table dialog box, which allows you
Button to unlink a downloaded table from its remote database.
Change Symbol for a Accesses the Change Symbol for a Mappable DBMS Table
Mappable DBMS dialog box, and allows you to change the symbol style of a
Table Button mappable DBMS table.
Disconnect DBMS Accesses the Close DBMS Disconnection dialog box, where
Button you can close a connection to a remote database.
Using Workspaces
A workspace is a list of all the tables, windows, and settings you are using, stored in a file with the
extension .WOR. Workspaces are a convenient way to return to a previously created map without
having to open each table file individually. The workspace keeps track of the following elements:
• Map, Browser, Graph, 3DMap, and Layout windows, including their size and position
• Query tables created from base tables using either the Select or SQL Select statements (queries
on queries will not be saved)
• Graphs
• Thematic maps
• Legend windows
• Cosmetic objects
• Labels
• Styles for fonts, symbols, lines, and fill patterns used to display objects
To view the contents in the workspace file, open the .WOR file in MapInfo Professional, a text editor
or word processor.
Note: When you save a workspace, you cannot save any references to selections or queries made
by the Selection tools or the Query options.
Opening a Workspace
Any previously opened tables and windows will be left untouched when you open a workspace.
However, to avoid cluttering up your screen with unnecessary windows, use the Close All command
from the File menu before adding the workspace.
When you exit MapInfo Professional, the MapInfo Professional workspace (MAPINFOW.WOR)
stores the last session (unless you have set your preferences so that the workspace will not be
written).If there are files you don't want added to your workspace, close them before exiting.
To open a workspace:
3. Specify the name, directory and drive for the workspace you want to open.
4. Click OK.
When you exit MapInfo Professional, the MapInfo Professional workspace (MapInfo.wor) stores your
last session. If there are files you don't want added to your workspace, make sure you close them
before exiting.
• For more information, see Opening Multiple Workspaces in the Help System.
For example, if you create a workspace called CUSTOMER.WOR that contains the STATES table. If
you later rename the STATES table to AMERICA, MapInfo Professional will not be able to open the
customer.wor workspace. It will try to open the STATES table and not be able to locate it.
• Make any table name changes before you start to build workspaces.
• Open the workspace file in any text editor and manually change the table names.
• Open a workspace. Rename the table(s) using the Rename Table dialog box and immediately
save the workspace.
To restore printer information from a workspace, check the Restore Printer Information to
Workspaces box. When you open the workspace, the printer name, paper orientation, paper size,
and the number of copies are restored. This is useful if you are sharing workspaces with other
MapInfo Professional 6.0 or later users who are also using the same printers. You may want to leave
it off if you want to send the workspace to someone who is using a different printer. If this preference
is turned off, MapInfo Professional uses the default printer selected in the Printer preferences.
Note: You can get additional printer advice in the MapInfo Professional Printing Guide, which is
located in the Documentation subfolder of your installation directory.
What is a Layer?
In MapInfo Professional you begin by opening your table of data and displaying it in a Map window.
Each table displays as a separate layer. Each layer contains the table plus any map objects, such as
regions, points, lines, and text. Additionally, the layer contains style overrides and zoom layering
characteristics that you can add to give the layer more or less prominence in the Map window.
Map layers form the building blocks of maps in MapInfo Professional. Once you have created your
layers, you can customize them in a variety of ways, add and delete layers, or reorder them.
For example, one layer may contain state boundaries, a second layer may have symbols that
represent capitals, a third layer might consist of text labels. By stacking these layers one on top of
the other, you begin to build a complete map. You can display one, two, or many tables at a time.
• Regions: closed objects that cover a given area. These include polygons, ellipses, and
rectangles. For example, country boundaries, postal code boundaries, sales territories.
• Point objects: represent single locations of data. For example, customer locations, restaurants,
parking meters. Points can also be combined into multipoint objects.
• Line objects: open objects that cover a given distance. These include lines, polylines, and arcs.
Examples are streets, rivers, power lines.
• Text objects: text that describes a map or another object, such as labels and titles.
• Collection objects: combination of region, line, and multipoint objects.
You can have each type of object in a separate layer (most common), or you can combine objects in
the same layer. MapInfo Professional lets you create, edit, customize, and display these objects to
make maps that meet your needs.
For information about drawing and editing map objects, see Drawing and Editing Objects in
Chapter 8 on page 275 and see Moving Map Objects in the Help System.
You also have options available to change the Display and Label settings; modify any thematic maps
you have displayed; and reorder, add, or remove layers.
• For instructions on accessing the Layer Control dialog box, see Accessing Layer Control in the
Help System.
• For instructions on changing layer order in the Layer Control dialog box, see Changing the Order
of Contiguous Layers or Changing the Order of Random Layers topics in the Help System.
When you begin to drag the layers, the cursor will change shape to represent the number of layers
being dragged. If you are dragging one layer, the cursor becomes an arrow icon with a single layer
icon attached to the top. If you are dragging multiple layers, the arrow icon will display multiple layer
icons at the top. If you select layers that cannot be dragged or if you are attempting to insert layers
where they cannot be inserted, the cursor becomes a circle with a line through it.
Note: A selection of layers that is out of sequence will become contiguous upon insertion.
You can also use the Up or Down buttons to move one or more layers. You cannot reorder or
remove the Cosmetic layer. It will always be the top layer.
There is ToolTip associated with field entries in the Layer Control dialog box that allows you to view
the whole name of the layer you hover over. This is to make it easier to identify the layers in your
map. You can change the way ToolTips display in the using the Map Window Preferences. Select
the Show ToolTips in Layer Control Dialog to display the ToolTip message or clear the check box
to prevent ToolTips from showing in Layer Control. To access the Map Window Preferences dialog
box, select Options > Preferences > Map Window.
2
4
1 Select these boxes to display a layer. 2 Select these boxes to edit a layer.
3 Select these boxes to label a layer automatically. 4 Select these boxes to make a
layer selectable in the Map window.
2. When you have completed your changes, click OK to display them on the map.
Note: You can only add layers from tables that are open. If you want to add a layer and you do not
see it in the list, make sure the table that contains that layer is open.
• For more information, see Adding a Layer to the Map and Adding Multiple Layers in the Help
System.
Reordering Layers
Map layers display in the order that they are listed in the Layer Control dialog box, with the bottom
layer drawn first and the top layer (which is always the Cosmetic Layer) drawn last. It is important to
order your layers correctly.
For example, you have a layer of customer points and a layer of census tracts. If the layers are
incorrectly ordered in the Map window, MapInfo Professional might draw the customer points first
and then display the census tract layer second. Your points would be obscured by the census tract
layer. You can reorder how layers are displayed in a Map window two ways.
• For more about layers, see Reordering Layers, Changing the Order of Contiguous Layers and
Changing the Order of Random Layers topics in the Help System.
Layer order is also important when you use the Select tool. The Select tool selects objects from the
topmost Selectable layer. If you have several objects at the same location, it is difficult to select the
exact one you want. You can reorder your layers in Layer Control so that the layer you want to select
from is the new topmost layer.
MapInfo Professional does not allow you to control the front-to-back ordering of objects within a
single map layer. If you are editing a table, and you draw a line on top of a circle, the line might
appear in front of or behind the circle; you cannot control whether it is in the front or the back. You
can, however, control the front-to-back ordering of objects in a Layout window.
Note: If you need to control the ordering of objects (for example, you need to make sure that your
lines display on top of your regions), put the different object types in separate layers. Put your
line objects in one table, and put your region objects in another table. Then use the Layer
Control dialog box to order the layers.
• For more information, see Removing a Layer from the Map and Changing a Layer’s Display
Options in the Help System.
First, make sure that the layer containing the objects you want to label is selectable.
2. Click on an object with the Label tool to display a label for that object. MapInfo Professional
labels the object with the values (from the column that you specified for that layer in the Label
Options dialog box.
3. To change label options, choose Map > Layer Control. The Layer Control dialog box displays.
4. Press the Label button. The Label Options dialog box displays. Specify the desired label
options, (Label Partial Objects, Allow Duplicate Text, Allow Overlapping Text, Styles, Position
etc.)
The anchor point is the label’s position relative to the map object. Click on one of the buttons in the
Label Style dialog box to select an anchor point. You have nine choices.
The anchor point is an ongoing attribute of the label. For example, if you anchor a point object’s label
at Center Left and you increase the label’s font size, the text will grow to the left. This way, the text
can never overwrite the point.
The default anchor point varies with the type of map object you are labeling:
Label Size
Label size does not change with zoom or scale changes. Labels display at the size you specify at all
zoom levels as well as on printed output. Labels are never hidden behind other geographic objects
because they are always the last objects drawn on the map.
For example, you have a layer of streets and a layer of postal code boundaries. When you zoom out
past 10 or so miles, the streets look like a black smudge in the window. This is because the zoom
(window width) is too wide to show detailed street maps. Use Zoom Layering to tell MapInfo
Professional to display the street layer only when the zoom is set to a distance that allows you to see
the street detail properly, for instance, less than 5 miles.
The first map doesn’t have zoom layering set for its street layer. At a zoom of 15 miles across, notice
how difficult it is to see any detail. The second map has zoom layering set to display the streets
when the zoom is less than five miles. Therefore, the streets layer does not display when the window
is set at 15 miles.
For more information, see Setting the Zoom Layering in the Help System.
You can display different layers in the same Map window at different zoom levels. For example, you
have a layer of streets, a layer of county boundaries, and a layer of state boundaries. You want the
streets layer to be visible only when the zoom level is less than eight miles. You want the county
boundary layer to display when the zoom level falls between 20 miles and 200 miles. You want the
states boundary layer to be visible only when the zoom level is greater than 100 miles. You can set a
different zoom level for every layer in your Map window.
Note: When you add an object, a region, a line, or a polyline in the Map window and zoom out
beyond where the zoom layer would permit you to see that feature, MapInfo Professional
turns off zoom layering so you can continue to see what you are working on. When you
complete the add process, a message displays asking you if you want to leave zoom layering
off (so you will still be able to see the feature). If you click Cancel, MapInfo Professional
cancels the zoom layering. If you click OK, you need to adjust your zoom settings to see this
feature again.
For more information, see Changing a Map’s Zoom Level in the Help System.
The Show Centroids box displays the centroids of each object in a layer. In MapInfo Professional, a
region’s centroid does not represent its center of mass. Instead, the centroid represents the location
used for automatic labeling, geocoding, and placement of thematic pie and bar charts. If you edit a
map in Reshape mode, you can reposition region centroids by dragging them.
You can only make the Cosmetic Layer editable or selectable. Other Layer Control options (labeling,
zoom layering, display mode) are not available for the Cosmetic Layer. To select fill patterns, line
types, symbols, and text font for the Cosmetic Layer, use the Line Style, Region Style, Symbol Style
and Text Style commands from the Options menu. When the Cosmetic Layer is editable, you can
access the style options from the Drawing Toolbar.
The contents of the Cosmetic Layer are linked proportionally to the map. Map objects (except for
symbols) and text in the Cosmetic Layer are proportionally linked to the zoom level of the map. If you
draw objects in the Cosmetic Layer and then change the map’s zoom from 30 to 100 miles, the size
of the objects will appear smaller.
• For specific instructions, see Making Layers Editable in the Help System.
If you wish to modify the table information, you must save a copy of the table.
• For instructions on making read-only map layers editable, see Making Layers Editable in the
Help System.
1. Make sure the layer you want information about is the selectable layer.
2. Click Info in the Main toolbar and click the object you want information about.
Note: If the information that displays is not what you were looking for, check to see that the
layer you are interested in getting data for is selected.
Note: Use the Ctrl key with the Info tool to toggle through all selectable layers and access
overlapping objects.
When you click a map location using the Info tool where two or more selectable map objects
overlap, the data tied to the objects on each layer display in the Info tool window. If you do not want
the information for all layers to display, turn off Selectable for those layers in the Layer Control
dialog box.
You can also view an object’s label expression in an InfoTip when you use the Select, Info, or Label
tools. InfoTips work very much like ToolTips. Using one of these tools, place your cursor over an
object. An InfoTip displays the label expression for the object in the topmost selectable layer. To set
InfoTips for a particular layer, adjust the Selectable attribute in the Layer Control dialog box so that
the Tips display for the layer you want. InfoTips are active by default, but you can turn them off in the
Map window preferences (on the Options menu, point to Preferences and click Map window).
Many MapInfo Professional functions require that map objects be selected before performing the
particular operation. To use the Select tool, Label tool or Info tool you must first make the layer
selectable. Unlike the editable feature, more than one layer may be selectable at the same time. You
may, however, only select from one layer at a time.
The Select tool selects objects from the topmost Selectable layer. To select an object that is not in
the top Selectable layer, you can turn off the Selectable option in Layer Control for every layer above
the layer you want to select from. Using the multi-select functionality, you can do this in just a few
steps. Select the layers, and select a Selectable check box for one of the layers. The Selectable
attribute is cleared for the selected layers. As an alternative, you can leave all layers Selectable and
use the Ctrl key in combination with the Select tool to cycle through each Selectable layer.
Note: The instructions for making a layer editable are the same, except that you select the check
box in the Editable column instead.
• For instructions on making objects in a layer selectable, see Selecting Objects in a Layer in the
Help System.
For example, if you want to find all customers who live within a fifty kilometers radius of Paris, make
the Street layer selectable. If the map also includes a layer of hospitals (which you do not want to
include in the radius search), turn off the Selectable option for the hospital layer.
The Editable or Selectable options only apply to the Map window itself. You can always select
objects using the Select or SQL Select commands regardless of whether a layer is selectable.
• Graduated symbol thematic maps do not require that your base layer contain point objects.
Instead, graduated symbol objects are built regardless of the map object type. Therefore, even if
your base layer contains region or line objects, you will still be able to create a graduated
symbols map.
• You can have multiple thematic layers per base layer. In some cases, you do not have to add
another base layer to the map to create another thematic layer. You can display more than one
thematic layer at a time, as well as perform bivariate thematic mapping.
• You can use Layer Control to turn the display on or off for a given thematic layer. The layer it is
based on can continue to display. You can also set individual zoom layers on thematic maps.
The following lists the order of map layers from top to bottom (note that map layers are drawn from
the bottom up):
4. Ranged (or Individual Value) thematic layer – where All Attributes are applied.
When you create a new thematic layer, MapInfo Professional automatically inserts it into its proper
place.
• For more information, see Reordering Thematic Layers in the Help System.
Thematic layers are always drawn after their base layer. Therefore, they appear above their base
layer in the Layer Control list, and are indented to distinguish them from other map layers.
Thematic layers are displayed in the list with this naming convention:
If you perform extensive map editing, you may need to convert polylines to regions. If you cut or
copy a group of selected nodes, MapInfo Professional treats the set of nodes as a polyline object,
and places the polyline on the clipboard. If you then paste the object, MapInfo Professional places
the polyline on your map. At this point, you may want to perform Convert to Regions, depending on
whether you want the finished object to be a region.
Convert to Regions also allows you to perform node-editing operations (for example, adding and
moving nodes) on objects that ordinarily do not allow node editing. For example, MapInfo
Professional does not allow you to add nodes to rectangle objects; however, if you convert a
rectangle object to a region, you can then add nodes to the region.
When you choose Convert to Regions, MapInfo Professional converts each of the selected
objects into a region object. Each object is converted into a separate region; MapInfo
Professional does not combine all selected objects into one region. To combine objects, use the
Combine command.
MapInfo Professional automatically assigns the current region style to each of the region objects.
To specify a region style, choose Options > Region Style.
Line, polyline, arc, ellipse, rectangle, and rounded rectangle objects may all be converted to
regions. The Convert to Regions command does not affect point objects, text objects and
region objects.
• For more information, see the Creating Regions from Polygonal Areas Enclosed by Polylines
topic in the Help System.
• For specific instructions, see Converting Grid Files to MapInfo Professional Grids and Specifying
Inflection Values with the MapInfo Professional Grid Converter in the Help System.
Note: The Grid Appearance dialog box allows you to specify color inflection distribution options for
grid maps.
• For specific instructions, see Adjusting the Translucency of a Grid Thematic Map in the Help
System.
This feature is especially useful when you want to display a vector or raster backdrop for your maps
such as joining street or boundary maps. For example, you may have a seamless layer of county
boundaries made up of several individual county tables.
• Layer Control
Use any of the functions except Thematic Mapping from the Layer control dialog box on your
seamless layer. Add, Remove, or Reorder layers or set Display, Zoom Layering or Label options
for the seamless layer (all base tables) at one time. However, you cannot make a seamless layer
editable.
• Info Tool
Retrieve information about a particular object in a base table.
• Select Tools
Select objects from the seamless layer. You can only select a group of objects if they reside in
the same base table. Press the Shift key while clicking the Select Tool to do so. If you attempt to
select several objects that reside in different base tables, MapInfo Professional will only select
objects in one base table. If you use the Marquee or Radius select tools and the selected area
spreads across two different base tables, MapInfo Professional selects the table in either the
center of the circle or polygon.
• Browse Table
Display a Browser window of a particular seamless table. You are prompted to select a base
table.
1. Choose Options > Show MapBasic Window. The MapBasic Window displays.
2. Type set table “tablename” seamless off. MapInfo Professional turns off the seamless layer.
3. Display the table in a browser to view or edit its table structure. If you edit the table structure, you
will need to recompile the seamless layer.
MapInfo Professional turns off the seamless layer. Display the table in a browser to view or edit its
table structure. Use the Seamless Table Manager to add or create seamless tables.
1. Choose Options > Show MapBasic Window. The MapBasic Window displays.
2. Type set table “tablename” seamless on. MapInfo Professional turns the seamless layer on
again.
The structure of each seamless layer includes the path name of each base table plus a description
that defaults to the table name (alias). To view the table structure, turn the seamless layer off and
display the seamless table in a browser. Refer to Turning Seamless Layers On and Off in the Help
System.
will only select objects in one base table. If you use the Marquee or Radius select tools and the
selected area spreads across two different base tables, MapInfo Professional selects the objects
in the center of the circle or polygon.
• Browser Table. Display a Browser window of a particular seamless table. You will be prompted to
select a base table.
• For more information, see Creating/Compiling a Seamless Layer in the Help System.
• For more about Seamless Layers in general, see the MapInfo Professional Help System.
The Help System contains these related topics:
Emergency medical calls thematically shaded by type of call and time of call, with
response zones shaded by number of calls.
MapInfo Professional begins when you open tables, whether they are maps or data from a database.
To understand the database concepts we are about to discuss, consider the table above.
Each row in the list contains information about one person. In database terms, each row is a record.
Each different box of information (Last Name, First Name, etc.) within a record is called a field.
Fields correspond to the columns so that the table shown above contains four different fields.
Database fields are ordered (first, second, third, fourth, etc.), and the basic convention is that the
first field displays as the first column in the database. The second field is in the column to the right of
the first, and so on to the last field, which is displayed in the right most column.
Since the data in a database isn’t usually in alphabetical order or postal code order or any other
pattern which would make it easy for the computer to find the information, the computer needs a way
to organize the information. A database uses an index to keep track of what information is where
and what record it is tied to. Without indices it would be tedious to find anything in a database with
hundreds of records, not to mention databases with thousands and tens of thousands of records.
A database index works on the same principle as a book index. A book index is an alphabetical list
of topics that appear in the book and the page number or address of the information. Database
indices work in a similar way, except that they generally work behind the scenes. You don’t ever see
them. But the computer constructs them and allows you to use them in your work. An index allows
the computer to work with the records according to the order of items in the key field.
MapInfo Professional requires fields to be indexed in order to use the Find command. Indices are
also used to improve performance in SQL Select and joins.
A query is just another word for a question. You query data to collect a particular type information
from your database. For example, if you wanted to know how many customers live within a certain
number of miles of your store, (and you had that kind of information in your database), you could
query the database to find out that information. The result of the query is query data. You can think of
query data as a subset of your data as in the example — a list of all the customers within 5 miles and
none of the customers who live further away. MapInfo Professional has tools to help you query your
data and display it on a map. For more about querying your data, see Selecting and Using Queries
in Chapter 9 on page 310.
• Microsoft Access
• Microsoft Excel
• dBASE DBF
• ESRI ® shapefiles
• Raster Image
• Grid Images
• ASCII Delimited Text
• Lotus 1–2–3
• Remote Databases (Oracle, Informix, SQL Server, etc.)
• Workspace
• Comma Delimited CSV files
When you choose a particular file format, the File Name box will only list files that have the
appropriate extension. For example, if you choose dBASE DBF from the File Format drop-down
list, MapInfo Professional will only list files that are in dBASE format.
When you choose a file other than a MapInfo-formatted file type, MapInfo Professional creates a
table structure for that data based on the type of file that it is.
Note: During the .TAB file creation process, the original file is in no way altered. The file retains its
original properties.
When you open that table in future work sessions, MapInfo Professional will treat these files as if
they were in MapInfo Professional’s native format. The next time you want to open the table, you
should choose the .TAB format for the table. If you accidently attempt to open the file again with its
original file format, MapInfo Professional prompts you with the message:
Also keep in mind that MapInfo Professional supports long filenames and UNC paths. The UNC
paths allow you to access your data without having to remember your drive mappings from one
session to another.
To display your table in the Map window, your data must contain X and Y coordinates. If it doesn’t
already, you can add them using MapInfo Professional. Assigning these coordinates is called
geocoding. More about geocoding follows later in this chapter and in Putting Your Data on the Map
in Chapter 5 on page 199.
When you bring in a raster image to MapInfo Professional, you may need to register it (specify its
map coordinates) so MapInfo Professional can display it properly. Choosing the Raster Image file
format from the Open dialog box will bring you to the Image Registration dialog box where you can
specify the appropriate map coordinates. Once you register the image, a process that creates a
.TAB file for the image, you can open it as you would open any table in a Map window. Images that
you purchase from MapInfo Professional will already be registered.
• For a full discussion of raster image display, see Registering SPOT Images in the Help system.
The MapInfo Professional raster handlers support:
• LeadTools to version 15
• MrSID SDK (3.2), to provide support for MG3 files
• Multi-threading; specifically for ECW and the Government handlers (ADRG, ASRP, CADRG, CIB,
NITF)
AirPhotoUSA provides raster images at different elevations for particular areas in the United States.
The AirPhotoUSA map handler allows MapInfo Professional users to open and display the imagery
contained in AirPhotoUSA Map files as a layer. These files are treated just like any other raster file in
MapInfo Professional. The MAPINFOW.PRJ file contains AirPhotoUSA information.
You can use the AirPhotoUSA Conterminous U.S. coordinate system without making any changes.
However, if you want MapInfo Professional to recognize and give a name to that coordinate system,
or to use it for other purposes, you must add it to the MAPINFOW.PRJ.
• <SOMEFILE>.tab: This file describes the structure of your table. It is a small text file describing
the format of the file containing your data.
• <SOMEFILE>.DAT or <SOMEFILE>.WKS, .DBF, .XLS: These files contain your tabular data. If
you are working with a dBASE/FoxBASE, delimited ASCII, Lotus 1–2–3, Microsoft Excel, or
Microsoft Access file, your MapInfo Professional table will consist of a .TAB file and your data or
spreadsheet file. For raster tables, the equivalent extension might be BMP, TIF, or GIF.
Your data may also contain graphic objects. Once you assign X and Y coordinates to your data
records, your table will also contain graphic objects. In Geocoding – Assigning Coordinates to
Records in Chapter 5 on page 211, you will learn how to assign X and Y coordinates to your data
records so you can display them on a map. If you already have graphic objects in your table, there
are two more files associated with the table:
Your table may also include an index file. The index file allows you to search for map objects using
the Find command. If you want to locate an address, city, or state using the Find command, those
fields must be indexed in your table. The index is located in:
• <SOMEFILE>.IND
2. Creating points on a map using either coordinates in your data or by matching your data to a
search file (see When Do I Geocode vs. Create Points? in Chapter 5 on page 200 for this
process).
3. Display your data on the map (see Displaying your Data on a Map in Chapter 5 on page 200
to complete this process).
If you are accessing your data remotely or use SpatialWare or other ODBC supported database
product, see Understanding Remote Tables and Databases in Chapter 7 on page 248and
Working with the MapBasic Window in the MapInfo Professional Help System for additional support.
For more information about converting, displaying, and printing your data, see Understanding Your
Data in Chapter 8 on page 273.
Note: When you open a table and select a new Preferred View from the drop-down list, MapInfo
Professional remembers your selection and uses it the next time you open a table.
• For instructions on opening the free introductory data provided by MapInfo, see Opening the
MapInfo Professional Introductory Data in the Help System.
1. On the File menu, click Open. The Open dialog box displays.
Note: If you are at the Quick Start dialog box (the first dialog box you see after starting MapInfo
Professional), choose the Open button. The Open dialog box displays.
2. Navigate to the data file you want to open. Use the Files of type drop down to select the type
appropriate for your data.
3. Select the view you want of this data from the Preferred View drop-down list.
• Automatic – MapInfo Professional chooses the most appropriate view. If the data is
mappable (i.e., graphic objects are attached to the data), for example, MapInfo Professional
opens the table in a Map window. If you have a Map window displayed and the table you
want to open is mappable, MapInfo Professional will automatically open the table in the
current Map window. If the data is not mappable, MapInfo Professional will attempt to open
the table in a Browser window. If the table cannot be mapped or browsed, MapInfo
Professional opens the table using the No View option (no data is displayed).
• Browser – MapInfo Professional attempts to open the table in a Browser window.
• Current Mapper – MapInfo Professional attempts to add your data to the current Map
window.
• New Mapper – MapInfo Professional attempts to open the table in a new Map window.
• No View – MapInfo Professional opens the table, but no data is displayed.
Note: When you open a table and select an option in the Preferred View drop-down list,
MapInfo Professional remembers what you selected and uses the same option the next
time you open a table.
4. Select the Create copy in MapInfo format for read/write to open it in native (.tab) format.
Note: If you do not select the Create copy... check box, the file opens read-only.
Note that although an MapInfo Professional table consists of two or more component files
(STATES.tab, STATES.DAT, STATES.MAP etc.), only the .TAB file appears in the File Name box of
the Open dialog box. It is the only component file you must open. For more about these other
MapInfo file types, see Understanding the Files Associated with MapInfo Professional Tables
in Chapter 4 on page 178.
In MapInfo Professional you can work with a variety of table types. Some data tables are like the
example table we just discussed. Further subdividing this class of tables are data tables that contain
graphic objects (map objects) and data tables that do not (such as spreadsheets or external
database tables). Raster tables are graphic images that you can display in a Map window. These
computerized pictures do not have the same table structure of record, field, and index as data tables
do, and therefore, will not be discussed in this chapter. For more on raster images, see Working with
Raster Images in the MapInfo Professional Help System.
You can see what windows are currently open by reviewing the list at the bottom of the Window
menu. If one of these “More Windows” windows is the active window, the check box displays beside
the More Windows entry. To make another window active, click the entry in the Window list. The
window you selected comes to the forefront of the MapInfo Professional screen. When you select
the More Windows entry, the Select Window dialog box displays. To activate a window from this list,
either double-click the entry in the Select Window list, or click the entry and click OK.
Of the five Preferred View options, Automatic and No View will work on all tables, regardless of
what kind of data they contain. MapInfo Professional attempts to open the table as specified for
Browser, Current Mapper, and New Mapper. If it cannot, it will open the table according to the
following rules:
• If Current Mapper is selected, and there is no Map window displayed, MapInfo Professional will
attempt to open the table in a new Map window.
• If Current Mapper or New Mapper is selected and the data is not mappable, MapInfo
Professional will try to open the table in a Browser window.
• If the table cannot be mapped or browsed, MapInfo Professional will open the table using the No
View option (no data is displayed).
For more information, see Renaming a Table and Deleting a Table in the Help System.
1 The Places box. Select the Workspaces Directory option in the Places box, to
display the Workspace (.wor) type in the Files of Type list. If you select any other
entry in the Places box, MapInfo (.tab) displays in the Files of type list.
The Open dialog box provides many ways to quickly find the maps that you have created in a variety
of locations in your system and network.
Note: The Places box on the left side of the Open dialog box allows you to select a directory in
which you may have your map and other MapInfo Professional tables and workspaces.
When you select the Workspaces Directory option in the Places box, the Files of type drop-down
list changes to Workspace (.wor) type. If you select any other entry in the Places box, MapInfo (.tab)
displays in the Files of type list.
• For more information, see Opening MapInfo Professional Introductory Data in the Help System.
• For more information, see Selecting Point Objects in Grid Files in the Help System.
To open a grid layer:
1. On the File menu, click Open to display the Open dialog box.
3. Navigate to the directory in which your grid image is located and click the file you want to open.
Only one view can be active at a time. To make a different window active, click its title bar. Notice
that the menu bar changes depending on which window is active. For instance, when you are
working in a Map window when you also have a Browser open, only the Map menu is available on
the menu bar. Make the Browser active. The Browse menu replaces the Map menu.
There are many different types of windows you can display your data in, depending upon what you
need your data to communicate. This section covers the many ways you can display your data using
MapInfo Pro. Each of these display methods: map, list, graph, and presentation give your
information a different impact. How you display the information you have should depend upon what
effect you want.
• Map windows present information arranged as conventional maps, allowing you to visualize the
geographic patterns of your data.
• Browser windows present information as tabular lists (just as conventional databases do),
allowing you to fully examine tabular data.
• Graph windows present information arranged as graphs, allowing you to visualize and make
comparisons of the purely numerical patterns.
• Layout windows present information in a polished and attractive way and can be embedded in
other applications such as Microsoft Word or PowerPoint.
You can zoom using the mouse wheel or using the keyboard. For more about zooming using the
mouse wheel, see Using the Microsoft IntelliMouse to Move Around the Windows in the MapInfo
Professional User Guide Help System.
In addition to the usual zoom keys on your Main Toolbar ( , , and ), you can use the + and -
keys on the keyboard, to zoom in and out more precisely.
Further, you can move an object in an editable layer more precisely by selecting it and using the
following key combinations.
• Choose Map > Change View. The Change View dialog box displays.
• Click the Change View button on the Main toolbar. The Change View dialog box displays.
The Change View dialog box allows you to set various parameters of the map including:
• Display the current zoom, scale or cursor position in the status bar (the default unit of
distance is miles which is specified in Map > Options).
• Change the zoom, scale, and the center point of the current map view.
• Behavior of the map when you resize the window.
• Resize the map to fit the new window, keeping the view the same.
• Set the map to preserve the current scale, so that resizing the window has the effect of letting
you see more or less of the map.
The Help System contains the following related topics:
• For more information, see Displaying Data in a Browser Window in the Help System.
The Status Bar appears at the bottom left of the MapInfo Professional window. This bar displays the
range of records currently displayed within the Browser window out of the total number of records in
the table.
To create a report of your data, use the Crystal Reports functionality included in MapInfo
Professional (on the Tools menu, click Crystal Reports).
• For more information, see Opening Multiple Browsers, Scrolling through a Table, and Using the
Select Tool to Edit Browser Entries in the Help System.
The number of rows and columns that can be displayed in a frame depends on font size and column
width. The frame displays Table text using the font style and size for that Browser window. When you
want a different type style in the frame, you have to make the change in the Browser window using
Options > Text Style dialog box. When you use smaller type, you can get more rows and columns
in a frame.
You can also manually adjust column width in a Browser window without affecting the underlying
field size for the base table. You do this by clicking and dragging the short vertical bars separating
the column names in the Browser window.
1. From the File menu, click Open and select the table that you want to display as a graph.
2. Choose Window > New Graph Window. The Create Graph Step 1 of 2 dialog box displays.
3. Choose the chart type and the template for your graph.
4. Click Next. The Create Graph Step 2 of 2 dialog box displays.
5. Choose the field, or create an expression that contains the data values fields that you want used
when creating your graph.
Note: For more information about using the graph features of MapInfo Professional, see Graph
Help System available by selecting Help > MapInfo Graphing Help Topics.
6. If you want labels for your graph, choose the column that the records are to be labeled with.
7. Choose how you want your graph data organized in rows or series.
After the graph displays you can invoke one of several editing dialog boxes to modify an extensive
array of attributes. You can also move and resize objects within the graph window until the desired
graph is achieved.
• Editing a Graph
• Saving a Graph
• Saving a Graph Window as a Template File
• Setting Margins for a Graph Window when Printing
• When Should I use Label Axis Options?
• When Should I use Value Axis Options?
You can display rulers at the top and to the left to help you in positioning, sizing and aligning objects.
The Zoom displayed in the status bar indicates the magnification factor that is currently applied to
the Layout. When the zoom is 37.46%, then the Layout is being displayed 37.46% of its actual size.
When the zoom is at 123%, then the Layout is being displayed at 123% of its actual size.
Note: MapInfo Professional has some excellent tools to assist you in moving around the Layout
window. See Getting Around in the Map Window on page 185 for these details.
• Legend Windows are the key boxes at the bottom of the map that explain what the map symbols
mean. There are two different kinds of legend windows:
a. The Thematic Legend window is automatically created and details the meaning of colors,
symbols and styles on a thematic map. Display or hide this legend in the Options menu, by
clicking the Show/Hide Theme Legend Window menu option.
b. The Cartographic Legend displays legend frames for any map layer, not just thematic map
layers. The legend window displays the legend, or key, to the cartographic data on your map.
The legend frames can all be in one window, or can be split among several legend windows
for the same map. Therefore, each map can have one or more cartographic legend windows
containing the frames of your choice. Additionally, you can customize the text and style of the
information presented. Modifications to the legend can be made through shortcut menus
you access by right-clicking in the legend window or through the Legend menu. You can
learn more about legends in Working with Legends in Chapter 10 on page 369.
• Redistricting Windows are allow you to create groupings of spatial information. This is a little
more complex than these other options. For more information about redistricting windows, see
Redistricting in the MapInfo Professional Help System.
Saving a Workspace
If you work with the same tables repeatedly, you know that opening each one individually every time
you use it can be tedious. With MapInfo Professional’s workspace feature, you can automate this
process so you can get back to the business of creating maps and analyzing data sooner.
When you work with MapInfo Professional you generally use many different tables and windows. A
Map window, for instance, is likely to be built of several layers. MapInfo Professional uses
workspaces to save your work setup from session to session. Workspaces prevent you from having
to reassemble all the pieces of your earlier setup from scratch. So, you don’t have to reopen tables,
re-create maps or layouts, resize windows, or do anything else just to duplicate what was on your
desktop the last time you were using MapInfo Professional.
CAUTION: Saving a workspace will not save edits you have made to tables in the
workspace.
If you close a window or table and you have thematic maps, graphs, label settings or label edits, or
cosmetic objects pending, MapInfo Professional will prompt you to save the session to a workspace.
• For more information, see Saving a Workspace and Saving a Map Window as a .TAB File in the
Help System.
For instructions on saving a Map window as a .TAB file, see the Help System.
Note: You will not be able to read files saved in MWS format in pre-8.0 versions of MapInfo
Professional.
You can set the visibility of a modifier theme without regard to its reference feature layer, so you can
turn the visibility of the main reference layer off but still display the theme. In MapXtreme2004, the
modifier themes (Dot Density, Ranges, Individual Value) are only drawn if the reference feature layer
is visible. To ensure that modifiers marked as visible in MapInfo Professional display in tools like
Workspace Manager, we force the visibility of the reference feature layer so that its modifier themes
display.
• For specific instructions, see Saving your Workspace as an XML-Based MWS File in the Help
System.
• For more information, see Caveats for Saving Label Expressions to MWS and Caveats for
Saving Thematic Expressions to MWS in the Help System.
You can also save a copy of the table under a new name, using Save Copy As. This, in essence,
creates a new table. This is helpful in several instances, as when you want to:
1. On the File menu, click Save Copy As. The Save Copy of Table dialog box displays.
The original table remains unchanged and open for all further changes. The new table does not
open immediately after its creation, but can be opened for use at any time. When choosing a name
for your new table that begins with a number, MapInfo Professional adds an underscore to the
beginning of the table name. For instance, your table 1STREETS.tab. will become 1STREETS.tab.
Saving a copy of a raster table only saves a copy of the *.tab file, not the image. You cannot change
the projection of a raster or grid table using Save Copy As. To do this go to the Table menu, point to
Raster and click Modify Image Registration and click the Projection button. Then save the file
from there.
Since MapInfo Professional supports long filenames, it is easier to give the new table a name that is
descriptive and at the same time distinguishes it from the original file.
Closing a Table
Closing a table removes it from active use in your current session. Choose the Close command
from the File menu to close tables. When you close a table, you automatically close all views of that
table. If you close a table that is displayed in a Map window with other tables, MapInfo Professional
removes that table from the window, but the Map window remains open.
In addition, any subset tables of the original table (known as query tables) also close. You can use
the Close command for any table, whether or not it is displayed in a window. Opening and closing
tables is different from opening and closing windows in which you view your tables. You can open a
table without opening any views of the data. Similarly, closing a window does not close the table (or
tables) you are viewing in the window. They are still open and available for use. To close a window,
click the Ctrl-menu box in the upper-left corner of any window and select Close.
If you have made changes to a table but have not yet saved those changes, MapInfo Professional
will ask you if you want to save them before closing the table. To save your changes, choose Save
Table from the File menu.
• For more information, see Closing a Table, Closing All Open Tables, and Closing Multiple Tables
in the Help System.
Most programs require you to import files created in some other programs. MapInfo Professional
allows you to work directly with files created in other programs. When you have a file in one of the
following non-MapInfo Professional formats, you do not have to import it:
• dBase DBF
• Delimited ASCII
• Lotus 1-2-3
• Microsoft Access Database
• Microsoft Excel
By not importing data you save time; opening a file is quicker than importing it. You also save disk
space. When you import a file, you make a copy of it. Since MapInfo Professional works directly with
files from other programs, it does not have to make a copy.
When MapInfo Professional opens a file from some other program, it creates a file with a .TAB
extension. This file describes the format of the file that actually contains the data. When you have
opened a non-MapInfo Professional file, such as a Lotus file, in a previous session and attempt to
open it again, the following prompt appears:
• For more information, see Importing DXF Attributes into MapInfo Professional and Importing
Attributes with Nested Blocks in the Help System.
• For more information, see DXF Exporting Notes in the Help System.
Cropping Images
When MapInfo Professional exports a window, it does not clip objects that extend beyond the edges
of the windows, but it does export information about where the clipping is.
Other programs always honor the clipping of bitmap files. As for other formats, the behavior varies
depending on the program that is used to display and print the file. Many programs, such as drawing
programs, "explode" the file into individual objects. A file containing several country boundaries
would explode into several polygon objects, one for each country. Programs like these usually ignore
the clipping information that MapInfo Professional stores in the file.
Other programs, such as word processing programs and spreadsheets, typically open files as one
compound object, without trying to explode them into component objects. These programs usually
honor the clipping information and clip the contents appropriately.
For example, if you are exporting a Map window that displays part of Germany, but not all of it, the
exported file contains the entire image of Germany. It also contains information about where MapInfo
Professional clipped that image in its Map window. But when you open the exported window in your
target application, a drawing package for example, the image of Germany may not be clipped.
MapInfo Professional also displays a dialog box that you use to indicate the character set for the
exported ASCII file. Different platforms use different character sets. MapInfo Professional must know
the platform where you are going to use the exported file in order to provide the appropriate
character set. No graphical data is exported to ASCII.
MapInfo Professional also displays the dBASE DBF Information dialog box that you use to indicate
the character set for the exported DBF file. Different platforms use different character sets. MapInfo
Professional must know the platform where you are going to use the exported file in order to provide
the appropriate character set.
Anti-aliasing allows you to smooth images in all types of windows such as Map windows, layouts,
legends, and graphs.
Note: You cannot anti-alias images you are exporting to .EMF or .WMF format, because these are
not true raster formats.
There are three smoothing options you can use to customize your raster image:
1. Smooth using a Filter value. You can set a flag that selects one of six filters that allow you to
choose the direction the filter is applied to the image from.
2. Smooth using a Mask value. You can select a value that indicates the size of the area you want
to smooth. For example, to create a 3x3 pixel mask value, you would enter a 3 in this field. This
would limit the amount of change in the color of the pixels. Typically mask sizes would be 2-3
pixels when exporting at screen resolution. If you are exporting at a higher resolution, a larger
mask might be appropriate.
3. Smooth using a Threshold value. You can select a threshold value to indicate which pixels to
smooth. Each pixel in an image has a value based on its color. The smaller the pixel value, the
darker the color. Select this option to smooth all of the pixels above the threshold you enter in
this field. When you set this value to 0, MapInfo Professional will smooth all of the pixels.
You must either set a global preference for these anti-aliasing options or set them locally during the
export process (using the Advanced button).
• For specific instructions, see Smoothing Map Images During Export in the Help System.
Use the Tool Manger to run, add, edit, or remove tools from the currently registered list of tools in the
Tools menu. You can also configure a tool to run automatically upon startup. If you performed a
Custom installation, you may have elected to not install the tools. In this case when you open the
Tool Manager dialog box, the list box will be empty (on the Tools menu, click Tool Manager).
For information about using the tools in MapInfo Professional, see the MapInfo Professional Help
System.
AutoLabeler – Use this tool to place text object style labels in the Cosmetic Layer of the active Map
window.
CoordSys Bounds Manager – Use this tool to check and set the coordinate system bounds for
mappable MapInfo Professional base tables.
Concentric Ring Buffer – Creates concentric ring buffers around one or more map objects. This
tool also computes aggregated values for underlying data that occur within each ring. Therefore, it
can be used to count how many customers occur within each ring and their total sales. You can
graph the results. See Concentric Ring Buffer Tool in the Tools section of the Help System.
Coordinate Extractor – Allows you to add two columns to an open table and updates each column
with x and y coordinates in the table’s native projection. For objects other that points, the x and y
coordinates will represent CentroidX and CentroidY locations. See Coordinate Extractor Tool in the
Tools section of the Help System.
Create Line by Length (Cogoline) – Draws lines in the Cosmetic Layer of a specific length and
angle. You can also use DMS coordinates and create polylines with this tool. See Create Line by
Length (COGOLine) Tool in the Tools section of the Help System.
DBMS Catalog – Use this tool to create a MapInfo Professional MapCatalog table in a remote
database. You need the catalog to download coordinate information to MapInfo Professional from a
remote database. This tool should be used by a qualified DBA.
DBMS Count Rows in Table – Allows you to optimize opening large tables (million or more rows)
using the DBMS Live Access method (unlinked tables). This will update an entry for a table in the
MapCatalog, correctly setting the number of rows for that table.
Degree Converter – Converts a column of data containing DMS coordinates to Decimal Decimals
and Decimal Degrees to degrees/minutes/seconds. See Degree Converter Tool in the Tools section
of the Help System.
Delete Duplicates – Use this tool to delete duplicate records from a table while retaining map
objects. This tool does not change the original table in any way. See Delete Duplicates Tool in the
Tools section of the Help System.
Disperse Points – Disperses points located in the same position. Points can be dispersed
systematically or can be used to calculate the distance from a selected object (or group of objects) to
the closest or farthest object(s). You can also specify criteria to limit the results. See Disperse Points
Tool in the Tools section of the Help System.
Distance Calculator – The Distance Calculator tool (DistanceCalc.MBX) is used to calculate the
distance from a selected object (or group of objects) to the closest or farthest object(s). You can also
specify criteria to limit the results. See Distance Calculator Tool in the Tools section of the Help
System.
EasyLoader – EasyLoader is a Windows-only utility that is loaded using the Tool Manager.
EasyLoader allows you to upload MapInfo Professional tab files to a remote database. Online help is
available for using EasyLoader. See EasyLoader Tool in the Tools section of the Help System.
GeoTracker Tool – This is a GPS tool to be used with MapInfo Professional, which supports up to
12 com ports, sophisticated error message management for Disconnect and Reconnect features,
and superior installation and help support features. See GeoTracker Tool in the Tools section of the
Help System.
Grid Maker – Draws a Graticule: a grid of latitude/longitude lines. See the Grid Maker Tool in the
Tools section of the Help System.
Grid Tools – Use these tools to create a MapInfo Professional native grid file from a table of points,
convert grids from any format that MapInfo Professional can read into MapInfo Professional grid
format (.MIG), and display x, y, and z coordinates, and row and column, of the grid you selected.
HTML Image Map – HTML Image Map allows you to create a web page based on any MapInfo
Professional Map window that includes a layer of polygons. The resulting HTML page includes an
Image Map (JPG or PNG) and applies a user designated title and copyright. See the HTML Image
Map Tool in the Tools section of the Help System.
Labeler – Transfer layer's labels into permanent text objects; label current selection; make individual
labels created with the Label tool into permanent text objects. See the Labeler Tool in the Tools
section of the Help System.
Legend Manager – Takes control of how MapInfo Professional displays Legend windows. Includes
the ability to have multiple Legend windows open, and to associate each legend with a specific Map
window. See the Legend Manager Tool in the Tools section of the Help System.
Link Utility for Google Earth – Use this tool to display your map data on Google Earth Maps. See
the Link Utility for Google Earth™ in the Tools section of the Help System.
Mapping Wizard Tool – Use this tool to open data, maps, perform analysis, and generate output
using a wizard. This tool is set to load automatically when you start MapInfo Professional.
MapX Geoset Tool – Allows you to read a MapX Geoset into a MapInfo Professional Map window,
and write a MapX Geoset from the contents of the MapInfo Professional Map window. See the MapX
Geoset Utility in the Tools section of the Help System.
Named Views – Use this tool to save a Map window’s current zoom and center as a named view.
Return to that view by selecting the view name from a dialog box.
North Arrow – Add North Arrows of various styles and optionally add a Magnetic Declination arrow.
A North Arrow can be added to a Map or Layout. You can either specify from the dialog box which
corner to position the North Arrow, or use the toolbar button to drag a rectangle and place the North
Arrow at the specified location. See the North Arrow Tool in the Tools section of the Help System.
Overview – Use this tool to open a new Map window to provide an overview of another Map
window.
Register Vector – Use this tool to put control points into a vector image and reference points into a
Map window and then performs an affine transformation to line them up.
Rotate Labels – Use this tool to rotate all the labels in a map layer at once.
Rotate Map Window – Use this tool to rotate the contents of the current Map window a specific
number of degrees. It calculates and sets an Affine transformation for the Map window.
Rotate Symbols – Use this tool to rotate all the symbols in a map layer at once.
ScaleBar – Use this tool to create a custom distance scalebar to annotate a Map window. This tool
can also be used in Layout windows.
Seamless Table Manager – Use this tool to create and manage seamless map sheets.
Search and Replace – Search a character column for a specific string and replace it with another
string or to search and replace multiple column entries. See the Search and Replace Tool in the
Tools section of the Help System.
Send to MapX Mobile – Use this tool to write a custom MapX geoset and associated .TAB files to
create a user-defined subset of a map window’s background data for display on a mobile device.
Set the Minimum Bounding Rectangle – Use this tool to set the Minimum Bounding Rectangle for
ODBC live access based tables. See the Set the Minimum Bounding Rectangle Tool in the Tools
section of the Help System.
Shields – Use this tool to draw decorative frames around text objects.
Spatialize SQLServer Table – Use this tool to accommodate spatial data in an existing SQL table.
SpiderGraph – This tool draws lines between objects in a single table, or the objects from two tables
based on a join. It then creates a new table of lines that connect the objects from the original table(s)
based on matching column names. See the Spider Graph Tool in the Tools section of the Help
System.
Symbol Maker – Use this tool to create, edit, and delete MapInfo Professional symbols. These
symbols become part of the standard MapInfo Professional symbol set.
Synchronize Windows – This tool provides toolbar icons that allow you to automatically share
changes made in one mapper window to all other mapper windows in a given MapInfo Professional
session. See the Synchronize Windows Tool in the Tools section of the Help System.
Table Manager – Use this tool to get information about all currently open tables, including table
metadata.
TOC Tool – Builds a seamless table of all the files listed in a TOC file. This utility will create one or
more seamless tables, grouped by zone and resolution. See the TOC Tool in the Tools section of the
Help System.
Universal Translator – Import and export MapInfo Professional data to and from other popular
mapping file formats. Provides a log file viewer to confirm log file changes. See the Universal
Translator Utility in the Tools section of the Help System.
Window Manager – Use this tool to assign the title of Map, Browser, Graph, Layout, and
Redistricter window and the default table view. The Set Default View option allows you to select a
layer from an open Map window and make the default zoom and center settings for the layer's base
table match those of the Map window. The default center and zoom settings are written to the table's
.MAP file. See the Window Manager Tool in the Tools section of the Help System.
Workspace Packager – Use this tool to create a copy of a workspace in a new location or folder,
and copies all the data referenced by the workspace to the same location. MapInfo Professional
updates the internal references in the workspace and .TAB files to point only to the "packaged"
copies of the data, so you can open the new workspace no matter where the folder is moved or
copied, even if the folder is moved or copied to a different computer. See the Workspace Packager
in the Tools section of the Help System.
Workspace Resolver – Use this tool to find missing .TAB files while you are opening a workspace.
See the Workspace Resolver in the Tools section of the Help System.
• Instructions for adding a tool to the Tool Manager, editing, and removing a tool from the Tool
Manager are available in the Help System.
During Geocoding, MapInfo Professional reads data such as street data, postal code data, and other
non-coordinate information from your database and matches it against street or postal code
information on a MapInfo data table.
During the Create Points process, MapInfo Professional reads X and Y coordinate data (such as
longitude and latitude data from a Global Positioning System) and plots data using those
coordinates. Use the appropriate process to the type of data you have collected.
• For more about the geocoding process, see Geocoding – Assigning Coordinates to
Records on page 211
• For more about the create points process, see Putting Latitude/Longitude Coordinates on
a Map on page 223.
Note: If your data is in non-MapInfo format before you geocode or create points, you must convert
it before using either of these processes.
• For more specific instructions on creating points, see Putting Longitude/Latitude Coordinates on
a Map in the Help System.
1. In MapInfo Professional on the File menu, click Open to display the Open dialog box.
2. In the Files of Type list select (.XLS), navigate to your data, and click Open.
3. Select the worksheet you want in your MapInfo data table. Make sure that this data includes
either postal codes or longitude/latitude coordinate values.
The default data range for an Excel file is the entire worksheet.
• If you select the Use Row Above Selected Range for Column Titles check box, the default
data range begins at A2 (row 2).
• If you clear the Use Row Above Selected Range for Column Titles check box, both the
Named Range and Current Value fields revert to their previous values on the Entire
Worksheet.
4. Click OK to display the Set Field Properties dialog box.
This dialog box allows you to reset the name, type and properties of any field (column) that you
import from the Excel table. The top of the Set Field Properties window shows the Fields
(column names) and Type (character, date, etc.) from the Excel spreadsheet. When you select
one of these fields, the Field Information box entries at the bottom allow you to specify the field
name, data type, number of characters (for character and decimal fields) or number of decimals
(for decimal fields only).
Note: If you click Cancel, MapInfo Professional cancels the import operation.
5. Click OK to convert the data to a MapInfo table (.tab) format. Now that you have converted your
data, you can plot your data; see the next section to continue.
• For more information, see Default Range Options When Importing MS Excel Files and
Controlling Treatment of Imported Excel Tables in the Help System.
• For more specific instructions on creating points, see Putting Longitude/Latitude Coordinates on
a Map in the Help System.
2. Choose Microsoft Access Database from the Files of type menu. The Access databases
(.mdb) for the specified location display.
3. Choose an Access database to open. If security is turned on, you will be prompted to give user
and password information to open the database.
4. The Open Access Table dialog box displays the tables for the opened database.
5. Choose an Access table or tables to open. The table or tables are opened in MapInfo
Professional. (Please note that for a table name with a space such as Order Details can be
saved in MapInfo Professional but subsequently will not be visible to MapInfo Professional.)
After you open an Access table in MapInfo Professional for the first time, MapInfo Professional
creates a definition for the table and gives it a .TAB extension. This enables you to it treat it like any
other MapInfo Professional table. For example, to open this file you would now open it like any other
MapInfo Professional table.
Note: Even though the table has the .TAB extension in MapInfo Professional, your data is still in
your original Access database table and is not a duplicate.
1. From the File menu, click Open to display the Open dialog box.
2. From the Files of type dialog box, select Comma delimited CSV (.csv).
3. Navigate to the folder that contains the file you want to open and click it to select it.
4. Click Open to display the Comma Delimited CSV Information dialog box.
The Delimiter option buttons in this dialog box are disabled intentionally because commas are
the only expected delimiters in this file format.
5. Select the File Character Set for this file from the drop-down list and select the Use First Line
for Column Titles check box if applicable.
• For more specific instructions on creating points, see Putting Longitude/Latitude Coordinates on
a Map in the Help System.
1. On the File menu, click Open to display the Open dialog box.
2. In the Files of Type list, select the format (.DBF), navigate to your data, and click Open.
3. Select the appropriate character set for your MapInfo data table. Windows U.S. and Western
Europe (“ANSI”) is the default option.
4. Click OK to convert your selected data to a MapInfo table (.tab) format.
5. On the File menu, click Save Copy As to make an editable copy of your table. Then, on the File
menu, click Close Table and close the original table. Finally open the editable copy.
• For more information, see Saving Data in DBF File Format in the Help System.
1. On the File menu, click Open to display the Open dialog box.
2. In the Files of Type list, select the format (.WK1,.WKS), navigate to your data, and click Open.
1. On the File menu, click Open to display the Open dialog box.
2. Select ESRI shapefile in the Files of type drop-down list.
4. Click Open to display the Please specify a TAB filename file. This dialog box saves the
shapefile into a format that MapInfo Professional can read. The file has the same name as the
file you selected but has a .tab extension.
6. Complete the entries in this dialog box and click OK to display the shapefile.
File Character Set
Select the character set appropriate for this file. The default option is Windows U.S. &
Western Europe (ANSI), but make your selection based on your local settings.
Projection
Select the appropriate projection for this file by clicking this button, selecting the category
and projection and clicking OK.
Style
Select any line or region style overrides that are necessary for this image by clicking the
Style button. When you select this option, the appropriate style options dialog box displays.
Make your changes and click OK to save them.
Save Object Cache
Select this check box to save the *.MAP file to hard drive. If you choose not to save the object
cache, you will have to recreate the *.MAP file the next time you open the shapefile file.
However, if you are going to save the shapefile as a *.tab file, you do not have to select the
check box.
Note: If after you open the shapefile in MapInfo Professional, you edit the file in ESRI ArcView
and save the file, the contents of the *.MAP and *.DAT files are recreated to retain these
edits even if you selected Save Object Cache before.
• For more information, see Working with Shapefules Containing M and Z Values in the Help
System.
Note: Registering your data using MapInfo does not change the original data in any way.
If your delimited ASCII file has an extension other than .TXT (such as .ASC, .CSV, or .DAT, etc.),
rename a copy of the file to <FILENAME>.TXT before you begin.
1. Open the data file using Wordpad/Notepad (on the Start menu, point to Programs and click
Accessories) or another text editor. See whether you have column headings and what delimiter
(character that separates each piece of data from the next) is used in the data file.
2. In MapInfo Professional, open File menu and click Open to display the Open dialog box.
3. In the Files of Type list, select the format (.TXT), navigate to your data, and click Open.
4. Specify a tab delimiter or type the other delimiter in the field provided.
5. Choose the character set your file is using from the File Character Set drop-down list.
Select the Use First Line for Column Titles check box if you have column headings.
7. On the File menu, click Save Copy As to make an editable copy of your table. Then, on the File
menu, click Close Table and close the original table. Finally open the editable copy. You can
only read information from these files.
• For more information, see Working With Spreadsheets and Editing Excel and Lotus
Spreadsheets in the Help System.
1. Choose File > Open to display the Open Table dialog box.
2. Choose Grid Image (*.grd, *.mig), from the Files of Type list box.
3. Click the file you want to open and click the Open button.
Note: There are some grid files in the introductory data provided on the MapInfo Professional
data CD.
1. Choose Table > Import to display the Import File dialog box. Specify the location, name, and
format of the file you want to import.
4. Click Save. The file is imported into the file you named with the specified format.
Currently, we support the OSGB recommended styles by mapping the style definitions to existing
MapInfo Professional styles. Where it is not possible to render complicated fill patterns, we use the
simple dot screen that the OSGB recommended to us. You cannot change the OSGB style mapping
to MapInfo styles.
• For more information, see Importing and Displaying GML File Data in the Help System.
xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.mapinfo.com/wfs_XX .\mi_usa.xsd"
Or, it could be a URI:
xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.lm.se/xml/namespace/abc
http://www2.xxx.se/xml/scheman/abc.xsd"
• For more specific instructions, see Importing and Displaying GML 2.1 Files in the Help System.
We split the TopographicArea feature type output into two layers so it is possible to save them in
different tables. The TopographicArea table contains only output whose areas defined in the OSGB
user guide as being part of the Topography complex or Structuring Layer. There is a feature type in
the GML Import dialog box called LandformArea, which allows the creation of the LandformArea
table. See Importing and Displaying GML File Data on page 207 for a clearer picture of this
process in action.
Note: Hover over an entry in the Tables List to display the path of the open table.
1. From the Table menu, choose List Open Tables to display the Table List dialog box.
2. Select the Group by Type check box to display the tables by format type. Click OK to close the
dialog box.
You can expand or contract the groups using the + and - to see the file names of the
open tables.
• Click
To copy the contents of the Statistics window to the clipboard, press and hold the Ctrl key and
press C. Go to the application you want to paste the Statistics data to and do one of the
following:
• Right-click to display the shortcut men, click Paste.
• Hold down the Ctrl key and press Insert.
Note: When you want statistics for an entire table, use Query > Select All to select all records in a
table.
Figure: Statistics Window
This specification supports transparent pixel definition for image formats as well. This allows you to
use the images you retrieve as overlays and not solely as the bottom layer of your map.
WMS data may not exist for the geography you are looking for. Further, the data that is provided is
determined by the WMS server.
Note: You must have a working Internet connection to retrieve or use WMS data.
• For instructions on retrieving and displaying data from a Web Map Service, see Retrieving Map
Data from Web Map Services in the Help System.
For example, you want to assign X and Y coordinates to a customer record whose address is 127
Winston Ave. MapInfo Professional reads that address and looks for a matching address in the
search table, such as a StreetPro table. (This search table already has X and Y coordinates
associated with its records.)
When MapInfo Professional matches 127 Winston Ave in your table to 127 Winston Ave in the
search table, it assigns the corresponding X and Y coordinates to your record. The geocoded point
becomes part of your database. You can then view these points by displaying your table in a Map
window.
• The name of your table for which you want to assign X and Y coordinates.
• The column in your table that contains the geographic information that will be used for matching.
• The name of the search table containing the geographic information that will be used for
matching.
• The search table column containing the geographic information for matching:
The dialog box also offers you the option of geocoding your data in two modes: automatically or
interactively. When you geocode a table automatically, MapInfo Professional geocodes exact
matches only and ignores all other records. It is the faster method, since MapInfo Professional
requires no user interaction once the geocoding process begins. When you geocode a table
interactively, MapInfo Professional pauses when it fails to match a record and lets you select from a
list of close matches. For more about the automatic and interactive geocoding modes, see Modes of
Geocoding on page 214.
Note: We recommend that you geocode your table automatically first and then go back and
geocode interactively to match the remaining records.
To geocode a record:
• MapInfo has to match an address in the source table with a location on the target table
Most of the problems in geocoding occur in trying to take the address data in the source file and
match it to addresses in the target tables.
Modes of Geocoding
MapInfo has two geocoding modes: automatic and interactive. The process MapInfo uses to match
target addresses with source addresses is the same in both modes.
Automatic mode matches addresses based on the choices in the Geocode dialog box.
When Geocoding is in automatic mode, only exact matches are geocoded. When some of your data
fails to match exactly (due, perhaps, to typographical errors), you need to geocode in Interactive
mode to match the near misses by hand. It is generally best to do two passes through your table,
with the first pass set on Automatic and the second pass set on Interactive. This approach takes less
processing time.
• For instructions on geocoding in automatic mode, see Geocoding Automatically in the Help
System.
Interactive mode stops at each address that does not meet the geocode parameters and permits
you to assist in the matching process. When you geocode interactively, you are not changing the
data. You are merely redirecting MapInfo Professional to look for different information.
Manual mode. Automatic and interactive geocoding work well for databases with “clean” data.
Sometimes, however, you know where a point should be on the map, but the location data does not
allow for a match. Manual geocoding is the process of placing your data records on the map by
clicking its location on the map. This method works best when you have a small table which contains
data that you are very familiar with.
Methods of Geocoding
In addition to geocoding automatically and manually, you have choices in how precise you want the
geocoded record to be. Let’s look at the variety of ways you can geocode your table.
Geocoding by Address
Street addresses typically consist of two or three components:
• Street number
• Street name
• Apartment, Suite, Floor, Room number or some other piece of information. Many addresses do
not have this component
MapInfo has one procedure for dealing with the street number and another procedure for dealing
with the street name. MapInfo deals with the third component, if present, as though it were a part of
the street name.
When you geocode your table with street addresses, MapInfo Professional matches the addresses
in your table to the street names and address ranges in a street table, such as StreetPro (MapInfo’s
premier streets data product) and assigns X and Y coordinates to your records. When you display
your records, MapInfo Professional will spot the record at the location of the record’s address.
MapInfo Professional places the record on the proper side of the street, offsets it from the side of the
street to the specified distance, and insets it from the end of the street the specified percentage of
the line. The Options dialog box controls these parameters. For more about setting the street offset
in the Options dialog box, see Street Offset in the Help System.
Geocoding by Boundary
In computer mapping, the term boundary is used to designate enclosed regions or areas such as
countries, cities, and postal codes. When you geocode your table with boundaries, MapInfo
Professional matches the boundary name in your table with the boundary name in the search table.
MapInfo Professional assigns the boundary centroid X and Y coordinates to your data records. The
centroid of a boundary is its approximate center point.
For example, you have a table of wholesale outlet stores. You want to assign X and Y coordinates to
each record according to county. MapInfo Professional reads the county name from your table,
matches it with the county name in the search table, and assigns the county centroid coordinates to
each of your records. The outlet locations will display at the county centroid in a Map window.
You can use any of the above methods to geocode your records, or you can use a combination of
address and boundary geocoding to increase the potential for a successful match.
Geocoding by Server
If you have access to a geocoding server such as MapMarker or Envinsa Server, you can geocode
using a more extensive data set.
If your area of interest isn't unique enough for MapInfo Professional to automatically determine the
position or location, you will need to refine your geocode search by specifying a particular boundary
that contains your area of interest. This will provide MapInfo Professional with geographic locations
on where to position your points.
The next table illustrates exact matching. The first column contains a street name from a target table
and the second column contains the corresponding street name from a source table. The third
column says why they do not match. The fourth column indicates whether the particular problem is
one which can be corrected through using the abbreviation equivalence file. This table assumes that
the addresses are the contents of a single column in a table. While the street number would often be
in the same column, we don’t indicate street numbers here because they are handled differently
than street names.
Correctable
with
Source Abbreviation
Target Address Address Comment File?
LaSalle St. LaSalle St The target address has a period after Yes
“St”. That period is not in the source
and causes the match to fail.
Correctable
with
Source Abbreviation
Target Address Address Comment File?
Saint John’s Lane St John’s Lane “Saint” and “St” do not match. Yes
MapInfo’s matching process is not case-sensitive; it does not care whether a letter is upper case or
lower case. This means that MapInfo treats the following as the same: Main, MAIN, main, maIN.
MapInfo Professional has a file called the Abbreviations File (MAPINFOW.ABB), which you can use
to record acceptable alternate spellings for abbreviations. For example Av for Ave. or BL for Blvd.
etc. Using this file increases your hit rate because there are more acceptable spellings for the same
abbreviations.
• For more information, see Solving Problems with Abbreviations and Substitutions in the Help
System.
Street Inset
The street inset is the distance a geocoded point is set from the end of the street. You can specify a
distance, or an inset can be a percentage of the length of the street. To avoid skewing the position of
inset points, MapInfo Professional performs a proportional calculation that insets the points located
at either end of the street the specified percentage or distance, but that decreases the inset as point
locations approach the center. Points located at the center of the street remain in their original
position.
• For more information, see Street Inset and Controlling How Much to Inset and Offset a Point
when Geocoding in the Help System.
When MapInfo cannot match the street name for a particular row, it applies the abbreviation file to
the target address. This file consists of pairs of items, such as “STREET ST” and “AVE AV”. When
MapInfo finds “STREET” in a target address, it changes it into “ST”; similarly it changes “AVE” to
“AV”. MapInfo doesn’t actually change your data in the target table. It substitutes abbreviations only
for the purpose of making matches. The substitution is only effective during the matching process.
The address in your table remains the same. It does not write the correct address form back to your
table.
Once MapInfo has made an abbreviation substitution it attempts to match the resulting street name
against the street names in the source table. When it fails to find an exact match at this point it:
To match “343 LaSalle St” MapInfo Professional would scan the address ranges until it finds the one
where “343” goes. Since 343 is between 333 and 375, the applications locates this address on that
street segment (the middle one in the table). Once MapInfo Professional has matched an address
number to a street segment it moves to the next row. When it fails to match a target street number to
an address range on the appropriate street it:
Matching to Region
When MapInfo is geocoding it checks to see how many occurrences of the target address exist. If
there is more than one, MapInfo must decide which source address to use. If the user’s target table
has a column with region data, MapInfo can refine geocoding within a boundary.
For example, assume that you are geocoding a database of records in Cook county, Illinois. The
address in the database reads 200 Washington St. Within the county of Cook, there are eight towns.
Four of these towns have a Washington St. Three of the four have a 200 Washington St. MapInfo
must now place the target address in the appropriate town. MapInfo uses region information to do
this. MapInfo now matches a region designation for the target address against the region designator
for the source addresses.
When you originally set up your geocoding operation, you had an opportunity to specify a region
(boundary) to use in refining your geocoding operation. This dialog box displays when you choose
Refine Search with Table and using Boundary Name Column.
If you specified a postal code table you enter the postal code and MapInfo Professional returns
possible matches.
You could use any one of several different region types, including county name, town name, and
postal code. Since almost all addresses contain postal codes, this is the most reliable way to refine
your search. When you set MapInfo to use postal codes to refine its address matching, MapInfo will
match the postal code of the target address against the postal code of the various matching source
addresses. When it finds the correct match, it is finished with the geocoding process. MapInfo can
now get coordinate information from the source table and use it to place a point object into the target
table.
However, once MapInfo has completed this process, many addresses may be unmatched. You can
match each one of them individually by geocoding in interactive mode. However, if you are working
with a large database, you want to do as little of this as possible. There are other ways of improving
MapInfo’s geocoding performance.
In the Geocode Options dialog box, you can specify that MapInfo automatically pick a different
boundary, providing there is only one, from the one you specify (Use A Match Found In A Different
Boundary). You might have had MapInfo geocode addresses to Northtown. One particular address,
“223 Locust Ct.” is not in Northtown, but it is in Westville, and no place else. In this case, MapInfo
would geocode “223 Locust Ct.” to Westville. However, if MapInfo had found a “223 Locust Ct.” in
Westville and another one in Center Valley, it would not geocode the address to either town. It would
leave “223 Locust Ct.” ungeocoded.
For more information, see After Geocoding in the Help System. This section contains the following
topics:
Your geocoded table may have records that did not geocode, or you may have added new data to
your table that have yet to be geocoded. There is a simple selection that can be performed to get a
Browser list of the records not geocoded.
1. Open your table if it is not open already, and on the Query menu, click Select.
2. Fill in the Select dialog box. The expression used is “NOT OBJ.” This selects all of the records
that are not objects, i.e., not geocoded. Click OK.
Follow these steps to attempt to locate newly geocoded points on the map.
1. Make sure that the Map window is active by clicking in its title bar.
2. On the Map menu, click Layer Control. Make sure that the table you geocoded is listed in the
Layer Control dialog box.
If the layer you are looking for is not listed, click the Add button and add that layer.
3. In the Layer Control dialog box move the geocoded table to the top, just below the Cosmetic
layer, to ensure that the points are not obscured by any other layer.
4. Make sure that the geocoded layer is set to visible. Click OK and exit Layer Control.
5. On the Map menu, click View Entire Layer. Select your table and click OK. This should put all of
the points from your table in view. You may see that your points are on the map, but are not in the
location you expected them to be. If they seem misplaced, see Ungeocoding Selected
Records on page 222.
6. If your points still do not display, on the Map menu, click Layer Control. Select the layer
containing your geocoded points, and click Display.
7. Select the Style Override check box and choose a symbol style that will stand out on your map.
Click OK, and click OK again to exit Layer Control.
After following these steps, if you have not found the points that you geocoded, try to select all of the
ungeocoded records as described in the section Selecting Points Not Geocoded.
Result Codes
When you are using the result code option (in Geocode Options dialog box) MapInfo will generate a
code for each record. These codes indicate the steps MapInfo Professional took to geocode the
record, whether or not the geocoding was successful, and whether or not the match was exact. You
can use return codes to diagnose MapInfo’s geocoding performance. It will help you spot “false
positives” resulting from using various geocoding options and to analyze why some records have not
been geocoded.
Ungeocoding a Table
Ungeocoding is the process of removing objects that have been attached to data records. There are
times when it will be necessary to ungeocode an entire table or selected records in a table. For
example, you have geocoded a database of customers using US_ZIPS.tab. Later, you want to
geocode the database again, using street addresses instead of postal code centroids since the
geocoding will be more precise. MapInfo Professional allows you to delete all graphic objects
associated with this table. You can then geocode your database again, using more specific
coordinates. Ungeocoding only selected records from your table is useful when the location
information changes for a relatively small number of records, such as address changes in a
geocoded list of customers.
1. Make the table you are working with the editable layer of the active Map window.
1. On the Table menu, point to Maintenance and click Table Structure. The Modify Table
Structure dialog box displays.
CAUTION: This action will remove all graphic objects from your table. This action cannot be
undone. If you are unsure of losing your points, save a copy of the table first.
3. A warning dialog box appears. If you are sure about removing all the objects, click OK.
Make sure that you don’t ungeocode your source tables. Unless you have created a backup of that
table, you will no longer be able to display that table as a map or use it for geocoding.
1. Make the table you are working with the editable layer of the active Map window.
For more information about trouble shooting your geocoding issues, see Resolving Geocoding
Issues in the Help System. This section contains the following topics:
Note: MapInfo Professional uses the coordinate fields in your table to create point objects. Records
that already have graphic objects associated with them will be skipped during the Create
Points operation.
For example, you have a table showing transmitter tower locations that was created by recording
coordinates using a global positioning system. You want to display the locations on a map in
MapInfo Professional. The table already has X and Y coordinate information but MapInfo
Professional cannot display this information until you create points for that coordinate data that
MapInfo Professional can read.
For more information, see the Putting Latitude/Longitude Coordinates on a Map in the Help System.
This section also contains these topics:
• For specific instructions, see the Dispersing Points Located in the Same Place in the Help
System.
• For specific instructions, see Creating Points for Intersections in the Help System.
no results, poor results, or multiple equal close results, the geocoding server can present you with
interactive options so you can select among possible matches or change your input. Further, these
web services allow you to set multiple matching conditions when more than one record matches the
records you are geocoding and set offsets for placing points right in the geocode properties.
For companies and organizations that use MapMarker and Envinsa servers as a geocoding engine,
you can now take advantage of the geocoding servers available to your whole enterprise. If your
organization makes this server available on your intranet or over the Internet, you can use our
geocoding web services from within MapInfo Professional to perform more sophisticated and
accurate data geocoding.
To use MapInfo Professional with a geocoding server, you need MapMarker Java Server 4.0 or later
or Envinsa 4.0 or later. MapInfo Professional supports any geography that is supported by Envinsa
currently. Envinsa supports MapMarker Java Server V2, V3, and V4. Keep in mind that any Envinsa
server only supports the data that is installed.
Before you can access a MapMarker or Envinsa geocoding service, you need to connect MapInfo
Professional to its server. This process gives MapInfo Professional all the information it needs to
access the geocoding service. You need to enter this information only once per service.
To set up a geocoding server and its preferences, see Setting up a Geocoding Server on
page 145 and Setting the Geocoding Server Preferences on page 140.
To geocode a single address using a geocoding service, see Geocoding a Single Address using a
Geocoding Service on page 471.
• To geocode a table of addresses using a geocoding service, see Geocoding a Table using a
Geocoding Service in the Help System.
1. On the Window menu, click New Map Window and select the tables you want in your map. The
order in which you select these tables determines the order they display.
1
2
1 Select your data from this drop-down list. 2 Select the background map here.
3. To change the symbol used to display your data, click the Layer Control , select the row with
your data in it, and click the Display button to select new display options.
1. Open the .tab files or .WOR files you want to plot your converted data onto.
2. Open the .tab files or .WOR files you just created and in the Preferred View drop-down box
select the Current Mapper option.
3. Click Open.
The Find Selection in All Windows command allows you to locate the selection in all open
windows (including a Browser window) that are currently open.
For detailed printing instructions, see Printing your Map in the Help System. These topics are also in
this section:
1. On the File menu, click Print to display the Print dialog box. This dialog box allows you to
specify printer properties, a page range for printing, and the number of copies to print.
Note: You can override the default printer setting by selecting another print from the Name
drop-down list.
2. If you need to change the size of the map, the orientation of your map or want to specify the
scale or a custom width or height, click the Options button. If you are printing a map, the Map
Print Options dialog box displays.
Note: If you are printing a graph or a browser or a 3DMap, your options will be different. See
Graph/Browser/3DMap Printing Options in the Help System for more information.
Note: The Map Window Preference setting Use Cartographic Scale affects the entries in this
dialog box.
3. Here you can specify the size of the map, how its contents will display, the scale, and its width
and height. For details on the other print options, see Graph/Browser/3DMap Printing Options in
the Help System. When you have completed your selections, click OK to continue.
• Map Size — Select the size of the map you are producing in this group; the options are
Window Size, Fit to Page, and Custom. As you make selections, the Custom Scale, Custom
Width and Custom Height entries change.
• Window Size — Click this button to print the map as it displays on your computer screen.
• Fit to Page — Click this button to fit the current map to the page size you have selected in
your preferences.
• Custom — Click this button to enter your own custom scale, width, and height entries in the
fields provided. Then, type the appropriate entries in the Custom Scale, Custom Width and
Height fields.
• Map Contents — Select an option in this group to determine the map contents you want to
print; the options are Same as Window and Centered on Window.
• Same as Window — Click this button to print the map contents as it appears in the Map
window, with the same proportions and content as you see.
• Centered on Window — Click this button to center as much of the current map that fits on
the page. When you select this option, the image may print on more than one page
depending upon fit. In general when you select this option, MapInfo Professional assumes
you want to select the Fit to Page radio button and selects this for you.
4. If your map is particularly complex (a large map, 3D, or one with 10 or more colors) there are
more options available using the Advanced button. The Advanced Printing Options dialog box
displays. (See Advanced Printing Options in the Help System). When you have completed your
selections, click OK to continue.
5. After you complete your selections, click OK on the Print dialog box to print your results.
Any customer or co-worker who has Adobe® Reader® can view and print this PDF file. Click here to
go to the Adobe Reader download page or retrieve it from the installation CD.
• For more information, see Printing your Map to a PDF File in the Help System.
The font and size of text objects in the Layout Window may not appear as they do on the printed
page. There are several possible reasons for this: fonts available for screen display are not available
for your printer, screen character width is different than printer character width, and screen resolution
is different than printer resolution.
To find out the true size of a text object in the Layout Window, use the Select tool and click on the
object. The edit handles indicate the object's true size.
When we discuss printer issues, we make the following assumptions about your print environment:
Note: Whenever we use the terms print or printer we also mean plotter.
When Printing a MapInfo Professional Object From Another Application
When you embed a MapInfo map or graph in another application (such as Word or PowerPoint),
click outside the map/graph before you use the Print or Print Preview commands. This allows the
container application to take over previewing or printing properly. This is particularly true if you have
just made changes to the map or graph you are printing.
Working with Fill Patterns
Note that fill patterns on the first row of the Region Style dialog box are Windows standard and tend
to print faster. The other patterns are bitmaps MapInfo has created for your use. You might want to
consider this when you are selecting fill patterns. See also Recommendations for Effective Pattern
Scaling in the MapInfo Professional Help System for more information regarding scaling and printing
fill patterns.
Translucent Raster Maps/Grids and Windows 9X Don’t Mix
You cannot print a translucent raster map or grid on Windows 9X platforms or export them to EMF or
WMF file formats. You need to use a non-metafile (for example, .BMP or .GIF) format to export
raster images on Windows 9X.
Customers printing large images (such as destination page size D, E, or A0) no longer have the
28,000 pixel limitation. If you experienced printer difficulties in the past due to this limitation, you
should notice a significant improvement in your printed images.
Keep in mind that you can only view the structure of a spreadsheet or database file that you convert
into MapInfo Professional’s table structure. See Displaying your Data on a Map in Chapter 5 on
page 200 for these instructions.
• On the Table menu, point to Maintenance and click Table Structure. The View/Modify Table
Structure dialog box displays.
• For more information, see Accessing StreetPro Data in the Help System.
Adding to a Table
One important operation in maintaining tables is the ability to update the data contained in the table.
MapInfo Professional’s Update Column feature allows you to:
• Add a temporary column or update an existing column with data from another table
• Update a table
• Place graphic information into visible columns
You can update all the rows in a table or a selection of rows. To update a selection of rows you need
to select the rows using Select, SQL Select, the Select tool, the Boundary Select tool, or the
Radius Select tool, and then update the selection.
You have tremendous flexibility with how information is imported and what information is transferred.
You can perform aggregate functions to transfer averages, minima, maxima, sums, weighted
averages, and proportional sums. You can also create expressions to derive additional information
from the data.
• For specific instructions and an example, see Adding a Temporary Column using Update
Column in the Help System.
For example, assume you are shading STATES by the values in SALES. Obviously, you want all
Pennsylvania sales to be associated with Pennsylvania, all Maryland sales to be associated with
Maryland, etc. MapInfo Professional has two ways of doing this:
2. Geographically/graphically.
In this case, the most likely descriptive field contains the state name or an abbreviation for the state
name. Thus the STATES table might have a field called Abbr, containing the abbreviation of the
state name, and SALES might have a field called State, that contains the state abbreviation. MapInfo
Professional matches the entries in these two fields so that information in the SALES State field is
matched to the record having the same entry in the Abbr field of STATE, thus matching NY (sales)
to NY (state), PA (sales) to PA (state), etc.
However, if both tables contain graphic information, MapInfo Professional can also make a graphic
match.
For example, if you are a conservation official and you want to shade a map of COUNTIES
according to the number of FIRES that occurred in the last year. Your FIRES database has been
geocoded. In this case MapInfo Professional could examine the coordinates of each fire location and
determine the county where the fire had occurred. That would allow MapInfo Professional to
associate each fire record with the appropriate county.
• For more information, see Specifying a Join Based on Descriptive Criteria and Specifying a Join
Based on Geographic Criteria in the Help System.
Updating a Table
For a quick visual way to update your table, select the objects in the Map window and use Update
Column to update the table with the new value. This would be useful when you want to update a
number of objects with the same value.
1. Create the District column (on the Table menu, point to Maintenance and click Table Structure)
in the States table.
4. Select the appropriate states with the Marquee tool (or other selection method).
5. On the Table menu, click Update Column and fill in the dialog box as illustrated in the next
figure. Be sure to put the value in quotes so MapInfo Professional does not treat it as a new
column name.
6. Click OK. MapInfo Professional creates a query table of the southeastern states with the District
column containing the value Southeast.
1. On the Table menu, click Append Rows to Table. The dialog box displays.
3. Specify the table to which the records will be appended and click OK.
If the corresponding columns do not have the same data type, a best fit is done to convert the data to
the appropriate type. If the order of the columns is not the same between the two tables, use the
Table Structure command to reorder the columns before using Append Rows to Table.
Note: If tables are mappable, the bounds of the map in one table must be large enough to allow
objects from the other table to fit within it. Otherwise, the objects will be distorted to the
bounds of the Map window. Use the Check/Set CoordSys Bounds tool to alter the map
bounds of the table if this occurs. See Using the Tools in the Tool Manager in Chapter 4
on page 195 for more about the CoordSys Bounds tool.
1. Choose Table > Append Rows to Table. The Append Table dialog box displays.
2. Choose the table you want to append from. Select a table in the Append Table drop down list.
3. Choose the table you are appending to. Select a table in the To Table drop down list.
When the columns of the two tables are not ordered properly, so that columns with corresponding
positions do not have corresponding data, use Modify Structure to change the order of the columns
in one of the tables.
You can use SQL Select to reorder the columns of one of the tables and then append the results.
1. On the File menu, click Open and open the table to be modified.
2. Add three new columns to your table. On the Table menu, point to Maintenance and click Table
Structure. Add two character columns of size 15. Call them FIRST and MIDDLE. Then add a
character column called LAST of size 30.
3. Put the full name into the column called LAST by choosing the Table menu, and clicking Update
Column. Fill in the Update Column dialog box.
The column to update is LAST, and we get the Value from the column that has the full name in it.
Remember we are only working with one table, so the Table to Update and Get Value From
Table should be the same table. In the following example, the table is TABLE1 and the full name
column is your_full_name_column. You should fill in your own values for these two items.
4. To parse the first name out of the full name column, choose the Table menu and click Update
Column. Fill in the Update Column dialog box.
5. To parse the last name out of the full name column, on the Table menu, click Update Column.
Fill in the Update Column dialog box.
6. To parse the middle name out of the full name column, on the Table menu, click Update
Column. Fill in the Update Column dialog box.
Update the MIDDLE column with the Value: Left$(LAST, Instr(1,LAST,” “))
7. Then update the LAST column again by returning to the Table menu, clicking Update Column,
and filling in the dialog box.
• For more information, see Placing Geographic Information in Visible Columns in the Help
System.
To add a row:
4. On the Edit menu, click New Row to add a row to the bottom of the table.
5. Type the new data into each appropriate column of the new row.
6. When you are finished adding rows, on the File menu, click Save Table to save the new data.
The Save Table dialog box displays.
1. On the File menu, click New Table. The New Table dialog box displays.
If you selected Create New, this dialog is empty. You can remove a field by
highlighting it and clicking the Remove Field button.
5. Choose Add Field to begin adding new fields to the database’s structure. Give the field a name,
type, width, and specify whether the field will be indexed.
6. Continue to add fields until you have the structure you want.
7. Use the Up and Down buttons to reorder the fields. Keep in mind that the order of fields in this
dialog box (top to bottom) will actually display as columns (left to right) in the Browser window.
10. Enter a name for the table in the File Name box.
11. Specify the file type in the Save as type drop-down list in one of these formats:
• MapInfo (*.tab)
• dBASE DBF (*.tab)
• Microsoft Access (*.tab)
12. Click Save. If you chose either of the MapInfo Professional formats, MapInfo Professional
creates your table. If you chose dBASE DBF, proceed to step 12. If you chose dBASE DBF, the
dBASE DBF Information dialog box displays, asking you to specify a file character set. Choose
the one appropriate for your language and click OK.
13. Click Save in the Create New Table dialog box. MapInfo Professional creates the new table.
Note: Do not use “Districts” as a name for your base tables. MapInfo Professional uses
“Districts” internally as a system table when beginning a redistricting session.
• For more information, see Naming a File and Opening Multiple Tables in the Help System.
To do this, you could draw a rectangle somewhere on the States map. Select some states around
the rectangle and specify them as the target. Select the rectangle and do a split operation. The new
objects will be created and each split object will have its same state initials. Then, use Combine
Objects Using Column and specify the state initials fields as the grouping value. The states will be
re-created.
The Combine Objects Using Column feature gives you the option of creating a new table for the
newly combined objects:
1. Choose Table > Combine Objects using Column to display the Combine Objects using
Column dialog box.
5. Press the Next button to display the New Table dialog box.
6. Press the Create button to display the New/Modify Table Structure dialog box.
7. Press the Create button to display the Create New Table dialog box.
The Table is Mappable option in the Modify Table Structure dialog box allows you to modify a table
so you can map it or, when left cleared, it will ungeocode your table.
1. Choose Table > Maintenance > Table Structure. The View/Modify Table Structure dialog box
displays.
2. Click the View/Modify Table drop-down list, a list of available tables displays.
4. Click OK.
The Modify Table Structure dialog box displays for editable tables and allows you to change the
structure of a table. The View Table Structure dialog box displays for read-only tables and is only for
viewing the table's structure.
Note: Keep in mind that you can only view the structure of a file that you bring into MapInfo
Professional.
Because each table has at least two files associated with it, you cannot change one file name
without changing all the other associated file names. Otherwise, MapInfo Professional would not
know where to find all the files that constitute the table.
• For more specific instructions, see Copying and Renaming a Table in the Help System.
Deleting a Table
Deleting a table allows you to remove the .tab file and all component files associated with the table.
To delete a table:
2. Choose the table to delete and click OK. A message displays to inform you that the table will be
permanently deleted and the operation cannot be undone.
Deleting a raster table only deletes the *.tab file. Deleting a grid file removes both the *.tab and grid
file.
Packing a Table
Packing a table allows you to compress tables to take up less disk space. You can choose to pack
only tabular data or graphic objects or both. Packing tabular data removes deleted records. When
you pack a table, MapInfo Professional requires that you have twice as much free space as the table
takes up to handle a copy of the database as a scratch file.
To pack a table:
1. On the Table menu, point to Maintenance and click Pack Table. The Pack Table dialog box
displays.
4. Click OK.
Note: Packing a table can corrupt customized labels saved to a workspace. If you are going to be
working with customized labels, pack the table before you create the labels.
Average Calculates the average of the values for all records in a group.
Sum Calculates the sum of the values for all records in a group.
Weighted Average Gives more weight to one value over another when averaging.
Proportion Sum A sum calculation that is adjusted based on how much of one object
is within another object.
Proportion Average An average calculation that is adjusted based on how much of one
object is within another object.
Proportion Weighted A weighted average calculation that is adjusted based on how much
Average of one object is within another object.
Note that average, count, min, max, sum, and weighted average operate on data values only. The
proportion functions take geographic relationships into account.
Note: To find instructions for using the Update Column feature, see Adding a Temporary Column
using Update Column on page 234.
• For more examples, see Collecting Data into the Table using Update Column in the Help
System.
Browsing a Table
There are times when viewing the tabular data in a table is necessary. In MapInfo Professional, this
is called browsing the table.
To browse a table:
The Browser shows the fields of the data table (column headings) and the records of data (rows).
A Browse menu item gives you further functionality. On the Browse menu, click Pick Fields to
display only the columns of data you want to see. If you wish to show information that is only implicit
in the base table, in the Pick Fields dialog box choose Expression from the Fields in Table list. For
more on expressions see Deriving Columns in Chapter 9 on page 327, or Creating Query
Expressions in Chapter 9 on page 316.
To show or hide the Browser window grid, on the Browse menu, click Options.
1. On the Edit menu, click New Row to add a row (or use Ctrl-E).
2. Enter text directly into each field. As you type, press Tab or Shift-Tab to move from field to field.
3. You must remember to save the new information to the base table before exiting the program.
The square box to the left of each record in the Browser window is the select box. Click it to select
the record in the Browser window. If the Map window for the table is open, the record is selected as
well. To add records to the selection, Shift and drag to select consecutive records, or Shift-Click
non-consecutive records.
Selecting records creates a subset of the table that you can browse, map, or graph, just like the full
table. More on selecting is found later in Chapter 9: Selecting and Querying Data. You can also
create a report of your tabular data using the Crystal Reports functionality included with MapInfo
Professional. The Crystal Reports User Guide, which is located in the Documentation subfolder of
your installation directory to help you get the most out of this powerful report writing program.
1. On the Tools menu, point to Crystal Reports and click New Report. The New Report dialog box
displays. It lists all the open tables.
2. Click the table you want to create a report for, and click Report. The Crystal Reports user
interface displays.
3. In Crystal Reports, Choose Report > Report Expert to display the Create Report Expert dialog
box. The Report Expert walks you through the selection of data, fields, fields to sort by, fields to
total, and styles for your report. Click Preview Sample to see a sample of your report on the
screen.
1. Choose Tools > Open Report. The Choose Crystal Report dialog box displays.
Saving a Report
When you save a report, an .rpt extension is assigned to the report. The report is assigned the
default name: (tablename) report.rpt. You may rename the report using the Crystal Reports Save As
feature.
All .rpt files are saved in the directory specified in Options> Preferences > Directories > Crystal
Report files.
To access data that is located on a remote Oracle or other SQL Server based DBMS systems, your
system requires:
• Oracle 9iR2
• Oracle 10G
• MS Access XP
• MS SQL Server 2000/2005*
• Informix 9.4
Note: If you are linking to a large table, it will significantly slow down the performance of your
system.
You can perform most operations on a linked table that you do for a regular MapInfo Professional
table. For instance, you can view, edit, copy, and save a linked table just as you could a regular
MapInfo Professional table. However, there are some things you can’t do to a linked table. For
instance, you can’t pack a linked table. You can’t modify the table structure of a linked.
You can download tables from a relational database management system such as Oracle, Informix,
or Access. These downloaded tables can be used stand-alone or remain linked to the original server
database. You can refresh these linked tables to rerun queries on a regular basis using the refresh
button or menu button. After editing in MapInfo Professional, the data in a linked table is saved to the
relational database management system in a manner that resolves any multi-editing conflicts.
A linked table may use one style for all objects within a table, or contain different styles for each row,
called per row styles. There are two requirements for setting up per row styles:
DBMS Drivers
Before you can access an SQL database, you must have the appropriate DBMS driver for the type
of database, and set up a DBMS data source for the data. The DBMS drivers were installed during
MapInfo Professional installation, or afterwards, using the DBMS Administrator in your Windows
Control Panel. You can install additional DBMS drivers at anytime using the DBMS Administrator. A
DBMS driver is a dynamic–link library (.DLL) file that MapInfo Professional uses to connect to an
SQL database. Each type of SQL database requires a different DBMS driver.
• For more information, see Resolving Editing Conflicts when Saving a Linked Table in the Help
System.
You can perform most operations on a live access table that you do for a regular MapInfo
Professional table. For example, you can view, edit, copy, and save a live access layer just as you
can a regular MapInfo Professional table. However, you cannot pack or modify a live access table’s
structure.
You can create live access tables with or without a cache. The cache is a memory cache, which
contains only the rows that are in the map display for that window. This optimizes certain operations
such as ToolTips, labeling, etc. on the map. The cache is automatically updated when the view of the
map changes, (for example, zooming or panning).
When the live access table is creating a new Map window, the initial view is determined by the entry
in the MapInfo_MapCatalog table. The columns DB_X_LL_DB_X_UR_DB_Y_UR describe a
rectangular area that is the initial map display. If the live access table is being added as a layer to an
existing Map window, the layer will be fit to that Map window.
MapInfo Professional stores information about a live access table in a TAB file. This information is
known as metadata. MapInfo Professional uses metadata to store information about the live access
table that is needed to manage transactions between MapInfo Professional and the server
database. Two of the most important kinds of information stored in the metadata include the
connection string and the query you build from the DBMS Table Wizard, or Expert dialog box.
If the total number of rows stored in the MapCatalog is out of sync with the actual number of rows in
the table, problems occur. The map will always include all of the map objects, but other things may
not work correctly. For example:
• For more information, see Improving Live Access Performance in the Help System.
There are four prerequisites for storing and retrieving spatial objects in a DBMS table:
• Coordinate values for the objects must be stored in columns of the remote table as numbers,
or as a spatial column if the database supports it, such as SpatialWare, or Oracle Spatial.
See Storing Coordinate Values in a Remote Table for these instructions.
• A spatial index column may be included to increase performance on queries against the
coordinates. See Creating a Spatial Index Column for these instructions.
• You must create a special table on the DBMS system known as the MapInfo_MapCatalog.
(MapInfo Professional creates this automatically when you use the EasyLoader.) You create
only one catalog per database. See Creating a MapInfo_MapCatalog for these instructions.
• You must supply information about mappable tables to the MapInfo MapCatalog using the
Make Table Mappable command. (This is for tables the EasyLoader does not upload.) See
Making a Remote Table Mappable for these instructions.
Creating a MapInfo_MapCatalog
Use EasyLoader to create a MapInfo_MapCatalog. MapInfo Professional stores information about
where the spatial columns are located in a special table on the DBMS known as the
MapInfo_MapCatalog. There must be one catalog per database. The application EasyLoader can be
used to create this catalog for each database: Oracle 9, Informix, SQL Server, and MS Access.
These applications will need to be customized for any other DBMS, or you can follow the procedure
for manually creating a map catalog. This is a one-time only task per database and is required
before any tables on that database can be mapped in MapInfo Professional.
The Make DBMS Table Mappable command makes a remote SQL database table (DBMS table)
mappable in MapInfo Professional. Any MapInfo Professional table may be displayed in a Browser,
but only a mappable table may have graphical objects attached. Only mappable tables can display in
Map windows. Use the Make Table Mappable command only for tables that you cannot upload with
EasyLoader.
In the Make DBMS Table Mappable command provide MapInfo Professional with the following
information from the remote database table so that the table can be mapped in MapInfo
Professional:
• The column(s) containing the spatial data to map the table (not applicable to relational Oracle
SDO)
• The projection used by the remote database table
• The spatial index column from the remote database table (used by MapInfo Professional to
speed access of the spatial data and improve performance)
• The symbol to use for objects
• Per row styles, if your table is set up for it, and the MapInfo_ MapCatalog has the appropriate
column structure
• Object type for Spatial databases
• Table Bounds (control the extent of the bounding rectangle for the Map window)
MapInfo Professional takes this information and stores it in a table called the MapInfo_MapCatalog.
Every time you use a DBMS table MapInfo Professional checks the catalog to see if the table is
mappable. As a result, you only have to make a DBMS table mappable once. It will always remain
mappable. However, one spatial index column entry per table is allowed in the Map Catalog.
Therefore, only one spatial column can be mappable at a time. If the table has more than one spatial
column and you want to map another spatial column, you must drop the spatial column currently in
the Map Catalog and make the table mappable using the new column.
Once you have the prerequisites in place you are ready to connect to your datasources and the
database tables you want to work with. If you are not familiar with the details of your remote
database type, discuss your needs with your database administrator to find out the basic information
required to connect to your database.
• For more information, see Making a DBMS Table Mappable and Changing the Symbol Style in a
Mappable DBMS Table in the Help System.
The Help System contains these additional related topics:
Open Database Connectivity is a standard for accessing disparate database systems. It is the oil
that moves the wheels of inter-database communication. MapInfo is committed to making this
important interface work for your organization.
Before you can download a DBMS table, you must connect to the specific data source where the
data to be downloaded resides.
1. Choose File > Open DBMS Connection. One of the following happens:
• If you installed the Oracle Spatial (OCI) and ODBC support, this dialog displays. Choose
whether to create an ODBC or Oracle connection and click New. When you select Oracle
Spatial, a different process occurs, see Opening a Connection to an Oracle Spatial Data
Source on page 255 for these instructions. When you select ODBC, the Select Data Source
dialog box displays.
• If the ODBC driver is the only one installed, the Select Data Source dialog displays.
2. Click New to display the Create New Data Source dialog box.
From this wizard dialog box you select a driver and choose a name for the connection.
You can add multiple data sources, each one associating a driver with data you want
to access using the driver. You need to give each data source a name that uniquely
identifies that data source.
3. Select the appropriate driver for this database connection from the list and click Next to display
the next dialog box.
To enter the driver-specific keywords for the database you are connecting to, click the Advanced
button. We recommend you leave the Verify this connection check box selected. Click OK to
continue.
5. Once you have set up your data source, MapInfo Professional displays the data source names in
the Select Data Source dialog box, for easy selection.
1. Choose File > Open DBMS Connection. If you installed the Oracle Spatial (OCI) driver, the
Open DBMS Connection dialog displays.
2. Choose Oracle Spatial and click New. The MapInfo Oracle Connect dialog box displays.
You may need to speak to your Oracle Database Administrator to get this information.
3. Type your user name and password for the Oracle server connection in the fields provided. Type
the name of the server on which your tables are located in the Server Name field. Click OK to
continue.
4. To access the tables on the selected server, select File > Open and click arrow beside the Files
of type drop-down list. Scroll to the bottom of the list to find the connection you created. For
more details about opening a table from this server, see Opening a Database Table from a
Connection.
2. From the Files of type drop-down list, select the database connection you created in Opening a
Connection to an ODBC Data Source on page 253.
1 This list displays the remote tables available on the selected data source.
Connections you add to the Files of type drop-down list appear at the bottom of the
list and contain a sequential number that indicates the order in which the connection
was added.
Note: If you do not see the table you are looking for in the list, click the Filter Tables button and
check the filter options to see if your view is restricted. Check the Owner drop-down list
too to see if there are other schemas on the server you selected that may contain the
table you are looking for.
3. Select the table in the list you want to open and click Open. The Open DBMS Table Options
dialog box displays.
Use this dialog box to select the type of view you want of your remote data.
• Click the Standard Mode to open particular rows or columns of the selected table. The
instructions in this description assume you are opening the table using Standard Mode.
• Click the Expert Mode to create a SQL Query to open particular rows or columns of the
selected table.
4. Click the Column Filter button to specify the columns to download. The Column Picker dialog
box displays.
An asterisk (*) appears in the Selected list when you first open this dialog box. If you
leave the asterisk, MapInfo Professional retrieves all the columns in the table from the
remote database.
a. To move the columns you want to display from the table from the Available group to the
Selected group using the arrow buttons. The single arrow keys move one selected column at
a time. The double arrow buttons move all the columns at once from one list to the other.
b. To change the order of the selected columns in the Selected list, highlight the column you
want to move and click the Up and Down buttons until the column is positioned correctly.
c. Click OK to complete your selections.
Note: If the table is mappable, the Available list also displays an additional column called OBJECT,
which refers to the spatial column. You can select it to download point objects from the table.
If the table is spatialized, MapInfo Professional downloads lines, points, and polygons
depending on what the table contains.
5. Click the Row Filter button to select the row data that you want MapInfo Professional to
download.
Leave this dialog box as it is to retrieve all of the rows pertaining to the columns you
selected.
a. Select the column, operator, and value entries that match the data you want to retrieve from
the selected table.
Note: This is the same as specifying the WHERE clause in a SQL query.
b. In the Column list, choose the column(s) from which you want to filter rows.
c. If you are filtering rows for one column, select a column, operator, and value. If filtering rows
on more than one column, select a column from the next drop-down list. This also activates
the next row of fields for data entry.
d. Choose how you would like to filter the rows using the Operator and Value boxes. See Notes
for Completing the Row Picker Query in the Help System for assistance in completing these
entries the way you want them.
Click OK when you have finished filtering the rows.
6. When you have completed your Standard Mode selections, do one of the following:
• To open a linked table, click Download data (Linked Table) to download the data and create
a linked table. Clear the box for live access.
• To open a live access table, click Live Access and choose whether to click the Cache check
box.
Select the Cache check box to keep attributes and objects that have been read in memory. If
you perform an operation such as zooming in they do not need to be fetched from the
database (since MapInfo Professional looks in memory for a record you may not see the
latest updates). If you select the Cache check box, another user’s updates may not appear
until the cache is invalidated by a pan or zoom out operation.
Clear the Cache check box, to retrieve all of the data from the database whenever it is
needed. This option provides the most current data but it is be less efficient.
7. Click OK to retrieve the data you selected and save it to the table name you specified.
• For more information, see Opening a DBMS Table from the Open Table Dialog Box and Notes
for Completing the Row Picker Query in the Help System.
1. Choose File > New Table. The New Table dialog box displays.
2. Specify how you want the table opened, (Browser, Mapper, Current Mapper).
3. Specify whether you want the table structure to be based on an existing table or you want
MapInfo Professional to create a new table structure.
4. Press the Create button. The New Table Structure dialog box displays.
5. Specify the field name, field type, number of characters (width), and whether or not the field is to
be indexed for each field in your new database.
You also indicate whether the table is mappable by associating graphic objects with records and,
if so, whether the map is to be an earth or a non-earth map.
If you are using the structure from another mappable table, then MapInfo Professional sets the
new table projection to the projection of the source table. Collectively, this information is the
structure of your database.
6. Press the Create button to display the Create New Table dialog box.
7. Select a DBMS database from the Save as type: drop-down list. The DBMS connection controls
display, (Owner: box and Filter Tables: button).
8. Specify a file name and press the Save button. The New DBMS Table Options dialog box
displays.
This dialog box has three tabs, General, Spatial, and Styles. However, If you cleared the Make
Table Mappable check box in step 4 then the DBMS Table Options dialog box will only have the
General tab. Press the Help button to display specific information corresponding to the tab you
are currently in.
Follow the instructions listed below, depending upon the tabs that display.
Cache
When the Cache check box is selected, you are using the local buffer. Access time to data is
faster but you don’t get the most current version.
When the Cache check box is cleared, you are always reading the remote data, which is the
most recent version.
Note: The Cache check box should only be enable if the Live option is selected. Refresh
occurs when you zoom, pan, or pack.
Key Column:
Allows you to specify a key column for the new table. Without a key column a DBMS table
cannot be open as live access and can only be opened read only as Linked.
If the Key Column check box is selected, then the corresponding combo box is enabled. You
can either choose a column that was specified in the New Table Structure dialog box or
specify a new column by typing into the combo box’s edit control.
By default the Key Column check box is selected and a new column is specified. The default
name of the new column depends on the DBMS connection: MI_PRINX for Oracle Spatial,
SW_MEMBER for all others.
10. Click the Spatial tab and specify the index type and coordinate column selections.
Index Type:
This setting determines the type of spatial indexing used on the table. Types MapInfo
(MICODE) and XY are always available. Server specific types may also be listed. The index
type selection affects the state of the other three controls in this tab.
Index Column:
This control is used to specify the primary spatial index column. It's always available, except
when the index type is XY.
X Coordinate:
This control is used to specify the X or latitude column in the database. It's only available for
MapInfo (MICODE) or XY types. You can either choose a float column that was specified in
the New Table Structure dialog box or specify a new column by typing into the combo box’s
edit control.
Y Coordinate:
This control is used to specify the Y or longitude column in the database. It's only available
for MapInfo (MICODE) or XY types. You can either choose a float column that was specified
in the New Table Structure dialog box or specify a new column by typing into the combo box’s
edit control.
11. Click the Styles tab and complete the appropriate selections.
Per Row Style
Check the Per Row Style box to enable per row symbology. The style info for each object is
maintained in a character column of the table. If unchecked, then the style of all objects in the
table is determined by the default object styles (maintained in the Map Catalog). If Per Row
Style is checked, then the Style Column combo box is enabled. By default Per Row Style is
checked and a new column named MI_STYLE is specified.
Style Column:
You can either choose a character column that was specified in the New Table Structure
dialog box or specify a new column by typing into the combo box’s edit control.
Default Object Styles:
Symbol/Line/Region
The default object styles are used when Per Row Style is not turned on for a table, or the
style info for a particular object does not exist (the style column for that row is empty). The
default style info specified here is entered into the map catalog. The default symbol, line and
region settings within MapInfo Professional are used to initialize these controls.
12. Press OK to open the DBMS table according to your specifications above.
When you open a remote table as a “Live” table, MapInfo Professional enables the Refresh
toolbar button so you can refresh the data in that table. This same functionality is available for linked
remote database tables.
You can refresh a MapInfo Professional linked table with the most recent data residing on the remote
database for that linked table.
2. Choose the name of the table to be refreshed from the refresh table list.
To unlink a table:
1. On the Table menu, point to Maintenance and click Unlink DBMS Table. The Unlink Table
dialog box displays.
2. Choose the name of the table to be unlinked from the Unlink table list.
Saving a linked or live table results saves the records on the remote database. But before MapInfo
Professional allows records from a linked or live table to be updated, it evaluates the records in a
process called conflict resolution.
If MapInfo Professional finds conflicts between the data on the remote database and any records in
the linked table since it was downloaded, the Resolve Conflicts dialog box automatically appears.
Use this dialog box to resolve conflicts.
• For more information, see Saving Changes Made to a DBMS Table in the Help System.
When saving a remote table, if MapInfo Professional finds conflicts between the data on the remote
database and any records in the remote table since it was downloaded, the Resolve Conflicts dialog
box automatically displays. Use this dialog box to resolve conflicts as explained in the next table.
This process will be invoked whenever an attempt to save a remote table detects a conflict in an
update. The dialog box allows the user to choose which fields from the conflicting records will be
used to update the database. Three instances of the record being updated must be considered:
• The original server state of the record (the record as it appeared when initially extracted from
the database).
• The current local state of the record (the record as it appears in the session of MapInfo
Professional making the update, possibly after editing by the user).
• The current server state of the record (the record as it appears in the database at the time of
the update).
A conflict exists when the original state of the record does not match the server state. This implies
that another user has updated this database since it was extracted by MapInfo Professional.
The Conflict Resolution dialog box displays once for each conflicting record. At any point in this
process, you may choose to leave this interactive mode and have the rest of the conflicts resolved
automatically. In that case, you can use all local values or all server values to resolve the conflicts in
the records.
For each conflict found during a commit, a modal dialog box displays. This box will display enough
information for you to decide which data values to use to update the row in question.
Current DBMS
Shows data as it appears in the remote database at the time of the update. (This data might
have been changed by another user since it was downloaded into an MapInfo Professional
linked table.) The Current field will be blank if the record has been deleted on the remote
database, after being downloaded into an MapInfo Professional linked table. If the current
data from the remote database is too long and does not fit into the list box, a truncated
representation will be shown instead. Its full value can be displayed in the Current field.
Current MapInfo Professional
Select this check box to update the remote database with the value from the MapInfo
Professional linked table.
If the current record on the database or the MapInfo Professional record was deleted, then
this check box is not available. Instead, you must use the MapInfo Professional or Current
button.
Current DBMS
Select to retain the current value on the remote database. If the current record on the
database or the MapInfo Professional record was deleted, then this check box is not
available. Instead, you must use the MapInfo Professional or Current button.
MI Pro button
This button selects all the MapInfo Professional values. If the record you are trying to resolve
was deleted from the MapInfo Professional database, selecting the MI Pro button will delete
the record from the remote database. If the record you are trying to resolve was deleted from
the remote database, selecting the MI Pro button will insert the new record into the remote
database.
Current button
This button selects all the current DBMS values. If the record you are trying to resolve was
deleted from the MapInfo Professional database, selecting the Current button will ignore the
deletion and retain the current record in the remote database. If the record you are trying to
resolve was deleted from the remote database, selecting the MI Pro button will insert the
new record into the remote database.
Column
Shows the full name of the column highlighted in the list box.
Original DBMS
Shows the full value of the original data highlighted in the list box.
Current MI Pro
Shows the full value of the MapInfo Professional data highlighted in the list box.
Current DBMS
Shows the full value of the current remote database data highlighted in the list box.
Stop Commit
The Stop Commit button terminates the entire update. A second dialog box confirms that
this is what you really want.
Automatic
The Automatic button causes the interactive conflict resolution to end. A dialog box displays
to allow you to select the automatic conflict-resolution modes you want to use for the
remainder of this update. You can select one two automatic modes from the dialog box. You
can accept MapInfo Professional values, or the values currently residing on the remote
database.
• For more information, see Saving a Copy of a Table to a DBMS Table in the Help System.
2. Select the connection(s) you want to close and click OK. The selected connection(s) close.
• The MapCatalog must contain columns that support the use of styles. They are:
RENDITIONTYPE, RENDITIONCOLUMN, and RENDITIONTABLE.
• The map table itself must have a character column wide enough to store the complete style
string. Style strings vary in width. We recommend a minimum of 50 characters be provided. If
you plan to use custom symbols, which use much longer strings, allow 200 characters.
• The entry for the table in the MapCatalog must be set correctly. This means that the
RENDITIONTYPE is 1, and the RENDITIONCOLUMN contains the name of the column that will
contain the style string. This entry is set by EasyLoader if the MapCatalog contains the new
columns, or it may be set using the Make Table Mappable function.
1. On the Table menu, point to Maintenance and click Change DBMS Table Symbol. The Select
DBMS Table is displayed. The dialog box only displays mappable DBMS tables.
2. Select a DBMS table to display the Change Table Object Style dialog box. Use the dialog box to
specify new style attributes for the objects in the selected table.
3. You must close, reopen, and refresh the linked table for the style change to take effect.
Note: If you have created a map you do not want to lose but cannot save to the DBMS of your
choice due to unsupported geometries, you can use the Save As command and save the
map without the unsupported geometries.
• Spatial Geometry Types with All Unsupported Objects: If you have created a map that might
contain all of the unsupported objects and you are trying to save to Oracle, this message
displays:
Table has unsupported objects (rounded rectangles, rectangles,
ellipses or arcs). Convert to regions and/or polylines?
Click Yes to convert the unsupported objects to regions or polylines; you would select No to
decline to convert the unsupported objects. If you decline, you cannot save the map you have
created to the Oracle database. A confirmation message explains that the operation is canceled.
• Spatial Geometry types with Region Objects Only: If you have created a map that contains
region objects only and you are trying to save to Oracle, this message displays:
Table has unsupported objects (rounded rectangles, rectangles, or
ellipses). Convert to regions?
Click Yes to convert the unsupported objects to regions; you would select No to decline to
convert the unsupported objects. If you decline, you cannot save the map you have created to
the Oracle database.
• For Spatial Geometry types with Line Objects Only: If you have created a map that contains
line objects only and you are trying to save to Oracle, this message displays:
Arc is an unsupported object. Convert to polylines?
Click Yes to convert the unsupported objects to polylines; you would select No to decline to
convert the unsupported objects. If you decline, you cannot save the map you have created to
the Oracle database.
• Spatial Geometry Types with All Unsupported Objects: If you have created a map that might
contain all of the unsupported objects and you are trying to save to Informix or SQL Server, this
message displays:
Table has unsupported objects (rounded rectangles, ellipses or
arcs). Convert to regions and/or polylines?
Click Yes to convert the unsupported objects to regions or polylines; you would select No to
decline to convert the unsupported objects. If you decline, you cannot save the map you have
created to the Informix or SQL Server database.
• Spatial Geometry types with Region Objects Only: If you have created a map that contains
region objects only and you are trying to save to Informix or SQL Server, this message displays:
Table has unsupported objects (rounded rectangles or ellipses).
Convert to regions?
Click Yes to convert the unsupported objects to regions; you would select No to decline to
convert the unsupported objects. If you decline, you cannot save the map you have created to
the Informix or SQL Server database.
• For Spatial Geometry types with Line Objects Only: If you have created a map that contains
line objects only and you are trying to save to Informix or SQL Server, this message displays:
Arc is an unsupported object. Convert to polylines?
Click Yes to convert the unsupported objects to polylines; you would select No to decline to
convert the unsupported objects. If you decline, you cannot save the map you have created to
the Informix or SQL Server database.
The Multipoint and Collection object types are translated into the Spatial Objects Oracle
MULTIPOINT and COLLECTION, respectively, via Oracle OCI and vice versa. However, Oracle's
COLLECTION object is broader in scope than MapInfo Professional’s Collection, which only allows
one REGION, one polyline and one multipoint. Therefore, conversion from MapInfo Professional
object to Oracle objects and the conversion from Oracle objects to MapInfo Professional objects
may not be a one-to-one translation.
The following table shows the relationship between MapInfo Professional objects and Oracle
objects.
MULTIPOINT Multipoint
COLLECTION Collection
Polygon REGION
Multiple Polygons
The table indicates how Oracle Spatial objects are translated into MapInfo Professional objects. All
point elements in an Oracle COLLECTION will be translated into one multipoint in a MapInfo
Professional Collection; all Oracle Line objects (including single and multiple) will be translated into
one MapInfo Professional polyline; and all Oracle Polygons (including single and multiple) will be
translated into one MapInfo Professional REGION. Therefore, when an Oracle COLLECTION is
modified and then saved back into Oracle Server by using MapInfo Professional, the original
structure of the Oracle COLLECTION object may be changed if it is more complicated than the
MapInfo Professional Collection.
Primary Key used for New Table Creation or When Saving a Remote Copy
An Unique key ensures that an entry does not match any other entry from a different record. If a
record does not contain any value, no error is reported. A Primary key requires that every record
contains a unique value in that field. By making these values Primary keys, we enforce that every
record has a value in this field.
Use the Auto Key check box in the Open DBMS Table Option dialog box to enable this feature.
When you select the Auto Key check box, the Primary key field is uneditable and the Unique key is
automatically incremented. If you do not select this check box, the Primary key field remains
editable, which supports backwards compatibility.
1. From the File menu, click Open and select an Oracle database from the Files of Type drop-
down list. Click OK to display the Open DBMS Table Options dialog box.
2. Select the Auto Key option to increment the Primary key of the selected table automatically for
any new records.
3. Click OK to continue.
• If a polygon has 2 looped sections, and the path traced by the nodes of the polygon follow a
cursive figure 8 pattern, then we call this a Figure 8 polygon.
• If the same 2 looped polygon can trace its path as a cursive capital letter B, then we call this a
Bow Tie polygon.
We think of Figure 8 as worse than Bow Tie because the area of a Figure 8 is always incorrect, while
the area of a Bow Tie can be correct and accurate. Both Figure 8's and Bow Ties are detected.
Supporting SpatialWare
SpatialWare is a MapInfo Corporation product that helps users store, access, manage, and
manipulate spatial data as a standard part of their business data. You can query both spatial and
non-spatial data within a single SQL Server query using SpatialWare. All of the strengths of SQL
Server as a relational database are extended to spatial data using SpatialWare. Spatial data may for
example be directly managed and edited by many different users simultaneously.
1. Open a remote DBMS connection and select a live table for display.
2. From the Map menu, click Create Legend to display the Create Legend Step 1 of 3 dialog box.
3. Select a layer to create a legend from and click Next to display the Create Legend Step 2 of 3
dialog box. For purposes of this demonstration, click Next to display the Create Legend Step 3 of
3 dialog box.
4. In the Styles from box, there are three options. The first option, map catalog, provides the
existing support and is still the default for live tables.
• Select map catalog to retrieve the default styles for the selected legend frame from the map
catalog. Use this option when you are concerned with performance. Retrieving map styles
from live tables on a remote database can take a long time, but retrieving a default style from
the map catalog can be significantly faster. Remember that styles in the map catalog may not
be as visually descriptive as the other options. This is the default option for live tables, but is
disabled for other types of tables.
• Select Unique Map Styles to retrieve all unique object styles for the live access table.
MapInfo Professional retrieves all unique map styles from the database table for a more
visually appealing legend. For extremely large tables, this option can take longer than the
first option. This option is selected by default when the legend frame is not a live access
table.
• Select Unique Values in a Column of the Selected Table to retrieve the styles associated
with the values saved in a particular column in the database table for a more visually
appealing legend. For extremely large tables, this option can take longer than the first option.
5. Then click the Save Frame Setting to Metadata check box to preserve the choice you made in
this dialog box. When you re-open this dialog box the settings from the metadata are used as
default values instead of the system set default values. There is legend metadata for the Styles
from radio buttons that we preserve.
• File Data Source — Displays all file DSNs (data source names) and subdirectories
contained within the directory displayed in the Look In box. Double-clicking a DSN connects
to the data source.
• Look In — Displays the current directory in which the subdirectories and file DSNs display.
Click the Down Arrow to the right of the text box to display the entire path.
• DSN Name — Displays the file DSN name selected in the File Data Sources list, or you can
enter a new file DSN name.
• New — Adds a new file data source. If you click this button, the Create New Data Source
dialog box appears with a list of drivers. Choose the driver for which you are adding a file
DSN. After you click Next, you may specify the keywords for the file DSN. See Opening a
Connection to an ODBC Data Source on page 253, for instructions on creating a new data
source.
6. If your connection type is Oracle Spatial, the MapInfo Professional Oracle Connect dialog box
displays.
7. Enter the server name, user name, and password, and then click OK.
When you have chosen or created a connection the Open DBMS dialog box displays. It contains
a list of tables for that connection, which displays in the Tables field. The directory path of the
database connection or the database name also displays. This field is not present for data
sources that do not provide this information.
8. Click the name of the table you want to download to highlight it.
9. As an optional step, use the Filter button to select which types of tables to list. The default
shows Tables, View, and Synonyms, and hides System tables.
10. Click Open. The Open DBMS Table Options dialog box displays.
For data sources that make use of owners, such as Oracle, the Owner field is activated. It allows
you to list tables owned by different users.
• See Troubleshooting DBMS Table Issues in the Help System.
In this Chapter:
Understanding the Drawing and Editing Tools . . . . . . . . . . . . . .276
Drawing Objects . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .278
Drawing Polygons and Polylines . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .281
Drawing Symbols . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .284
Working with Text on the Map. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .287
Editing Objects . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .288
Understanding the Drawing and Editing Tools
However, these tools and commands give you more than the ability to modify your map. You can
draw a variety of objects that you can use to perform powerful geographic analyses. For example,
you can draw circles, polygons, and other bounded objects. You can then search for records within
those boundaries.
Note: You can only draw and edit objects on a map when the layer the object is on is editable.
We have covered making a layer editable in depth elsewhere in this User Guide. See Making the
Layers “Editable” on page 167.
Note: We have increased the size of the allowed objects in MapInfo Professional. That is, we have
increased the number of nodes permitted per object for regions, polylines, and multipoints
and we have increased the number of polygons allowed in a multipolygon region and
increase the number of polylines in a multiple segment polyline.
• For more general information, see Understanding the Drawing and Editing Tools in the Help
System.
Tool
Icon Button Description
Reshape Toggle in and out of Reshape mode with this button when you want to add,
delete, or move nodes in an editable layer (also available on the Edit menu).
Add Node The Add Node button allows you to put additional nodes on an object for
more precise editing.
Line Style Displays the Line Style dialog box where you can change the color, width,
and type of selected line objects or set new defaults for future objects.
Region Displays the Region Style dialog box where you can change the fill pattern
Style and border of selected region objects or set new defaults for future objects.
Tool
Icon Button Description
Symbol Displays the Symbol Style dialog box where you can change the symbol
Style type, color, and size of selected objects or set new defaults for future
objects.
Text Style Displays the Text Style dialog box where you can change the font, size,
color, and attributes of selected text or set new defaults for future text and
labels.
Adding a Node
Nodes can be added only to lines, polylines, and regions.
The maximum number of nodes for regions and polylines is 1,048,572 nodes for a single polygon
region or polyline. The limit drops by seven nodes for every two additional polygons.
To add a node :
2. Move the cursor to the point on the segment where you want to add a node.
3. Click to add the node. Press the Backspace key to delete the last node added.
4. Choose Edit > New Row, a new row is added to the bottom of the table.
1. Select one or more objects in the editable map layer of the active Map window. These are the
objects to which you want to add nodes.
2. Choose Objects > Set Target. The objects you selected in Step 1 appear in a different style to
indicate that they are the editing targets.
3. Select one or more objects from any layer of the active Map window. Presumably, these are
objects that intersect your target object(s).
If you use Overlay Nodes to add nodes to a line, MapInfo Professional converts the line to a
polyline. If you use Overlay Nodes to add nodes to an ellipse, rectangle or rounded rectangle
object, MapInfo Professional converts the object to a region. Overlay Nodes does not affect text or
point objects, and you may not use point or text objects to add nodes to other objects.
Drawing Objects
Drawing objects in MapInfo Professional is easy. Once you have made the layer editable, choose
the appropriate tool. Using the shape tools, you can draw arcs, ellipses, circles, lines, rectangles,
and rounded rectangles on your map. You can either draw the object directly on the Cosmetic Layer
(and save it to another or new layer later) or make a map layer editable and draw the objects there.
Once you have drawn the object, you can move the object, delete it, copy it to the Clipboard, or
paste it to another Map window.
Also, you can delete the last node of the object by pressing the Backspace key. If there is only one
node left in the object, it will not be deleted.
Note: If the object is not editable then you can only access a read-only dialog box.
1. Choose Map > Layer Control. The Layer Control dialog box displays.
4. Click OK.
8. Click OK.
Use the Help search option to locate information for a specific map object (for example, Arcs, Points,
Polygons etc.).
1. Choose File > Revert Table to display the Revert Table dialog box. Here you can choose the
table to revert to (that is, return to its previous state).
2. Once you have chosen a table to revert, MapInfo Professional prompts you on whether you wish
to discard the changes you have made in the table.
3. Click Discard. MapInfo Professional discards the changes you have made to the table.
However, if you have second thoughts, click Cancel.
• For instructions on drawing specific objects such as lines, polylines, squares, etc, see Drawing
Objects in the Help System.
• Arc
• Ellipse
• Rectangle
• Rounded Rectangle
You can also use the Ruler window with the Marquee Select and Radius Select tools. Just click the
Ruler tool to display the Ruler window.
If the Ruler window is not active, the drawing and selection tools noted above do not display
distance. The rubber-banding line does not display.
• For more instructions, see the Measuring the Distance between Two Points topic in the Help
System.
Object Styles
MapInfo Professional draws objects using the default color, fill pattern, line type, symbol, and text
settings for the layer you are drawing on. The default style can be set in the Styles Preferences
dialog box.
1. On the Map menu, click Layer Control and make the layer editable.
2. Select the object and choose the appropriate style command from the Options menu.
The style commands are also available on the Drawing Toolbar. These commands also set the
styles for any subsequent objects to be drawn on the layer.
For closed shapes such as circles and squares, you can change the fill pattern and color, the style
and color of the border, and the line width of the border. For arcs and lines, you can change the type
of line, its color, and the width of the line. In addition, you can use interleaved line styles to create the
appearance of intersections for overlapping intersections and lines within a single layer. Interleaved
line styles are available for use with lines of the same style and color (they can be different widths).
Interleaved line styles are not available for solid lines or borders.
Any edits to an object’s default settings will be applied during the entire work session until you make
new changes. To save the settings, you must save the table where the object resides.
You can also change the display of an object in Layer Control. In the Layer Control dialog box, click
the Display button to bring up the Display Options dialog box. Click the Style Override check box to
activate the Style Override button. Click the Style button to bring up the appropriate style dialog
box.
Note: The settings you specify through the Display Options dialog box are temporary unless you
save the table to a workspace.
• For more information, see Using Interleaved Line Styles in the Help System.
For instance, you want to create school districts for your map. You have a street map of your town to
guide you in defining the school district boundaries.
To create a polygon:
4. When you are ready to complete the object, double-click the last end point.
You can delete the last node by pressing the Backspace key.
Note: If there is only one node left in the object it will not be deleted.
You can then use the Combine command to combine this region with another, reshape the region,
etc.
Polylines are made up of multiple line segments that are treated as one object. Unlike lines created
with the Line tool, you can smooth polylines into a continuous curve using the Smooth command.
Again, you can delete the last node by pressing the Backspace key.
Note: If there is only one node left in the object it will not be deleted.
This functionality is useful when you want to draw perpendicular lines at an angle rather than
horizontal to the map.
Note: Snap and Autotrace functionality must be turned off to use this feature, because when these
features are activated, the Ctrl and Shift keys have other purposes. The Shift and Ctrl keys
also do not operate when you are using the Polygon Select tool.
4. Click and draw a single line in any direction other than horizontal following these directions:
• To draw the next segment perpendicular to the last segment, press Ctrl while dragging the
cursor.
• To draw the next segment perpendicular to horizontal, press Shift while dragging the cursor.
4. Move the mouse to another node of the same object. Follow the procedure below for the type of
object you are tracing:
• Polyline: Hold down the Shift key or the Ctrl key and click.
• Polygon: Hold down the Shift key for the shorter set of nodes or the Ctrl key for the longer
set of nodes and click.
Pressing the Shift or Ctrl keys highlights the trace path. Click to automatically trace the
segments between the nodes and add them to the polyline/polygon you are drawing.
5. Continue until you have traced the entire polygon/polyline and right-click to end.
Note: Autotrace only one object at a time; clicking nodes in different objects will produce a straight
line between the two nodes.
2. Open Layer Control and make the layer that contains the polyline editable.
4. On the Objects menu, click Enclose. The Create Region Objects From Enclosed Areas dialog
box displays.
You can also convert regions to polylines. For these instructions, see Converting Regions to
Polylines on page 298.
5. If a layer is not a cosmetic layer or if the polyline is in the Layout window, the Data
Disaggregation dialog box will appear. Here the user can specify how data is disaggregated.
6. After selecting the data disaggregation method, click OK. The selected polyline will be split at the
node into two polylines.
Drawing Symbols
Symbols on your maps make your map more expressive and easier to understand. This section
explains how to change a style currently used by MapInfo Professional and create your own custom
symbols. We also discuss in detail the rules governing symbols.
To draw symbols, make the layer you want to draw the symbols to editable and choose the Symbol
tool. Place the cursor where you want the symbol to be and click. The symbol displays using the
default symbol style settings.
Here you can change the symbol, font, color, and size, as well as create background effects and
bold face for symbols.
Select the Display at Actual Size check box to see the symbol you selected at the size it was
originally created.
Click the Reload button to refresh the list of custom symbols stored in the Application Data
CUSTSYMB directory. Select this button if you added a new custom symbol and do not see the
symbol(s) in the list.
Click the Full View button to display the entire view of custom symbol in a separate window. This
button displays only when you select the Custom Symbols font type. You use this button when
the preview is too large to display completely in the sample area.
The symbol displays with the style changes you specified. These settings also apply to any
subsequent symbols you draw until you change the settings.
• MapInfo Cartographic
• MapInfo Transportation
• MapInfo Real Estate
• MapInfo Miscellaneous
• MapInfo 3.0 Compatible Symbols (vector symbols, available as a True Type font in MapInfo
Professional): the 36 shapes from the MapInfo symbol set
• MapInfo Oil & Gas
• MapInfo Weather
• MapInfo Arrows
• Installed font symbols: symbols available from the installed fonts that offer a symbol set
• Custom symbols: from here you can access user-created bitmap symbols which you have
saved to the CUSTSYMB directory. This directory is created during MapInfo Professional
installation. See Working with Custom Symbols (page 285) for more about this process.
The MapInfo Symbols font is a TrueType font. When you use these symbols, the Background and
Effects options in the Symbol Style dialog box are unavailable.
Usually, this directory is located in Program Files\MapInfo\Professional\ (or one of its subdirectories)
or in \Documents and Settings\user’s login directory\Applications Data\MapInfo\MapInfo\version
number\. If you cannot find this directory, click Start and Search and search for \CUSTSYMB on
your system.
Note: If you add custom symbols while you are working in MapInfo Professional, open the Symbol
Style dialog box and click the Reload button to ensure that the new symbol(s) you have
added display. Otherwise, you have to exit MapInfo Professional and re-enter it to get the
new symbols to display in the Custom Symbols list.
When you change the style of a custom symbol, the Effects options in the Symbol Style dialog box
change. You can either show a background or apply a color.
• Show Background displays the custom symbol with the background color with which it was
created.
• Apply Color replaces all non-white pixels with a color you choose from the color palette.
• Display at Actual Size shows the symbol at its actual size.
When you are creating extended custom symbols we recommend you check the Show
Background check box if you do not require transparency. This setting improves performance
significantly during exporting and Drag and Drop operations.
MapInfo Professional ships with custom symbols that you can use to enhance your maps.
2. Place the bitmap in the directory you have assigned for symbols.
4. Open your map and choose Map > Layer Control to display the Layer Control dialog box.
5. Make the map layer where you want to place the symbol editable.
6. Choose Options > Symbol Style to display the Symbol Style dialog box.
8. You must click the Reload button to view the newly added custom symbol.
10. Click on the map using the Symbol tool to display your custom symbol.
Note: The bitmap file has to be 256 color and under 128k in size. Bitmaps should also be the same
dimension in x and y.
• For more information, see Finding the Custom Symbol Directory in the Help System.
The Dispersed Groups symbol font gives you a way to display symbols that represent different
organizations, events, or services that occupy the same coordinate location without overlapping
each other. When you zoom out from the coordinate point, these symbols display around the
coordinate point side by side. This font is installed when you install MapInfo Professional.
• Crime mapping: See multiple incidents at the same address and for traffic incident analysis
• Insurance: See multiple policy holders, policies, claims, or inspection requirements at the
same address
• Wireless telecom: See multiple assets on the same mast/tower
• Health care: See multiple incidents at the same address
• Retail: See multiple attributes of a retail store, for example what internal franchised
departments it contains or specific services that it offers.
• For specific instructions, see Displaying Overlapping Symbols in the Help System.
To create text, make sure the layer you want to draw the text to is editable and choose the Text tool.
The cursor changes to an I-beam. Place the cursor where you want the text to be and type in the text
you want.
1. Click the Text button in the Drawing toolbar. The cursor turns into an I-beam when moved over
the active window.
2. Click the cursor at the place on the map, layout, or data displayed in the Browser window where
you want to enter the text. A blinking cursor appears. In a Browser, press Tab to move to the next
cell.
3. Type the desired text. The text will appear at the blinking cursor as you type.
5. When you are finished entering text, press Esc or click the Select button in the Main toolbar and
click the mouse somewhere else on the Map or Layout.
Note: The font used is the current font, as indicated in Options > Text Style.
These settings will remain in effect for any text you subsequently draw on the map until you
change them.
3. To save changes, on the File menu, click Save. To save objects drawn to the Cosmetic Layer, on
the Map menu, click Save Cosmetic Objects.
Editing Objects
In all likelihood, you will need to change or edit some of the objects you have drawn or mapped. To
begin this process, you need to make the layer that you want to change editable (on the Map menu,
click Layer Control).
To edit an object:
If the object is a boundary or region, edit handles appear at the outer corners of the object.
2. Drag the object to a new position or change its line style, fill pattern, or symbol.
To delete an object:
To move an object (in an editable layer) one pixel at a time, click it and press and hold the Ctrl key
and press the Arrow button corresponding to the direction you want the object to move. To move the
object 10 pixels at a time, press and hold the Ctrl and Shift keys and press the Arrow button
corresponding to the direction you want the object to move.
Also, if you click the on the fifth edit handle (rotate handle) and hold down the mouse button, you can
rotate the highlighted box to the desired angle. A rubber banding box is drawn representing the
bounds of the rotated object. If you press and hold Shift key while the rubber banding box is being
drawn, the rotation will be limited to 45 degree increments.
2. Make the layer where the object is located editable (on the Map menu, click Layer Control).
If you select more than one object at a time to move, the objects move in the same way. Take
care to ensure that you do not move an object off the map or off land by mistake.
Note: When you move the objects, you move them all at once, maintaining their positions
relative to one another.
You can both move and offset the objects you select using this process. The difference between
these two operations is whether MapInfo Professional makes a copy of the data (as in the case of
copy) or simply moves the objects and stores the new value in the original table.
2. Make sure a layer is editable (on the Map menu, click Layer Control).
The offset/move functionality is available when any layer is editable, not just when the objects
you want to move or offset are in the editable layer. However, you can only move an object within
its editable layer. Copy is always permitted as long as a layer is editable.
4. On the Objects menu, click Offset to display the Offset Objects dialog box.
5. To move your selected objects, enter or select from the following options and click OK to apply
the changes. To copy your selected objects to offset them, enter or select from the following
options and click Next. Then go to step 6.
• Angle — To offset your selected object at an angle, type the angle (in degrees) in this field.
The new object is created based on the original object and is offset in the direction of the
angle you specified, measured from the positive X-axis. If you enter a positive angle, the
object is offset counterclockwise; if you enter a negative angle, the object is offset clockwise.
• Distance/Units — To set the offset distance and units, type the distance and select the units
in the Distance box. The list of units is as follows: inches, links, feet, U.S. Survey feet, yards,
rods, chains, miles, nautical miles, millimeters, centimeters, meters, and kilometers.
Note: MapInfo Professional takes the default units from the map window in which you've
selected the object.
• Create Copy — Click this option to create a copy of the selected object(s) in the data. When
you complete this process, MapInfo Professional saves the copy to the editable layer.
• Move Objects — Click this option to move the object without creating a copy in the data. You
can only move an object within its own editable layer. When you move objects, the Data
Aggregation dialog box does not display, since you are only moving the data within the layer.
• Copy or Move Distance Using — The option you select in this box depends largely upon
the projection of your source map. If your map has a latitude/longitude projection, MapInfo
Professional enables the Spherical type only. If you are working with a non-Earth projection,
MapInfo Professional enables the Cartesian type only.
When you click Spherical, MapInfo Professional calculates the copy/move distance by
mapping the data into a Latitude/Longitude On Earth projection.
When you click Cartesian, MapInfo Professional calculates the copy/move distance by
considering the data to be projected to a flat surface and distances are measured using
Cartesian distance calculations.
6. The Data Aggregation dialog box displays if one of these conditions are true:
• You clicked the Create Copy option
• You selected objects in a different table from the table associated with the editable layer
• The editable layer is not the cosmetic layer and has no text associated with the geographical
objects in it
You may notice that the only controls available to you in this dialog box are Blank, Value, and
No Data.
Type a value you will remember in the Value field of this dialog box. For more information about
data aggregation, see Aggregating and Disaggregating Data in Chapter 11 on page 387.
7. Click OK to copy the data and offset the objects you selected.
2. On the Objects menu, click Rotate to display the Rotate Objects dialog box.
3. In this dialog box, you specify the angle and the anchor point of the rotation. Type the rotation
angle in the Rotation field.
Note: The rotation angle can be positive (counter clockwise) or negative (clockwise).
To return to the default anchor point, click the Reset Anchor button.
5. Decide whether or not you want to lock the anchor point. Click the Lock Anchor Point Position
check box to lock the anchor point.
When you lock the anchor point, you ensure that the anchor point will not be recalculated when
you return to the Map or Layout window. If you do not lock the anchor point, MapInfo
Professional recalculates the anchor point in the based on the rotated selection. Once the
objects are rotated, they may have a different anchor point.
Note: You cannot maintain an anchor point lock when you change the selection from the Map
window to the Layout window or from the Layout to the Map window.
6. When you have completed these entries or selections, click OK to rotate your object(s).
• A single object (not a polyline), the default anchor point is the object's centroid
• A single polyline or several objects, the default anchor point is the center of the polyline’s or the
selected objects minimum bounding rectangle (MBR)
• Multiple objects, the default anchor point is the center of the MBR of the selected objects
For example, if you double-click a region, MapInfo Professional displays the perimeter, centroid, and
area. It also shows the type of distance calculation that was used to obtain these values.
If the layer is Selectable but not editable, you can only view these attributes. If the layer is also
editable, then you can change these attributes by typing new values into the text boxes of the dialog
box. The illustration above shows the Object Attribute dialog box for a region object in an editable
layer. You can also access this dialog box on the Edit menu (click Get Info).
Changing an object’s size and position with the Object Attribute dialog box gives you much greater
control over its exact size and position than you have through drawing it on the screen. For example,
you have a list of ten radio towers and their X and Y coordinates. You could geocode these points
using the Create Points command. However, if you bring up the Points Object Attribute dialog box
and type the new X and Y coordinates, you can create ten points with the Symbol tool and then
individually place them in the correct location.
You can also use the Text Object Attribute dialog box to change the point’s actual text. For example,
you have typed the title “World Population” on a Map window. You want to fix your typographical
error. Bring up the Object Attribute dialog box for the text object. You can correct your error in the
box that displays the text.
• For more information, see Changing Attributes for Multiple Layers in the Help System.
To reshape an object:
3. To reshape the object, move the nodes, add nodes, or delete nodes from the object.
To move a node, click it and, while holding down the mouse button, drag the node to the desired
location. The line segments connected to the node are moved to a new position.
To add a node, click the Add Node tool from the Drawing Toolbar, position the cursor where you
want to add the node, and click the mouse button. MapInfo Professional adds a node. You can
move this node or delete it, just as you would any node.
To delete a node, position the cursor over the node, click it, and press the Delete key. To delete
the last node when creating a polyline or polygon, click the Backspace key.
The Reshape command is very useful when you are creating sales territories or other merged
boundaries. For example, you are merging postal code boundaries together to create school
districts. Some postal code boundaries fall into more than one school district. Use the Reshape
command to reshape the school district to incorporate a section of a postal code boundary.
1 Select the object. Click Reshape mode to display the nodes. 2 Select the nodes you
want to copy.
3 Choose Copy and Paste to display the new objects with edit handles.
4 Click and drag the object to move to another location.
2. Select the first node with the Select tool. Shift-click the last node to be copied. MapInfo
Professional selects all nodes between following the shortest route. (To select all nodes except
those between the shortest distance, use Ctrl-click with the Select tool.)
3. On the Edit menu, click Copy to copy the nodes to the clipboard.
4. Paste the duplicate nodes onto the map. On the File menu, click Paste. The object you copied is
drawn on top of the original object as a polyline.
5. To move the polyline click it and drag the polyline to a new location.
Note: You can also use the snap to capability to snap to visible centroids in region objects.
To toggle Snap to Nodes, press the S key. The Status Bar displays with the word “SNAP” when Snap
mode is activated. When you activate the Snap mode, a circle displays around your cursor showing
the size of the tolerance of the Snap mode in pixels. The S key acts like a toggle on/off switch. You
can set the snap tolerance in pixels in the Map Window Preferences dialog box. The Snap
Tolerance field allows you to specify a tolerance. If you set the snap tolerance to 3 pixels, whenever
you move the cursor within 3 pixels of a node, the cursor will snap to the node.
Snap mode works in the Map Window and Layout window (but not raster layers). It works with all
MapInfo Professional tools in the Main and Drawing toolbars except Pan, Drag Map, and Text tool.
Additionally, snap mode works on object types, including regions, points, multipoints, collection
objects, lines and polylines, rectangles, and arcs. It is not available for text objects, ellipses, and
rounded rectangles. You set the Snap in one window at a time and can save it with your workspace.
Snap to Nodes applies to all selectable layers—this is useful if you are drawing an object in one
layer and want to attach it to an object in another layer. If you do not want to snap to objects in
certain layers, make those layers unselectable.
• From the Options menu, select Preferences, then Map Window to display the Map Window
Preferences dialog box.
Under the Snap Options section, you can change the snap tolerance to make the snap radius larger
or smaller (measured in pixels). If you clear Display Snap Radius, the radius will not be displayed
when snap mode is turned on. Remember to click OK to save your preferences.
Autotracing Objects
You can trace the nodes of an object, for example, the Yucatan in Mexico using the Polyline or
Polygon tools. This makes it easier to digitize objects that share a border because you don't have to
re-digitize the shared border. You can also use this feature to trace an existing polygon/polyline
network, for example, a street, a county, or some other polyline or boundary. A Status Bar entry
displays showing that this mode is enabled.
To trace a border:
3. Press the S key to turn on the Snap process and the T key to turn on the Autotrace functionality.
4. Select the Polygon or Polyline tool from the Drawing toolbar and select the first
node you want to trace.
5. Drag the mouse along the nodes of the line or object you want to trace.
• To enable the AutoTrace mode, you must be using a “poly” tool such as Add Polygon or
Add Polyline
• You must press S to enable the Snap feature to use the AutoTrace feature
You can use the Shift/Ctrl key functionality for this mode. When you AutoTrace a polygon, the path
contains the least number of nodes necessary to complete the AutoTrace, which is similar to the
Shift key behavior. If you want to trace the longer path, press the Ctrl key to override default
AutoTrace direction. When you are autotracing a closed polyline, the trace line never crosses the
start and end points of the polyline (so the Ctrl key has no effect).
• Click a polyline with the Select tool and on the Objects menu, click Smooth. MapInfo
Professional smooths the line so that it appears to be one continuous line with curves instead
of angles.
• To undo the process choose either the Undo Smooth command or on the Objects menu,
click Unsmooth.
Both the Smooth and Unsmooth commands can be used only on polylines. A polyline is a line drawn
with the Polyline tool. Smooth and Unsmooth do not work with objects drawn with the Line tool. If
you attempt to smooth or unsmooth any object besides a polyline, MapInfo Professional displays a
warning message.
For instance, you select a group of nodes that you want to copy and paste elsewhere on your map.
MapInfo Professional treats the group as a polyline and copies it to the clipboard. After you paste the
polyline on your map, you can convert it to a region on the Objects menu, click Convert to Region.
If you want to create a buffer zone within one mile of a boundary, meaning you want a zone that
extends one mile from the boundary to the outside and to the inside, you must first convert the
region to a polyline and then create the buffer. If you first create the buffer on the region, you will
include too much territory in the buffer (the entire region in the buffer plus the one mile buffer that
extends outside of the region).
Converting objects to polylines and regions allows you to perform node-editing operations on objects
that ordinarily do not allow node editing. For example, you cannot add nodes to a rectangle object. If,
however, you first convert the rectangle into a polyline or region, you can then add nodes to the
object.
1. You can use the Drag Map Window functionality to drag the layers of an existing Map window
onto the another Map window. To see this method, see Merging Maps using the Drag Map
Window Tool in the Help System.
2. You can copy the map layers you want from one map to the other in the Layer Control dialog
box. To see this method, see Merging Maps from Layer Control in the Help System.
When you merge the layers from the source map on top of the destination map, the destination map
settings take precedence. This means that the clip regions and coordinate systems, for example, are
based on the settings in the destination map. If the destination map does not allow raster
reprojection and the source map has a raster layer, the coordinate system of destination map could
change.
Consider this example of a vector map and a raster map. Many times you want to add detail to a
map by merging it with another open map. You can think of the map you are dragging or copying
layers from as the source map.
You can think of the map that you are dragging or copying the layers to as the destination map.
Note: MapInfo Professional does not copy the Cosmetic layer objects or thematic layers from a
source map to the new window, so any symbols or features you have created there do not
merge.
• For more information, see Merging Maps using the Drag Map Window Tool and Merging Maps
from Layer Control in the Help System.
In this Chapter:
Selecting Your Data in MapInfo Professional . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .302
Querying Your Data in MapInfo Professional . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .310
Selecting Your Data in MapInfo Professional
For example, you have a basket of fruit. You want to organize the fruit into different categories,
based on one or more variables:
MapInfo Professional can retrieve information or even individual records from within your data. We
refer to the record or records that are retrieved this way as selections. A selection is a subset of data
that has been collected based on one or more variables.
For example, you have a table of customer records. You could create a subset of all customers who
live within a 50 mile radius of Prague. Or, you could create a subset of all customers who purchased
over $1000 of merchandise. Or, you could create a subset of all customers whose last name begins
with the letter “B”.
The statements above used to create these subsets are known as queries. A query is just another
word for a question — which of my customers spent more than $1,000? Which of my customers
lives within 50 miles of Prague?
As with the fruit example, there are many different ways to group your data. Some data records will
obviously fall into more than one category. You could also use more than one variable to group your
data. Which of my customers lives within 50 miles of Prague and purchased over $1000 of
merchandise? This section gives you some examples and some practical applications of “selecting”
in MapInfo Professional.
Characteristics of Selections
Selections are temporary tables. When you make a selection, MapInfo Professional creates this
temporary table (called a selection) to store the records you’ve selected.
You can perform many of the tasks with a selection table that you can perform with a permanent
(base) table such as:
• View it in a Browser, a Map window (if it has graphic objects), a Graph or a Layout window.
• Cut and copy it into the clipboard and paste it into another table, or even into another
application.
• Use it to edit a table. If you want to edit only certain records in a table, you can get those
records into a selection and then edit that selection.
• Make a further selection from it.
To convert selections into permanent tables, on the File menu, click Save Copy As. Once you’ve
saved the temporary selection table as a permanent table, you can treat the new table like any other
table. Selection tables are totally dependent on the table from which they were created. If you close
a base table, all associated selection tables are deleted.
• Selecting from the screen: Select tool, Radius Select tool, Boundary Select tool, Polygon
Select tool, Marquee Select tool, Invert Selection tool, Select All command. To select records
with the tools, click or encircle the associated graphic objects. To select records from a layer
at the same time, on the Query menu, click Select All.
• Selecting with queries: Select, SQL Select. When you select records with either of these
methods, you create a logical expression that MapInfo Professional uses to select the
records. For example, the expression SALES > 20000 means that MapInfo Professional will
select only those records with sales higher than $20,000. We discuss Select and SQL Select
in more detail in Using Select to Create Queries on page 318 and Using SQL Select to
Query Data on page 321).
1. Choose Table > Import to display the Import File dialog box. Choose OS MasterMap (*.gml)
from the Files of type: drop-down list and navigate to its location.
2. Select a GML file to import. Click Open. The GML Import dialog box displays.
When you select map objects in a Selectable layer, MapInfo Professional highlights the objects
using the settings defined in the Highlight Control section of the Preferences dialog box (Options
menu). When you select map objects in an Editable layer, MapInfo Professional places edit handles
(small squares) around the extents of the object you selected.
If you have more than one Selectable layer in a Map window, MapInfo Professional selects objects
from the topmost Selectable layer.
For example, you have a Selectable layer of county boundaries and a Selectable layer of state
boundaries. If the county boundaries are in the topmost layer in the Map window, MapInfo
Professional selects objects from the county layer. If the state boundaries are in the topmost layer in
the Map window, MapInfo Professional selects objects from the states layer. When you use the
Select tool, MapInfo Professional also displays InfoTips for the topmost Selectable layer. As you
move your cursor over the objects, InfoTips display the object’s label expression. You can turn off the
InfoTips in the Map window Preferences (on the Options menu, point to Preferences and click Map
window).
Likewise, if you perform a boundary search, the boundary object that you want to search should be
in the topmost layer.
For example, you have a layer of postal code boundaries and a layer of state boundaries. If you want
to select all objects that fall within a postal code boundary, the postal code layer should be the
topmost boundary layer. If you want to select all objects that fall within a given state, the state layer
should be the topmost boundary layer. You can reorder the layers by selecting the Map menu, and
clicking Layer Control.
You can select objects from tables other than the topmost table, by holding down the Ctrl key when
you are selecting an object. For example, say you have three selectable layers, such as STATES,
COUNTIES, and CITIES. If you want to select objects in the STATES table, but it is the bottom layer
in the Map window, do the following:
1. Hold down the Ctrl key and click the map with the Select tool. You are now in the second layer.
2. Hold down the Ctrl key and click the map again with the Select tool. You are now selecting
objects from the third layer, the STATES layer.
The tool must be active before you can use it; activate the tool by clicking on it. The tool's icon is
highlighted in the Main toolbar and the cursor becomes a pointer. If you are editing records in a
browser, the cursor becomes an I-beam.
The layer where the object is located has to be selectable in the Map window. When an object is
selected it is highlighted according to the settings you specified in Options > Preferences.
• When the layer is editable, the selected object is surrounded by edit handles and is colored and
patterned as it was originally defined.
• When you select another object, the first object is unselected.
• To select a number of objects from a map or layout, hold the Shift key down and click the desired
objects with the Select tool.
Selecting Tools
MapInfo Professional includes several tools on the Main toolbar to allow you to choose records for
further viewing and analysis, including the Select tool, Radius Select tool, Marquee Select tool,
Polygon Select tool, Boundary Select tool, and Invert Selection tool. Each tool is discussed in the
next section.
1. Make the layer that you want to select objects from Selectable (on the Map menu, click Layer
Control).
3. Click an object in the Map window. If that object’s layer is selectable, MapInfo Professional
highlights the object. If the layer is editable, MapInfo Professional puts edit handles around the
extents of the object. If the layer is neither editable nor selectable, MapInfo Professional does not
allow you to select the object.
4. On the Window menu, click New Browser Window to display selected records in a Browser.
Choose Selection from the list of tables. MapInfo Professional creates a Browser of the new
temporary table. To select records from the Browser, simply click each record with the Select
tool.
2. Hold down the Shift key and click another object. MapInfo Professional selects that object, too. If
you select a second object without holding down the Shift key, MapInfo Professional unselects
the first object and selects the second object.
• For additional instructions, see Selecting the Next Selectable Object Beneath the Current Object
in the Help System.
• Hold the Shift key down and then click the object. When you click, the object is removed from
the selection set.
To deselect all objects:
• Choose Query > Unselect All or click someplace on the map where there are no objects.
• For additional information, see Moving Selected Objects and Rotating Selected Objects in the
Help System.
The Radius Select tool selects all objects whose centroid falls within the circle. The object doesn’t
have to be completely bounded by the circle.
1. Make the layer you want to select objects from selectable (on the Map menu, click Layer
Control).
2. Choose the Radius Select tool from the Main toolbar. The cursor becomes a hand when moved
over the Map window.
3. Click a place on the map that you would like to use as the center point of your radius search. For
example, if you want to select all the fire hydrants that fall within two miles of a fire station, click
the fire station and use that as the center point.
4. Hold down the mouse button and drag the mouse away from the center point. MapInfo
Professional draws a circle around the point and reports the radius of the circle in the Status Bar
(lower left corner of the screen).
5. When you have the desired radius release the mouse button. MapInfo Professional highlights all
map objects that fall within that circle.
6. To see a list of all the records that fall within that circle, choose New Browser Window from the
Window menu. Choose Selection from the list of tables. MapInfo Professional creates a
Browser of the new selection table.
Note: To select objects from another layer, you must turn off selectable in Layer Control for the
upper layers. Only objects from one layer at a time are selected.
1. Make the layer that you want to select objects from Selectable (click Layer Control).
2. Choose the Marquee Select tool from the Main toolbar. The cursor becomes a hand when
moved over the Map window.
3. Click a place on the map outside of the area you want to include in the marquee box.
4. Hold down the mouse button and drag the mouse to form a dotted rectangle around the points
you want to select.
5. When you have reached the desired rectangle size release the mouse button. MapInfo
Professional highlights all map objects that fall within that rectangle.
6. To see a list of all the selected records, on the Window menu, click New Browser Window.
Choose Selection from the list of tables. MapInfo Professional creates a Browser of the new
selection table.
1. Make the layer that you want to select from Selectable (on the Map menu, click Layer Control).
2. Choose the Polygon Select tool from the Main toolbar. The cursor becomes a pointing hand
when moved over the Map window.
3. Click the map location at which you want to place the first end point of the polygon. Move the
cursor over your map in any direction. MapInfo Professional draws a line from the point where
you clicked to the cursor.
4. Click to create another endpoint. Continue to move the cursor and click until you have the
desired number of sides to your polygon.
5. To close the polygon, make your last click as close as possible to the first click. MapInfo
Professional closes the polygon and selects the objects that are within it.
Note: Press Shift while using the Polygon Select tool to add newly selected objects to the
previous selection.
For example, you have a layer of states and a layer of retailers. Using the Boundary Select tool, you
could click a state and create a temporary list of all the retailers in that state.
1. Make the layer that you want to select objects from Selectable (click Layer Control).
2. Choose the Boundary Select tool from the Main toolbar. The cursor becomes a cross hair when
moved over the Map window.
3. Click within a boundary object. MapInfo Professional selects all objects that fall within that
boundary.
4. To see a list of all the records that fall within that boundary, on the Window menu, click New
Browser Window. Choose Selection from the list of tables. MapInfo Professional creates a
Browser of the new selection table.
1. Make the map layer that you want to select from Selectable (on the Map menu, click Layer
Control).
2. Make the Select tool active, and click one or two map objects.
3. Click the Invert Selection tool. MapInfo Professional selects all the objects that are not part of
the current selection, and cancels the current selection. You can also find Invert Selection in the
Query menu.
To cancel the selection of all selected objects, you can either click the Map window where there are
no objects or choose the Unselect All command from the Query menu.
In the case of Select, you can pose a question of a single table. For example,
• Derive new columns – columns that calculate new values based on the contents of your
existing columns.
• Aggregate your data so that you see only a listing of subtotals instead of seeing your entire
table.
• Combine two or more tables into one results table.
• Show only the columns and rows that interest you.
For instance, by formulating queries with Select, you can ask MapInfo Professional to:
• Show only postal code regions where the average household income is above $65,000.
• Show only postal code regions where the median age is 42.
• Show only the postal code regions where the household income is above $65,000 and the
median age is 42.
• Show only records for all orders received in July or September.
• Show cities of over 100,000 people in Texas, California and Florida.
When you are working in a Browser, MapInfo Professional highlights the records meeting the criteria
of the query. When you are working in a Map window, the graphic objects of the chosen records are
highlighted. When you are working in both windows, the objects in both are highlighted. In all cases,
MapInfo Professional automatically creates a working table called Selection that contains the results
of the query. You can browse, map, or graph this table like any other table. The table can also be
saved as a separate table with Save Copy As.
Your tables must be mappable and indexed. If you need to set up these components, see File >
New Table (Import) or Table > Maintenance > Table Structure.
2. Click the Search table drop-down list and choose a table from which to search.
3. Click the for objects in column drop-down list and choose the column containing the location
information of the objects you are looking for.
You now have the option of refining the search. Use this option when you are trying to find an
object or address whose name is not unique and is used for other objects or locations.
For example, when you are searching for the town of Ipswich in Great Britain, do you want
Ipswich in Suffolk county or Ipswich in Essex county. Refining the search by county allows you to
specify the county for each town, rather than just the town name.
• Optional - Click the Refine search with table drop-down list and choose a refining table (the
table must contain regions, such as states, counties, census tracts etc.).
• Optional - Click the using boundary name column drop-down list and choose your refining
column, the column containing the name of the boundary.
4. Check the Find in Front Window Only check box when you want the Find operation executed
only in the Front Window. When this check box is unchecked, the Find operation is executed in
all windows. When checked, if features are found, they will be marked with a symbol in a Map
Window. If the Browser window is the active window, it will be scrolled so the record appears in
the Browser view.
When you have finished defining where to look for your search data and selecting between the
front most map and all maps then specify what data to look for.
5. Click OK. The Find dialog box displays. This dialog box allows you to specify what data to look
for.
The name of the column that you specified in the first Find dialog box is listed to the left of the list
box (for example, Street). When locating a street address, type in "# Name", such as "30 Elm St"
or "1045 Templar Blvd." What you type in depends on geocoding preferences specified in
Options > Preferences > Address Matching.
Note: MapInfo Professional comes with a text file called MAPINFOW.ABB [MapInfo
Professional Abbreviations], that contains a list of common street abbreviations, such as
"St" for "Street" and "Blvd." for "Boulevard," and so forth. These help MapInfo
Professional to obtain exact matches. To familiarize yourself with the MAPINFOW.ABB
file, you can take a look at its contents in the Notepad Text Editor.
6. Type the name of the object or address you are searching for in this box. If you have used the
Refine option in the first dialog box, a second column name is listed (for example, ZIP).
7. Type the name of the refining boundary in this box. If MapInfo Professional cannot find an exact
match for the object you specified, it lists possible matches.
8. Click Up or Down to move to other pages and choose a specific entry from the list.
You can also use the Find command to locate street intersections. When you type in the name of
the object to be found in the second Find dialog box (enter object name to find), separate the two
items by a double ampersand (&&). For example, to find the intersection of Congress Street and
Christie Street, type "Congress Street && Christie Street."
2. Create your query and verify that it is correct, selecting the open table that you want to query.
3. Select the Find Results in Current Map Window check box to display the results upon
completion.
• For more information, see Selecting All Objects from a Table in the Help System.
To make a query:
2. Click on the Select records from table drop-down list and choose the table from which to select
the records.
3. Type your query expression in the that satisfy box, or click the Assist button to display the
Expression dialog box which helps you write an expression.
4. Type a name in the Store Results in table box for the temporary table that stores the results of
your query or choose selection (the default). If Selection is chosen, MapInfo Professional
automatically names the table Query 1, Query 2 etc.
5. To sort the query by the value in some column (optional) click the Sort results by column drop-
down list and choose the column containing the value you want to sort with.
6. Click OK. A Browser window of your query results displays if the Browse Results box is
checked.
You can use Select to highlight objects in a map or a table that meet certain criteria and create a
results table that you can browse, map, or graph like any other table.
• When you are working in a Browser window, the records meeting the criteria of the query are
highlighted.
• When you are working in a map, the graphic objects of the chosen records are highlighted.
• When you are working with both a Map window and a Browser window, the objects and the
records are highlighted.
In all cases, a working table is automatically created called Query 3. This table contains the results
of the query. You can map, or graph this table like any other table. The table can also be saved as a
separate table with Save Copy As.
• For more information, see Saving Queries and Loading Templates in the Help System.
1. Open the table you wish to query, if you haven't already done so. The table that you query is
known as the base table. If you use SQL Select to perform a query on the World table, the World
table is your base table.
2. Choose Query > SQL Select. Fill in the portions of the SQL Select dialog box that meet your
needs. When you click OK, MapInfo Professional performs the query.
MapInfo Professional extracts data from your base table, stores the query results in a special,
temporary table, known as the results table. The results table contains only the rows and
columns that meet your criteria. The default name of the results table is Selection (although you
can specify a different results table name in the Into Table Named field in the SQL Select dialog
box).
3. Open a Map window and/or a Browser window if you want to see the query results. By default,
MapInfo Professional displays the results table in a Browser window automatically (unless you
clear the Browse Results check box in the SQL Select dialog box).
If your results table is called Selection (the default name), the Browser window shows a different
table name, such as Query1 or Query2. This is because the moment you Browse the Selection
table, MapInfo Professional takes a "snapshot" of the table, and names the snapshot Queryn
(where n is a number, one or greater). MapInfo Professional takes the snapshot because
"Selection" is a special table name; Selection dynamically changes every time you select or de-
select rows.
In the SQL Select dialog box, you can enter a different name for your results table (e.g. you can
name your results table My_Query). This prevents MapInfo Professional from renaming your
results table Queryn.
4. MapInfo Professional automatically selects all rows in the results table. Thus, after you perform
SQL Select, you can perform operations on the entire set of selected rows. For example, you
could apply a different fill color to all selected rows (by choosing Options > Region Style), or
you could cut or copy all selected rows.
5. Usually, any alterations you make to the results table are automatically applied to your original
(base) table. For example, if you use SQL Select to select some of the rows from the Orders
table, and then you delete some of the rows from your results table, MapInfo Professional
deletes the corresponding rows from your base table (Orders). However, if your query produces
subtotals, you can alter the results table without affecting the base table.
6. Choose File > Save As if you want to make a permanent copy of the results table. If you do not
perform Save As, the results table will be deleted when you exit MapInfo Professional.
For more information, see the following topics in the Help System:
The Find Results in Current Map Window check box displays in both dialog boxes. If
there are no open Map windows, this check box is disabled. You cannot save this
check box setting to a template. This option is cleared by default.
2. Create your query and verify that it is correct, selecting the open table that you want to query.
3. Select the Find Results in Current Map Window check box to display the results. Click OK.
• For more information, see Choosing Which Columns Appear in the Results Table and Creating
Statistical Calculations in the Help System.
MapInfo Professional searches the apartment table for all records that satisfy this condition and puts
those records in a temporary table that you can map, browse, graph or carry out additional queries.
You can also perform mathematical operations on your data. For example, you want to create a
temporary table of all apartments that have a total cost of less than $800. Total cost is equal to the
sum of the rent and the monthly utilities.
For more information, see Creating Expressions on page 485 for details in creating a variety of
expressions.
Specifying an Expression
There are two ways of creating an expression. The first method is to type in the expression directly.
When you are creating very simple expressions, this method is usually faster. The second method is
to press the Assist button in the Select dialog box and build your expression using the pop ups in
the Expression dialog box. This method is particularly useful when you are just learning how to build
expressions or when you are building very complex expressions.
To specify an expression:
3. Type your expression directly into this box, or choose from the drop down list selections to create
an expression.
The Expression dialog box gives you three drop-down lists that you can use to build your
expression: columns, operators, and functions.
Columns
This pop up lists every column in the table from which you are selecting. If the table contains derived
columns from previous queries, those columns will also be listed.
Operators
This pop up contains mathematical and logical operation symbols. The mathematical operators in
this pop up include addition, subtraction, multiplication, division, greater than, less than, and equal
signs. You can use these symbols to create mathematical formulas. For example, from your table of
sales representatives you want to select those sales representatives who, on the average, gross
more than $2000 per month. Gross sales is computed by adding together sales and commission.
You have two columns in your table: TOTAL_SALES, which is total sales for the year for each
representative and COMMISSION, which is total commission for the year for each representative.
You could build the following expression:
The Operators pop up also includes logical operators conjunctions AND, NOT, OR and LIKE. The
LIKE operator can be used with two wildcard characters: ‘%’ and ‘_’. The ‘%’ character matches zero
or more characters. The ‘_’ character matches only one character.
Functions
This pop up contains mathematical functions that take one or more parameters and return a value.
You use functions to perform basic mathematical functions on the data in that column. For example:
• abs(<number>)
takes the absolute value of the numbers in the specified column.
For example, a meteorologist wants to select all days where the temperature in her city was more
than 10 degrees warmer or cooler than the national average. She has a column in her table,
AVG_DIFF, that contains the difference between the national average and city average.
• abs(AVG_DIFF) > 10
This expression tells MapInfo Professional to select all records where the absolute value of the
average difference is greater than ten.
The Functions pop up contains many other functions, including area, perimeter, sin, cos, and date-
related functions. For a complete list of functions, see Chapter 16: Creating Expressions.
Verify
This button reviews the expression you have created and verifies that it is valid. This is particularly
helpful if you are new to writing expressions.
1. On the Query menu, click Select to display the Select dialog box.
2. To see a list of the records you have selected, select the Browse Results check box. MapInfo
Professional creates a Browser of the new selection table.
3. To display the query results in the currently active Map window, select Find Results in Current
Map Window. If there are no open Map windows, this check box is disabled. You cannot save
this check box setting to a template. This option is cleared by default.
MapInfo Professional names the table Query1. It will name the next temporary selection table
Query2. You can override MapInfo Professional’s default name and give the selection a descriptive
name. Type the new name into the Store Results in Table box. The table can also be saved as a
separate table with Save Copy As.
Example: Selecting
MapInfo Professional makes finding information and locations easy. You can use the Select feature
to create subset databases. As an example, we use the WORLD table to select countries with a
literacy rate greater than 90%.
2. On the Query menu, click Select to display the Select dialog box.
From the Operators drop-down list, choose > (the greater than sign).
Type 90.
Click Verify to confirm the syntax of your expression. Click OK to close the Verify dialog box.
5. Click OK to close the Expression dialog box. The Select dialog box redisplays.
7. Click OK. MapInfo Professional creates a Browser that contains the selections. Notice that the
selections display in both the World map and Browser.
There are two ways to create a new table that will contain a subset of the records from an existing
file. You can interactively select the objects representing the records you would like to put in the new
table using one of the select tools. Or, you can use the SQL Select command to choose a subset of
objects based on an SQL function. For an example using the SQL Select command, see Example 1
— Computing Population Density Using Area on page 322. Saving the resulting table is the
same procedure, whether you choose the objects interactively or use an SQL select statement.
Note: Many of the queries on the following pages can be done either by using the SQL Select
command or through the simpler Select command. Because SQL Select is more versatile
and more commonly used, the SQL Select dialog box is used in the following examples.
2. Select the objects that will make up the subset with the Select tool, Radius Search Selector
tool, or Polygon Search Selector tool. Shift-click to select multiple objects.
3. On the File menu, click Save Copy As and save the Selection table. The table can be saved
with any filename.
In the first part of this chapter, we discussed selections and query tables as a result of using Query
Select command. We now turn our attention to an extremely powerful and useful feature in MapInfo
Professional, querying by SQL Select.
While MapInfo Professional’s Select command lets you formulate sophisticated queries, SQL Select
goes even further. The records in the query table generated by the Select command don’t have any
information in them that isn’t contained in the records of the base table. They are, in fact, the same
records. They have been arranged so that they can be viewed together.
With SQL Select you can create query tables containing information that was only implicit in the
base table(s).
The SQL Select dialog box is one of the most elaborate ones in MapInfo Professional. But don’t be
intimidated. Once you learn what each box is used for, it is fairly simple to create powerful selection
statements. You can type directly into the boxes or you can use the pop up menus on the right to
enter items into the boxes.
The easiest way to describe the dialog box is to walk you through an example, step-by-step. This
example uses data from the WORLD table included in MapInfo Professional, so you can try out this
SQL Select exercise yourself. We have included a brief description of the parts of the dialog box with
each step. A complete description of each box is given after the example.
Note: Expanding the text controls is no guarantee that the resulting query can be handled by
MapInfo Professional. You can still receive the Query too complex error when adding
larger queries.
• POPULATION / AREA
While the WORLD table has a population column (pop_1994), it does not include a column for
country area. However, since the WORLD table has graphic objects associated with the records,
MapInfo Professional can compute the total area for each country.
Open the WORLD.tab table, and maximize its display by clicking the window’s maximize button. On
the Query menu, click SQL Select to display the SQL Select dialog box.
1. In the From Tables box, choose WORLD from the Tables drop-down list.
You can specify more than one table in an SQL statement. This example uses only one table,
WORLD.
2. You should fill in the From Tables box before you fill in the Select Columns box. MapInfo
Professional uses the tables in the From Tables box to generate the list of columns in the
Columns drop-down list.
3. Place your cursor in the Select Columns box and delete the asterisk (*). In this example, we will
specify a list of columns to be included in the resulting query table, instead of including all
columns.
Note: An asterisk (*) in the Select Columns box means by default that all columns would be
queried.
Remember, the query table is the temporary table that MapInfo Professional creates to store the
results of the query.
This creates a derived column. A derived column is a column that contains the results of
calculations performed on another column or columns. When MapInfo Professional creates the
query table, it will include two columns: the Country column and the pop_1994/Area(obj, “sq
mi”) column, which is our population density column. MapInfo Professional includes a units
statement with all geographic functions. If you wanted MapInfo Professional to return the area in
square kilometers, you would change “sq mi” to “sq km.”
Now, we need to build an expression that selects only those countries whose population density
is over 500 people per square mile.
8. Tab to the Where Condition box and select pop_1994 from the Columns drop-down list.
9. Select the division sign (/) from the Operators drop-down list.
11. Select the greater than sign (>) from the Operators drop-down list.
We have now built the expression “Select all countries whose population density
(pop_1994/Area(obj, “sq mi”)) is more than (>) 500 people per square mile.”
14. Tab to the Order by Columns box and select Country from the Columns list.
The Order by Columns box allows you to specify the order the records in the query table will
display. By selecting Country, MapInfo Professional will list the records in alphabetical order,
according to country name.
15. Tab to the Into Table Named box and type DENSITY.
By default, MapInfo Professional names the query table Query1. Subsequent query tables will be
named Query2, Query3, and so on. You can change the name of the query table by typing in a
new table name in the Into Table Named box. MapInfo Professional will name the query table
DENSITY.
16. Click Verify. MapInfo Professional checks the syntax of your SQL statement. If there are any
errors in your statement, MapInfo Professional gives you an error message telling you what the
error is and which box contains the error.
17. Select the Browse Results check box to create a Browser of the query table. If you do not select
Browse Results, MapInfo Professional still creates the temporary query table but doesn’t display
it. If you wanted to display the table after the face, choose the Browse option in the Window
menu and select DENSITY from the drop-down list.
18. To display the query results in the currently active Map window, select Find Results in Current
Map Window. If there are no open Map windows, this check box is disabled. You cannot save
this check box setting to a template. This option is cleared by default.
The first column contains the country name. The second column contains the population density.
Note that the countries are listed in alphabetical order (Order By: Country) and the population
density for each country listed is over 500 people per square mile (pop_1994/ Area(obj, “sq mi”)
> 500).
1. On the File menu, click Open Table and open the STATES table in a Map window.
2. On the Query menu, click SQL Select and fill in the SQL Select dialog box.
This creates a new table, HIDENSTY, that contains only those states with a relatively high
population density (population divided by total area). The asterisk (*) in the Select Columns box
transfers all of the columns in the STATES table to the HIDENSTY table.
3. On the File menu, click Save Copy As and save the Selection table. The table can be saved
with any filename.
Saving Queries
Any query created using the Select or SQL Select commands can be saved as an MapInfo
Professional query table. Query tables consist of a .tab file and a .QRY file. After you have executed
a Select or SQL Select statement, on the File menu, click Save Query to save the query as a table.
When you open this table, the tables on which the query is based are re-opened and the query is re-
executed.
Note: Queries made against other queries cannot be saved as a table or in a workspace.
Note: To save queries to a workspace, the Save Queries in Workspaces check box must be
selected in the Startup preferences. MapInfo Professional selects this check box by default.
1. Choose Options > Preferences > Startup. The Startup Preferences dialog box displays.
3. Click OK.
If you selected this option and open a workspace, the associated queries are regenerated. A
separate MapInfo Professional table (.tab) file for the queries is not created.
Note: Only queries created using the SQL Select or Select commands are saved in a workspace.
Loading a Template
You can load any saved query template.
1. In the Select or SQL Select dialog boxes, lick the Load Template button. The Load Dialog From
Query File dialog box displays. It lists the .QRY files.
2. Select the .QRY file you want to use, and click Open. The Select or SQL Select dialog box
displays with the values from the template already filled in. Simply execute your query to create
the query browser.
Renaming a Template
Rename a template by selecting and clicking the template name; enter a new name up to 64
characters.
Saving a Template
After you have finished writing your Select or SQL Select query, you can save the query as a
template.
1. In the Select or SQL Select dialog boxes, click the Save Template button to save the query to a
template, or query file. The Save Dialog to Query File displays.
2. Give the query file a name, select a folder, and click Save. Query files are saved with a .QRY
extension and are saved in the directory specified in the Directories preferences.
Note: The query does not need to be complete or syntactically correct to save it to a template.
Deleting a Template
To delete a template:
• Select the template name and press the Delete key. A dialog box displays prompting you to
confirm or cancel the operation. If no templates of the given type exist, a button to restore a
default template displays.
Deriving Columns
A derived column is a column in a query table whose contents are created by applying an
expression to the values of columns already existing in some base table. In the example above,
population density was a derived column. By default, the Select Columns box contains an asterisk
(*), indicating that all of the columns in the base table are to be included in the query table. If you
don’t want all of those columns, you should delete the asterisk and list only those columns that you
want to use. You aren’t limited to creating one derived column. You can create as many derived
columns as you want. Note that the more derived columns you create, the longer it will take MapInfo
Professional to execute the query.
You can also created derived columns based on the aggregate functions count, sum, avg, wtavg,
max, and min. For example:
• sum(Population)
would give you the population for the entire world.
The alias must follow the expression. It must also be separated from the expression by a blank
space and enclosed in quotes. For example:
You can use aliases to rename any column in a table, not just derived columns. For example, if each
country in your table is a separate sales territory for your corporation, you might want to rename the
Country column “TERRITORY”. The procedure is identical:
Aggregating Data
When you aggregate data, you perform a mathematical operation on all of a column’s values in all of
the records in your table. Unlike the Select command, which only allows you to perform
mathematical functions on individual records, SQL allows you to aggregate (or summarize) data
across records.
MapInfo Professional looks for each unique set of data values in the specified column or columns
and creates one row for each such unique set. When you aggregate data, you need to specify:
MapInfo Professional could also compute the total sales for each representative by specifying in the
SQL Select dialog box:
SALES_REP sum(SALES)
John 3300
Cathy 3000
Julie 2700
or MapInfo Professional could compute the average sales for each representative:
SALES_REP avg(SALES)
John 1100
Cathy 1000
Julie 900
or MapInfo Professional could compute the total sales for each month:
MONTH sum(SALES)
May 3200
June 2900
July 2900
• Count(*): counts the number of records in a group. It takes * as its argument because it
applies to the record as a whole, and not to any particular field in the record.
• Sum (expression): calculates the sum of the values in <expression> for all group records.
• Average (expression): calculates the average of the values in <expression> for all the
records in a group.
• WtAvg (expression): calculates the weighted average of the values in <expression> for all
the records in a group.
• Max (expression): finds the highest value in <expression> for all records in a group.
• Min (expression): finds the lowest value in <expression> for all records in a group.
For more about grouping and ordering your data, see the Help System.
Whenever you are working with multiple tables, you must put a statement in the Where Condition
telling MapInfo Professional how to match up the rows in the different tables. For example, you have
the WORLD table that contains countries and a table of economic statistics (Eco_Stats), also broken
down by country.
You want to create a query table that contains both sets of data:
• Select Columns: * (an asterisk indicates include all columns in the query table)
• From Tables: World, Eco_Stats
• Where Condition: World.Country = Eco_Stats.Country
The two columns that you want to match do not have to have the same name. For example, you
have a table of international customers (Int_Cust) that contains a sales territory column
(TERRITORY). This column contains continent names, since your company breaks up its sales
territories according to continent. If you wanted to temporarily join the two tables:
• Select Columns: *
• From Tables: World, Int_Cust
• Where Condition: World.Continent = Int_Cust.TERRITORY
For an example, see Example — Total Population and Area by Continent in the Help System.
Order of Clauses
The order in which Join clauses are performed does not matter. For example, each of the following
are valid clauses:
Error Handling
If an invalid Where condition that uses an OR as a logical operator is detected, MapInfo Professional
will indicate an error has occurred. Usually this error will display whenever MapInfo Professional
cannot find a join between two tables. For example, if you have specified the following incorrect
condition:
Geographic operators allow you to select objects on the basis of their spatial relationship to some
other object. MapInfo Professional has a special column name you use with geographical operators:
"obj" or "object". This column name refers to the graphic objects that are attached to your table.
The geographic operators go between the objects being specified. Select the geographic operators
from the Operators drop-down list.
The difference between Contains and Within on the one hand, and Contains Entire and Entirely
Within on the other, hinges on how the geographic comparison is made. For Contains and Within,
the comparison is based on object centroids. For Contains Entirely and Entirely Within, the
comparisons are based on the whole object.
In each case, object A contains object B because the centroid of object B is inside the boundary of
object A. However, in the cases at the left and in the middle, part of object B is outside the boundary
of object A. Only in the case to the right is all of object B inside object A. Only in this case could we
assert "object A Contains Entire Object B" or "Object B Entirely Within Object A." Further, if A
contains entire B, then A contains B, and If A is entirely within B then A is within B.
MapInfo Professional can perform a simple Contains or Within comparison more rapidly than a
Contains Entire or Entirely Within. Therefore, unless you are absolutely sure that objects are
completely inside other objects, you should use Contains and Within rather than Contains Entire
or Entirely Within.
Geographic operators provide a way of joining tables. When there are no columns in the tables on
which you can base your join, you can use a geographical operator to specify the join (in the Where
Condition field). If you want to perform a query that involves both a Cities table and a States table,
you can join the tables using either of the following expressions:
In either case, MapInfo Professional finds the cities within each state and then associates a row for a
city with the row for the state that contains it. In the same SQL Select query, you could also use
aggregate functions to count the number of cities per state or to summarize city-based data on a
statewide basis.
When you have a table of counties and one of customers, where counties are polygons and
customers are points, you could specify a geographic join using either of the following geographic
expressions:
When you want to join two tables, you must determine whether one of the columns in the first table
contains values that match one of the columns in the second table. Imagine that you have a table of
counties that has demographic information--the population of people in various age ranges, ethnic
groups, and occupational categories in each county. You may also have a database containing
information about customer orders. You want to examine these two tables and see if certain kinds of
orders come from counties having certain demographic characteristics. Perhaps you want to select
counties according to combinations of orders and demographic characteristics. To do this you have
to be able to join the two tables.
Suppose the counties table contains the name of the county. Similarly, one of the columns in the
order table contains the name of the county in which the order originated. Thus, these two tables
have one field in common, the county name. MapInfo Professional can use that common field to join
the two tables.
Select Columns: *
From Tables: Counties, Orders
Where Condition: Counties.CountyName = Orders.County
The order of the table names (in the From Tables field) is important. If both tables contain map
objects, the results table will only retain the map objects from the first table listed in the From Tables
field. Furthermore, when the query is complete, MapInfo Professional automatically selects some or
all of the rows from whichever table is listed first in the From Tables field. Thus, in the preceding
example, MapInfo Professional will select some or all of the rows from the Counties table. The
results table will also include data copied from the Orders table, but the Orders table will not be
selected per se.
When you join two tables, the number of rows in the results table depends on how well the two
tables match up. Suppose you have an Orders table with 10,000 rows, and you join the Orders table
to the States table, which has fifty rows. The results table may contain as many as 10,000 rows.
However, if some of the rows in the Orders table fail to match any of the rows in the States table, the
results table will contain fewer than 10,000 rows. Thus, if 400 of the rows in the Orders table do not
have a state name (perhaps due to data-entry errors), and if the relational join relies on the state
name, the results table may only contain 9,600 rows.
You can use Update Column to modify the results of an SQL Select multi-table join. When you want
to update a column in one table with information from another table, you can:
2. Use Update Column on Selection. The update automatically takes effect in the appropriate base
table.
• For more information, see Performing Outer Joins and Using the Instr Function to Find Data in
the Help System.
The first SQL Select statement produces a query table with two columns. The first column is a list of
all unique values in the data column and the second column lists the number of times that each
unique value occurs. The second SQL statement compares each data column value with all rows in
the Query table where the count is greater than one.
In the next example, there is a table EMPLOYEE that has two columns Id_Num and Name.
To find the duplicate values, perform the two SQL Selects, modifying them where indicated.
1. On the Query menu, click SQL Select and fill in the SQL Select dialog box.
Substitute the name of your data column for ID_Num and the name of your table for
EMPLOYEE. The number 1 in the Group By Columns box will group the row by ID_Num (the first
column). The 2 Desc in the Order by Columns box will arrange the records in descending order
based on the values in the count(*) field (the second column).
This SQL Select statement returns a query table with two columns. The first column contains
every identification number possessed by at least one employee. The second column contains
the number of employees that have that identification number. The rows are sorted by the
number of employees that have each id number (i.e., the count).
2. On the Query menu, click SQL Select and fill in the dialog box.
Also, change EMPLOYEE to the name of your table and ID_Num to the name of your data column.
In the example, the SQL statement returns a query table containing all of the rows from EMPLOYEE
with duplicated data column values. The where condition selects all rows from EMPLOYEE that
have an identification number that is the same as one of the ID numbers in the Count_By_ID query
table. This sub-select finds all identification numbers that occur more than once.
2. On the Query menu, click SQL Select and fill in the SQL Select dialog box, substituting your X
and Y values for the values mentioned above
As in the previous SQL query, replace EMPLOYEE with the name of your table, and ID_Num
with the name of the relevant column from your table.
3. Click OK. The resulting query table contains last names and first names plus a new column
called DISTANCE which records the distance between the fixed location (-101.697209,
36.550036) and the point associated with each row of the table.
4. To save the results in a permanent table, on the File menu, click Save Copy As, and save the
CUSTDIST table.
For instructions on entering SQL queries using the Expert button, see the Help System.
Thematic mapping is a powerful way to analyze and visualize your data. You
give graphic form to your data so that you can see it on a map. Patterns and
trends that are almost impossible to detect in lists of data reveal themselves
clearly when you use thematic shading to display the data on a map.
You can create thematic maps with MapInfo Professional® using the following
methods: ranges of values, graduated symbols, dot density, individual values,
bar and pie charts and continuous grid. There are also several variations on and
options within these methods, such as bivariate thematic mapping and inflection
point, that give you even more ways to analyze your data.
In this Chapter:
MapInfo Professional in Action. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .340
Using Thematic Mapping to Analyze Information . . . . . . . . . . . .340
Types of Thematic Maps . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .344
Working with Thematic Maps and Legends. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .362
Updating Columns using Thematic Mapping . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .365
Working with Legends . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .369
Working with Grid Surface Maps . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .374
For clarification of the uses of thematic maps in MapInfo Professional, see
MapInfo in Action in the Help System.
• For an example, see Can You Give Me an Example in the Help System.
With MapInfo Professional, you create different thematic maps by assigning these colors, patterns,
or symbols to map objects according to specific values in your table. MapInfo Professional’s bar and
pie charts allow you to make data comparisons for each record. Grids allow you to see continuous
change of your data across an area.
The Thematic Map feature uses a wizard made up of a series of three dialog boxes to help you
choose the type of thematic map you want, the table(s) and fields that will be used to construct the
map, and a variety of options to customize your map.
MapInfo Professional’s thematic templates make it easy to start constructing a theme. Just choose a
template that represents the type of thematic map you want. The templates are fully customizable
and can be saved as new templates for future thematic mapping needs. More than 40 templates
ship with MapInfo Professional.
A thematic variable can also be an expression. Choose Expression from the field list in place of a
data field to construct a statement that derives information from the data in your table(s). Although
an expression can be made up of more than one variable (for example, POP_1990 – POP_1980),
for purposes of thematic mapping, a complete expression is equivalent to one thematic variable.
See Querying Your Data in MapInfo Professional in Chapter 9 on page 310, and Creating
Expressions in the MapInfo Professional User Guide, which is located in the Documentation
subfolder of your installation directory, for more detailed information.
You can also create bivariate thematic maps, where one map object, such as a symbol, represents
two different pieces of data. The symbol color, for example, can represent one thematic variable,
and the symbol size can represent another.
If the data is in the same table on which you are basing the map, choose the desired field directly in
the Field list box in the Thematic – Step 2 of 3 dialog box.
If the data is in another table, you must first bring the data into the table on which you’re basing the
thematic map. This requires creating a temporary column using Update Column.
For example, you have a table of parking meters that contains the location of the parking meter and
the last time the parking meter was emptied. Using Individual Values you want to shade the parking
meter symbols according to the last time each meter was emptied. MapInfo Professional will assign
a color to each time. In Step 2 of 3, choose the parking meter table as your table, and choose the
field that contains the time each meter was emptied.
The temporary column can contain data taken directly from the other table, or you can aggregate the
data to create derived information for the temporary column.
For example, you have two tables: a table of county boundaries and a table of police stations. You
want to shade the table of county boundaries according to the number of police stations in each
county.
To do this, all the information you want to use must be in the county table. Therefore, you must add
police station data to this table.
Using Update Column, you create a temporary column in the county boundaries table that will store
the police station information. To create this column, the two tables must have a link so that MapInfo
Professional can access the data that goes into the temporary column. The link can either be a
matching field (like county name), or you can make the link geographically (police stations contained
within counties).
• For details on how thematic mapping works, see Methods of Thematic Mapping in the Help
System.
• Graduated symbol thematic maps do not require that your base map contain point objects.
Instead, graduated symbol objects are built regardless of the map object type. Therefore, even if
your base map contains region or line objects, you will still be able to create a graduated
symbols map.
• You can have multiple thematic layers per base map layer. In some cases, you do not have to
add another base layer to the map to create another thematic layer. You can display more than
one thematic layer at a time, as well as perform bivariate thematic mapping.
• You can use Layer Control to turn the display on or off for a given thematic layer. The layer it is
based on can continue to display. You can also set individual zoom layers on thematic maps.
The following lists the order of map layers from top to bottom (note that map layers are drawn from
the bottom up):
4. Ranged (or Individual Value) thematic layer – where All Attributes are applied.
When you create a new thematic layer, MapInfo Professional automatically inserts it into its proper
place.
Thematic layers are displayed in the list with this naming convention:
The variable list is truncated if there is not enough room to display each variable in your analysis.
• Ranges
• Bar Charts
• Pie Charts
• Granulated
• Dot Density
• Individual
• Grid
Each has its own purpose and unique attributes. For example, using Ranges of Values, you could
thematically shade a map of the world according to population density. You could shade the
countries with graduated shades of red, the darkest red representing the most densely populated
countries, and the palest red representing the least densely populated countries. At a glance you
can see the distribution of the world’s population.
You are not limited to representing numeric values with thematic mapping. Nominal values also may
be shaded thematically. For example, you have a table of underground cables. Those cables that
haven’t been serviced in the past six months are labeled priority status. Using Individual Values, you
can shade the cables according to their repair status. All records with the same value will be shaded
the same. See the individual sections later in this chapter for more information on each type of
thematic map. They offer general information on the methods available for creating thematic maps.
For more information on any of these methods and options, see Thematic Mapping in the Online
Help.
Ranged Maps
When you create a ranged thematic map, MapInfo Professional groups all records into ranges and
assigns each record’s object the color, symbol, or line for its corresponding range. For example, if
you wanted to visualize the population of the world by growth rate, you would shade countries
according to their reported growth rate amounts.
With the Ranged map feature, MapInfo Professional groups the growth rate amounts into ranges.
For example, in the next table, all countries that had growth rates between zero and one percent are
grouped into one range. Countries that had growth rates between one and 2.2 are grouped in a
separate range. Countries that have rates between 2.2 and 3.1 are in a third range, and those
countries reporting greater than 3.1 are in a fourth range.
All records are assigned to a range and then assigned a color based on that range. For example, the
countries with the higher growth rates are shaded in red. The other ranges are shaded in lighter
shades of red to light green and finally darker green. When you display the map, the colors make it
readily apparent which locations have the highest growth rate in relation to their neighbors.
Ranges are also useful when the size of the region is not directly related to the magnitude of the
data values. In our population density example in this section, we see that countries that are small in
size can be very densely populated, and countries that are large in size may not be densely
populated. Differences like these are more readily apparent when the regions are shaded in this
manner.
Equal Count has the same number of records in each range. If you want MapInfo Professional to
group 100 records into 4 ranges using Equal Count, MapInfo Professional computes the ranges so
that approximately 25 records fall into each range, depending on the rounding factor you set.
When using Equal Count (or any other range method), it’s important to watch out for any extreme
data values that might affect your thematic map (in statistics, these values are referred to as
outliers). For example, if you tell MapInfo Professional to shade according to Equal Count with this
database:
Ben and Miguel are grouped in the same range (since they have the two lowest values). This may
not produce the results you want since the value for Ben is so much lower than any of the other
values.
Equal Ranges divides records across ranges of equal size. For example, you have a field in your
table with data values ranging from 1 to 100. You want to create a thematic map with four equal size
ranges. MapInfo Professional produces ranges 1–25, 25–50, 50–75, and 75–100. (Since ranges use
“=>” and “<=”, they need to overlap.)
Keep in mind that MapInfo Professional may create ranges with no data records, depending on the
distribution of your data. For example, if you tell MapInfo Professional to shade the following
database according to Equal Ranges:
Penny 6 Kyle 1
Miguel 4 Angela 92
Linda 95 Elroy 89
Ben 10 Mark 10
MapInfo Professional creates four ranges (1–25, 25–50, 50–75, and 75–100). Notice, however, that
only two of those ranges (1–25 and 75–100) actually contain records.
Natural Break and Quantile are two ways to show data that is not evenly distributed.
Natural Break creates ranges according to an algorithm that uses the average of each range to
distribute the data more evenly across the ranges. It distributes the values so that the average of
each range is as close as possible to each of the range values in that range. This ensures that the
ranges are well-represented by their averages, and that data values within each of the ranges are
fairly close together. MapInfo Professional bases its Natural Break algorithm on the procedure
described by Jenks and Caspall in their article "Error on Choroplethic Maps: Definition,
Measurement, Reduction" from the Annals of American Geographers, June, 1971.
Quantiling enables you to build ranges that determine the distribution of a thematic variable across
a segment of your data. For example, you can quantile state population by urban population to
illustrate how urban population is distributed across the United States. Your legend will not indicate
that you have used Quantile to build your ranges. You can customize the legend so that it shows
which field you used to quantile the table.
When you create ranges using Standard Deviation, the middle range breaks at the mean of your
values, and the ranges above and below the middle range are one standard deviation above or
below the mean. You can also define your own ranges using Custom.
You can customize the color of each bar, create a frame around each chart, and fill the empty space
inside the frame with a pattern or color. In addition, you can change the bar chart’s orientation, such
as displaying horizontal bars instead of vertical (the default). You can also control where to display
the chart: over the object’s centroid (the default) or any of eight other locations.
You can also change the type of bar chart. In our example, you can create a multi-bar chart, where
each thematic variable has its own bar, or a stacked bar chart with each thematic variable on top of
one another, or a graduated bar chart, where the bars are graduated in size based on some value.
You can also scale the bars in a multi-bar chart independently from one another. To show negative
values in a bar chart map, the bars extend in the opposite direction to the chart’s orientation. Note
that negative values do not display in stacked bar charts.
Both pie and bar charts are particularly useful for analyzing demographic data. For example, you
have a table of demographic information for the United States. Your table shows the populations of
several major demographic groups. Using pie charts, you can show the population of each
demographic group, and see what fraction of the pie it makes up in each pie. This enables you to
see the distribution of demographic groups on a per state basis, or across the entire United States.
You can also look at one demographic group and see how the population of the group varies in
different states. For best results, use no more than four to six pie wedges per pie chart in your
analysis.
You can customize the color of each pie wedge as well as the borders of the wedges and the whole
pie. You can also specify the angle at which you want to place the first pie wedge, and whether the
variables go in a clockwise or counterclockwise direction. Like bar charts, you can also change the
pie’s orientation. The default is to place the pie over the centroid of the object.
You can choose from graduated pies or half pies. Graduated pies graduate the size of the pies
according to the sum of their components. Half pies distribute your data across half a pie instead.
For instance, use graduated symbols to show the number of housing units by city. When you select
the graduated symbols option, MapInfo Professional varies the size of each symbol according to the
value in the sales order field.
You can also represent how much interest each customer has expressed in a given product by
assigning a symbol whose size is proportional to the customer’s interest.
Graduated symbols maps work best when you use numeric data. If you are working with a layer of
restaurants, it makes no sense to create graduated symbols based on the type of cuisine each
restaurant serves. However, graduated symbols are appropriate when you want to show the number
of hamburgers sold at 20 different fast food restaurants.
There are three attributes you can customize on a graduated symbols map: the color, type, and size
of the symbol. To change the symbol’s attributes in Thematic Step 3 of 3, choose Customize
Settings and click the symbol icon in the Customize Graduated Symbols dialog box to access the
Symbol Style dialog box. The default symbol is a red circle.
In the Customize Graduated Symbols dialog box, the size of the symbol in the Symbol box is the
size for the value listed in the at Value box. All values between the high value and zero have
interpolated point sizes. If you want the symbols at the low end to be larger, increase the point size.
You can also display symbols for negative data values. To change it, click Options in the Customize
Graduated Symbols dialog box. There is a separate symbol picker so that you can make this symbol
as distinct from the symbol for positive values as you want. When you click the icon a different
Symbol Style dialog box displays, enabling you to choose a different symbol type, change the color
or the size, or change any combination of the three attributes. The default symbol for negative
values is a blue circle, and all values between zero and the low value (a negative number) also have
interpolated point sizes.
Dot density is particularly useful for showing raw data where one dot represents a large number of
something: population, number of fast food restaurants, number of distributors who carry a brand of
soda, etc.
For example, if you have a table of age demographics broken down into postal codes, you could use
the dot density option to show the concentration of small children in each postal code boundary.
1 Rensselaer County
There are three customizing options for dot density maps. You can specify the value of one dot. For
example, you have a table of population statistics, broken down by county. There are 10,000 pre-
school students in Rensselaer County, New York. If you display Rensselaer County according to the
number of pre-school students using the dot density method, each dot could represent 200 students.
In that case, there would be 50 dots in Rensselaer County. You can specify the number of units each
dot represents using the Customize Dot Density Settings dialog box.
When you increase the value each dot represents, you decrease the number of dots that display on
the map. You could modify your dot density map so that one dot represents 400 students. In that
case, there would only be 25 dots in Rensselaer County.
A second option is to change the size of the dots according to your needs, either large or small. If
you are working with large populations, or large counts of something, make the dot size smaller so
that the distribution of dots is easier to see.
Conversely, if your working with a small data set, making the dot size larger might illustrate your
analysis more clearly.
Note: Distribution of dots is random within the region. If you shade states according to population,
the dots for New York are spread out throughout the state; they are not concentrated in New
York City, where the majority of the state’s population lives.
Thirdly, in the Customize Dot Density Settings dialog box, change the color of the dot to either red or
black to add more variety to the final map. In this dialog box, you can select Circle or Square dot
thematics and specify the dot density width (in pixels) of the square or circle. In general, squares
look clearer at small sizes. At larger sizes, it may be more appropriate to use circles. You can create
multiple dot density maps on the same layer by varying these options.
In the Creating a Thematic Map - Step 3 of 3 dialog box, select the Customize Settings button to
display the Customize Dot Density Setting dialog box. Here you can change the number of units that
each dot represents, and also select the dot shape (square or circle) size, and color. You can specify
a circle size from 2 to 25 pixels in width. For a square, the size can range from 1 to 25 pixels.
In the Creating a Thematic Map - Step 3 of 3 dialog box, select the Customize Settings button to
display the Customize Dot Density Setting dialog box. Here you can change the number of units that
each dot represents, and also select the dot shape (square or circle) size, and color. You can specify
a circle size from 2 to 25 pixels in width. For a square, the size can range from 1 to 25 pixels.
For example, a soft drink distributor maintains a table of the supermarkets that buy soft drinks from
him. Each supermarket sells the distributor’s brand of soft drink for a different price. If the distributor
shades the supermarket points by price, using individual values, all stores that sell the soft drink for
49 cents are shaded one color, all stores that sell the soft drink for 51 cents are shaded another
color, and so on. Each unique value is assigned its own color. The distributor is able to see the price
distribution among the supermarkets and can determine where he should increase his sales volume,
based on the price.
If you are shading your points, lines or boundaries using nominal data, you can shade only by
individual values. Nominal data is either non-numerical data (name, type of cuisine served, or brand
of automobile sold) or numeric data where the numbers represent non-numeric data like an ID
number. Dates are considered numeric data and can be used in both ranged and individual values
maps.
For example, you have the results from a consumer survey. One question on the survey reads “What
is your favorite Sunday afternoon activity?” The possible responses are:
1. Sleeping
2. Watching TV
3. Taking a drive
4. Reading
You want to shade each consumer point with the response for the favorite Sunday activity. The
SUNDAY column of your table contains the number that corresponds to the consumer’s favorite
activity. However, the numbers in this column do not represent quantitative values. Going to the
movies is not greater than Playing or watching sports even though 7 > 5. When numbers are used
as names instead of values, you must shade your objects by individual values. The numbers are
only used to reference the pastimes so color can be assigned to them.
Important Notes:
When you are creating and merging theme templates:
• MapInfo Professional saves the custom label order only when the option to Save Individual
Value categories is selected in the Save Theme to a Template dialog box. This implies that
when you create a theme based on a template, MapInfo Professional applies the custom label
order only when the thematic expression creates the same categories as those in the template.
• When you are merging theme templates, the custom label order from the source template is
applied to the current theme only when the option to Merge Individual categories is selected in
the Merge a Template to a Theme dialog box and the template and current theme have the same
number of categories.
• Saving a Template - The entry for theme templates in the Options > Preferences > Directories
dialog box allows you to designate the directory where theme templates reside.
• For more information, see Saving Individual Categories in a Theme Template for an Existing
Thematic Map and Saving Individual Categories in a Theme Template when Creating a
Thematic Map in the Help System.
Grid mapping displays data as continuous color gradations across the map. This type of thematic
map is produced by an interpolation of point data from the source table. A grid file is generated from
the data interpolation and displayed as a raster image in a Map window.
Next Button
Continue to next step.
Range Template
Displays your data according to the ranges you set. Ranges are shaded with colors and/or patterns.
Choose from templates displayed as shaded lines, points or regions. Ranged thematic maps allow
you to illustrate data values across points, lines and regions. They are used to show a relationship
between the data values and geographical area (e.g. sales figures, household income) or to present
ratio information such as population density (population divided by area). Ratio information can be
shown in other types of thematic maps when you choose Expression in Step 2.
Bar Chart Template
Displays a bar chart of your thematic variables for each record in your table. Use bar charts to
analyze multiple variables per record on the map. Make comparisons between the size of the bars in
each chart to obtain information about a record in the table set, or compare one bar in all the bar
charts to draw conclusions about a variable across all of the records, or compare the height of the
bar charts to obtain information about the entire table. To indicate a negative value in a bar chart,
bars extend in the direction opposite to the charts orientation. Negative values do not display in
stacked bar charts.
Pie Chart Template
Displays a pie chart of your thematic variables for each record in your table. Pie charts are multi-
variable. Use pie charts on the map to analyze more than one variable at a time. You can compare
the size of the pie wedges in each chart to obtain information about a record in the table, or compare
one pie wedge in all of the pie charts to draw conclusions about a variable across all the records, or
compare the diameter of the pie charts to obtain information about the entire data set.
Graduated Template
Displays a symbol for each record in your table, the size of which is directly proportional to your data
values. A graduated symbol map shows data points with specific numerical values. It is useful for
illustrating quantitative information, such as high-to-low rankings. The size of the symbols is
proportional to the data values of the points. Points that have larger data values appear larger, and
points that have smaller data values appear smaller.
• For instructions on creating a Graduated Symbols thematic map, see Creating a Graduated
Symbols Thematic Map in the Help System.
Dot Density Template
Displays the data values as dots on your map, where each dot is equal to a number, and the total
number of dots in a region is proportional to the data value for that region. A dot density map allows
you to examine raw counts of data (e.g. population). Each dot represents a number of units. That
number, multiplied by the total number of dots in the region, equals the data value for that region.
• For instructions on creating a Dot Density thematic map, see Creating a Dot Density Thematic
Map in the Help System.
Individual Values Template
Shades records according to individual data values. Individual value templates are multi-variable.
Choose from shaded lines, points or regions. A thematic map that draws map objects according to
individual values is useful when you want to emphasize categorical differences in the data rather
than show quantitative information (e.g. types of stores in a given area, zoning classifications in a
given area etc.).
• For instructions on creating a Individual Values thematic map, see Creating an Individual Values
Thematic Map in the Help System.
Grid Template
Grid mapping displays data as continuous color gradations across the map. This type of thematic is
produced by an interpolation of point data from the source table. A grid file is generated from the
data interpolation and displayed as a raster image in a Map window.
A thematic variable can be the data value that is associated with the graphic objects (regions, lines,
and points) displayed in your map, such as the values in a column like Pop_1990, Buy_Power, or
Median Age.
You can also obtain your thematic variable from another table using Table > Update Column. Update
Column creates a temporary column in your base table where you can aggregate or calculate
information about your data.
You can also use an expression for your thematic variable. For example, you could use the following
expression to display population density:
Your map may have more than one variable, depending on the thematic method you choose. Pie
and Bar chart maps contain more than one variable; the other five types of thematic maps contain
one variable. Depending on your choice of a one-variable or multi-variable thematic map, one of two
Create Thematic Map- Step 2 of 3 dialog boxes displays.
1. Choose a table from the Table drop-down list. The drop-down list displays the tables that are
mapped in the active Map window.
2. Choose the table on which you want to base the map.
If you have objects selected in the Map window, the Selection from TABLE item also displays in
the list. This enables you to create a thematic map based on the selected items without having to
map the selection. You can also base your thematic map on a mapped query table.
3. Choose a field from the Field drop-down list. The drop-down list displays all the numeric fields in
the table you selected from the Table list. Choose the field or expression that contains the data
values.
4. Select the Ignore Zeroes or Blanks check box to ignore zero values and blank values in the
table. Because you are creating a thematic map based on one field in a table, any zero or blank
values in that field will cause the whole record to be ignored. If you are creating a grid map, you
can choose a table of regions to clip the grid against.
To create a multi-variable thematic map in the Create Thematic Map - Step 2 of 3 dialog box:
1. Choose the table on which you want to base the map from the Table drop-down list. The drop-
down list displays the tables that are mapped in the active Map window.
If you have objects selected in the Map window, the Selection from TABLE item also displays in
the list. This enables you to create a thematic map based on the selected items without having to
map the selection.
Fields from TABLE displays all the numeric fields in the table you selected from the Table list.
2. Choose the field, or create an expression that contains the data values.
Fields for Pie/Bar Chart indicates the fields or expressions you have chosen for your pie or bar
chart thematic map. The order of the variables in the Field for the Pie/Bar Chart list is the order
in which the variables appear in the legend.
• For bar chart thematic maps, the order in which the variables display in the legend is the
order in which the bars display from left to right on the map.
• For pie chart maps, the first variable in the legend corresponds to the pie wedge that begins
at the angle specified in the Customize Pie Style dialog box.
3. To display the Customize Pie Style dialog box, click Styles in the Create Thematic Map - Step 3
of 3 dialog box.
• Click Up to move the selected field or expression up one place in the Fields for Pie/Bar
Chart list. Up is unavailable when the selected item is the first item in the list.
• Click Down to move the selected field or expression down one place in the Fields for
Pie/Bar Chart list. Down is unavailable when the selected item is the last item in the list.
• Click the Right Arrow button to move the selected field in the Fields from TABLE list to the
Fields for Pie/Bar Chart list.
• Click the Left Arrow button to move the selected field in the Fields for Pie/Bar Chart list to
the Fields from TABLE list.
4. Choose Next to go on to Step 3.
Template
The buttons in the Templates group enable you to specify a name for a template, save the thematic
map as a template, and when modifying an existing theme merge the thematic map with another
template.
Save As
Displays the Save Theme to a Template dialog box. Type a unique name or select an existing name
and overwrite it. If you overwrite an existing template, you are prompted to confirm this action.
Merge
The Merge button is enabled only when you are modifying an existing theme, not when you are
creating a thematic map.
When you click OK a thematic map is created based on either the default or customized settings.
• For more information, see Customizing the Legend of a Thematic Map, Showing or Hiding a
Legend, and Deleting a Frame from a Legend in the Help System.
• For more information, see Saving a Theme to a Map Window in the Help System.
Note: A Grid thematic layer will not be indented in the Layer Control dialog box; a grid thematic
layer is a read-only layer.
3. Click the Thematic button at the side of the Layer Control dialog box. The Modify Thematic
Layer dialog box displays.
4. Change the thematic settings, style, or legends from this dialog box.
Note: The availability of certain dialog boxes depends on the type of thematic map you are
altering.
For a full discussion of altering thematic maps, see Modifying a Thematic Map on page 362.
• Choose Map > Change View. The Change View dialog box displays.
• Click the Change View button on the Main toolbar. The Change View dialog box displays.
The Change View dialog box allows you to set various parameters of the map including:
• Display the current zoom, scale or cursor position in the status bar (the default unit of distance is
miles which is specified in Map > Options).
• Change the zoom, scale, and the center point of the current map view.
• Behavior of the map when you resize the window.
• Resize the map to fit the new window, keeping the view the same.
• Set the map to preserve the current scale, so that resizing the window has the effect of letting
you see more or less of the map.
This example assumes the map distance units are in miles and the Layout paper units are in inches.
2. Double-click the map frame to bring up the Object Frame dialog box.
2. In the Modify Thematic Map dialog box, click the Merge button in the Templates group. The
Merge a Template into the Current Theme dialog box displays with a list of the same type
templates as your theme (all range of values templates, for example.)
3. Choose the new template and click OK to return to the Modify Thematic Map dialog box.
4. Click OK again to display the map with the new thematic template. The settings in this template
will be applied to your theme.
The Merge feature is only available once you have created the thematic map.
Diverging templates are useful when showing data that diverges more dramatically. An example
might be world literacy rates:
your session to a workspace, MapInfo Professional displays the Save Map Objects dialog box and
prompts you to do so. The dialog box indicates what types of objects will be lost (for example,
thematic layers, label layers) if you do not save your session to a workspace. You can turn off the
warning prompt in Map Window preferences.
For individual value themes you can also save the actual categories in a theme template. For
example, if you choose to build an individual value theme on a table to show land usage, you can
assign a different region style to each type of land usage (commercial, forest, residential, farm land
etc.). You may then want to take those same assignments and apply them to another table. You can
do this by storing the category in a template, it will be associated appropriately when the template is
applied to the second table.
To save individual categories in a theme template when creating a new thematic map or for an
existing thematic map, from the Modify Thematic Map dialog box press the Save As button and
specify a template Name. Check the Save Individual Value Categories box and click OK. A
template is saved that can be used to apply the stored individual categories to a second table. When
you choose Map menu and click Create Thematic Map the template's name will appear in the
Template Name field of the Create Thematic Map - Step 1 of 3 dialog box.
2. Choose Map > Create Legend. The Create Legend Step 1 of 3 dialog box displays.
Only title/subtitles can be set for theme frames. If a theme layer is selected, the title/subtitle
currently set for the thematic legend displays; you may edit these.
The other options are not available. Changing a theme legend's title/subtitle affects all
occurrences of the thematic legend. Additionally, fonts designated in Step 2 of 3 are not be
applied to thematic legends.
1. Make a thematic map the active Map window and choose Map > Create Legend. The Create
Legend Step 1 of 3 dialog box displays.
2. Select the thematic layer as one of the legend frames you want to include in the legend. Select
any other layers you want to include. Click Next. The Create Legend Step 2 of 3 dialog box
displays.
3. Fill in the Legend Properties and Legend Frame defaults. Click Next. The Create Legend Step 3
of 3 dialog box displays.
4. Select the theme frame to edit the title and subtitle(s). Click Finish when you are ready to display
the legend.
Only title/subtitles can be set for theme frames. If a theme layer is selected, the title/subtitle currently
set for the thematic legend displays; you may edit these. The other options are not available.
Changing a theme legend's title/subtitle affects all occurrences of the thematic legend. Additionally,
fonts designated in Step 2 of 3 will not be applied to thematic legends.
For example, you have a table of U.S. state boundaries and a table of U.S. city point locations. Using
ranges of values you want to shade the STATES table according to the percentage of each state’s
population living in urban areas. For MapInfo Professional to calculate this percentage, the
population for the cities must be in the STATES table.
Note: Some of the files used in this example may be from the MapInfo Professional Tutorial data
and is only available from the MapInfo web site, www.mapinfo.com/miprotutorial.
1. Open the base table (STATES.tab) and the city table (CITY_125.tab).
2. On the Map menu, click Create Thematic Map. Create Thematic Map Step 1 of 3 displays.
3. Choose Ranges and select a template name from the list. This is the style of the thematic map
you are creating. Click Next to display the Create Thematic Map Step 2 of 3 dialog box.
4. Choose STATES, since this is the table you want to shade and in the Field drop-down list,
choose Join. The Update Column for Thematic dialog box displays.
Table to Update is already set to STATES and Column to Update is automatically set to Add new
temporary column.
5. Select the CITY_125 in the Get Value From Table box. If that is the only other table open,
MapInfo Professional automatically displays its title in the list box.
Note: When you create a temporary column for a thematic map, the field must be a numeric
field. This is true for all thematic maps except individual values.
Since in our example, we are looking for the percentage of the population living in urban areas in
the United States, we need to calculate the total of the CITY_125 population; that is, we must
calculate the total of the population of each city in a each state. We need to put that sum into the
temporary column.
To put the data from the CITY_125 table into the temporary column of the STATES table, there
must be a link between the two tables that MapInfo Professional can use to access the data.
MapInfo Professional can often make this link automatically. In this example, both our tables
have a State field.
When you choose Join in the Update Column for Thematic dialog box, you can see that MapInfo
Professional has already set up the Specify Join dialog box with the STATE fields from both
tables. If the join were not calculated automatically it would be necessary to specify the matching
fields or geographic join.
8. Choose OK. MapInfo Professional calculates the sum and returns you to the Thematic – Step 2
of 3 dialog box. The Field list box displays the temporary column you created: SumOfTot_pop.
However, before we create the map, we still need to calculate the percentage of the total
population of each state that is urban. That information does not exist as a field in the table, so
you must build an expression to generate it.
9. In the Field drop-down list, select Expression. The Expression dialog box displays.
The expression SumOfTot_pop/Pop_1990 * 100 will give you the answer as a percent.
SumOfTot_pop/Pop_1990*100
11. Choose Verify to ensure that your syntax is correct, and then choose OK. The Create Thematic
– Step 2 of 3 dialog box redisplays showing the expression you created. Choose Next to go on to
the Create Thematic Map Step 3 of 3 dialog box.
12. Click the Ranges button and choose either Equal Count or Equal Ranges to customize the
ranges, whichever gives you the best representation of your data. Use Round By to round to a
decimal place or whole number. Customize the styles to best illustrate your analysis by clicking
the Styles button. Customize your legend by clicking the Legend button.
For details about using point or line objects to represent thematic variables, see Bivariate Thematic
Mapping in the MapInfo Professional Help System.
2. Choose Table > Update Column. The Update Column dialog box displays.
3. Choose the table to which the temporary column will be added in the Table to Update list.
4. Choose the table from which MapInfo Professional will retrieve the update information in the Get
Value from Table list.
5. To add a temporary column, select the Add new temporary column option from the Column to
Update list.
If necessary, specify the information MapInfo Professional will need to associate the data (join) in
the two tables by using their common tabular or graphic data.
6. Choose how to produce the column data by specifying how to calculate the information based on
columns and expressions at the Calculate and of lists.
7. Select the Browse Results check box to display the table with its new temporary column in
browser format.
8. Click OK. The temporary column is added based on the specified information.
When you make changes to the data table, the new temporary column is automatically updated.
To save the table with its new temporary columns, use File > Save As. If the temporary columns
are added to a table in a workspace, the changes are automatically saved when you save the
workspace.
The Help System contains the following topics about Bivariate Thematic Mapping:
• The first dialog box allows you to select the layers that will appear in the legend window
• The second dialog box allows you to set options for each frame in the legend window
• The third dialog box allows you to create attribute driven legends, save frame settings to
metadata, create the Legend with joined information.
To create a legend window:
1. Choose Map > Create Legend. The Create Legend - Step 1 of 3 dialog box displays.
The primary function of this step is to choose the layers that will contribute to the legend. The
legend will have one frame for each layer that appears in the destination list box "Legend
Frames". By default, all layers that can contribute to the legend will appear in the “Legend
Frames” list box. The frames will be drawn in the order which they appear in the list, so Up and
Down buttons are provided for reordering.
By default, all layers are selected and appear in the Legend Frames list box. If you want to
choose specific layers for the cartographic legend you are creating use the Remove button to
move the layer name to the Layers list box. Any layer you move to the Layers list box will not be
included in the legend.
Note: A layer must contain style attributes to appear in the list box; therefore raster layers are
not included in the list box.
2. Complete the Create Legend - Step 1 of 3 dialog box selecting the layers that will contribute to
the legend. Press the dialog box’s Help button for specific dialog box field information.
6. Complete the Create Legend - Step 3 of 3 dialog box attributes for each Legend Frame. Click
Finish to display the legend.
• For more specific information, see Creating a Legend Window and Modifying the Legend
Window Properties in the Help System.
You can save the Legend window to the map table metadata as a default that will be invoked when
the legend is next created. The metadata defaults are used to initialize the Create Legend Step 3
dialog box. To override metadata defaults, select your own settings in the dialog box and save your
changes by writing them to the map table metadata.
1. On the Map menu, click Create Legend. The Create Legend – Step 1 of 3 dialog box displays.
2. Select the layers you want to use in the legend and click Next. The Create Legend – Step 2 of 3
dialog box displays.
3. Specify the legend properties and legend frame defaults and click Finish or click Next to select
and set attributes for each legend frame.
• If you click Finish, your legend displays.
• If you click Next, the Create Legend – Step 3 of 3 dialog box displays.
4. Specify the legend frames and give titles to them in the fields provided and click Finish to display
your legend. For more details on the options available in the cartographic legend feature, see
Creating a Cartographic Legend on page 422 or see About Cartographic Legends in the Help
System.
To customize a legend:
3. Choose Map > Create Thematic Map to display the Create Thematic Map - Step 1 of 3 dialog
box.
4. Choose one of the thematic style buttons and choose Next. The Create Thematic Map - Step 2
of 3 dialog box displays.
5. Choose the table on which you want to base the shading, and choose the fields or expressions
containing the data values. Different prompts display depending on what type of thematic map
you selected.
6. Choose Next. The Create Thematic Map - Step 3 of 3 dialog box displays.
8. Choose the items you want to customize and make the desired changes.
• For specific instructions, see Customizing a Thematic Legend and Displaying or Hiding a
Floating Thematic Legend in the Help System.
1. From the Legend menu, select Refresh to display the Refresh Legend window.
2. Select Refresh Style Sample Size and select either Small or Large.
You can also change the default value for style sample size shown in Create Legend - Step 2 of 3.
In the Legend Preferences window (Options > Preferences > Legends), select either Small or
Large Style Sample Size. The initial default is Large. After changing the preferences, you can
Refresh Styles through the user interface.
• For more information, see Metadata Support for Cartographic Legends in the Help System.
• MapInfo Professional saves the custom label order only when the option to Save Individual
Value categories is selected in the Save Theme to a Template dialog box. This implies that
when you create a theme based on a template, MapInfo Professional applies the custom label
order only when the thematic expression creates the same categories as those in the template.
• When you are merging theme templates, the custom label order from the source template is
applied to the current theme only when the option to Merge Individual categories is selected in
the Merge a Template to a Theme dialog box and the template and current theme have the same
number of categories.
• For more information, see Creating Custom Labels for Legends in the Help System.
Grid theme maps are appropriate analytical tools in traditional GIS environments and other
industries where the data points have measured values that reflect those locations. For example,
use grid shading to illustrate temperature changes, snowfall amounts, or change in elevation.
The next figure shows the light to dark gradual transition across the United States, which represents
low to high average annual temperatures. The continuous shading allows you to derive
measurements at places other than where measurements were taken.
MapInfo Professional contains one read/write grid handler and a Grid Engine tool kit that shows you
how to create your own. Once you have written a grid engine, you place this file in your MapInfo
Professional application directory and set the preference in the Map Window dialog box. Specifically,
to set the default grid writeable handler, go to the Map window preferences and specify your grid
handler file. The available handler formats depend on what grid handlers have been installed.
Changing the default grid handler will change the default file extension of the grid file name.
Grid files are stored by default in the data directory specified as a preference. Grid files can be
opened from the File menu, click Open command like other MapInfo Professional supported file
types.
When you open a table that has a grid filename associated with it, MapInfo Professional searches
for the file if it cannot find it immediately. For example, the search capability can simplify opening
tables if your .tab file refers to an image that resides on a CD-ROM drive, and different letters are
used to designate the CD-ROM drive on different systems.
1. Search for the file where specified by the FILE tag in the .tab file.
2. Search for the file in the same directory as the .tab file.
3. Search for the file in the Table Search path specified in the Directories preferences.
MapInfo Professional either opens the table as though it found the file in the specified location, or it
will report an error because the file could not be found in any location.
• DEM–USGS ASCII(*.DEM)
• DTED–levels 1, 2, and 3 (*.DT0, *.DT1, *.DT2)
• GTOPO30 (*.DEM)
• MapInfo Vertical Mapper (*.GRD, *.GRC)
You can open these grid file types directly from the Open dialog box. You will see the file extensions
listed next to the Grid Image file type in the Files of Type drop-down list in the bottom of the dialog
box. Because the handlers are read-only, they cannot be used to create grid files during the thematic
mapping process.
If the relief shading option is enabled (Create Thematic Map Step 3 of 3 > Styles > Grid
Appearance), a separate file will be created to store the hill shade information. The hillshade file is
stored in the same location as the grid file and has the same base name as the grid but with the
extension “.MIH”. If the grid file is read-only, for example, it’s located on a CD, the .MIH files will be
created in the same location as the .tab file. The .tab file will contain a new metadata key, for
example:
The Vertical Mapper Grid files can also be opened directly in MapInfo Professional. The *.GRD or
*.GRC extension is listed with the other Grid Image formats in the Files of Type drop-down list.
Currently, grids using the Vertical Mapper handler cannot be modified in the Modify Thematic Map
dialog box. They are read-only. They must be created or modified in the Vertical Mapper source
application, which is available from MapInfo. In addition, you cannot create .GRD or .GRC files in
MapInfo Professional, however, you can convert *.GRD files to *.MIG files with Gridtools.MBX.
In this Chapter:
Buffering Your Data . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .378
Editing Objects using the Set Target Model . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .385
Creating Territories by Combining Objects . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .393
Creating and Manipulating Objects . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .396
Buffering Your Data
Understanding Buffers
A buffer is a region that surrounds a line object, another region, symbol, or any other object in a Map
window. For example, you can create a buffer region that surrounds Interstate 90 by 440 yards on
either side. You can create a buffer region that surrounds the proposed school district by five miles
on all borders. Both the 440 yards and five miles are their respective regions’ buffer radii. The buffer
table is then joined to data associated with the original buffered objects.
Note: The maximum buffer resolution is 500 segments per circle. This affects the entry you can
make in the Smoothness field of the Buffer Objects dialog box.
Creating a Buffer
To buffer objects:
1. Select the objects that you want to buffer. Make sure there is an editable layer in the Map
window. The output buffered objects will be placed in that layer.
Note: There are certain table variables that you need to be aware of that will determine the
aggregation method used in joining the table of buffers to data associated with the
original objects. See Table Variables for this information.
2. On the Objects menu, click Buffer. The Buffer Objects dialog box displays.
3. Select appropriate buffer radius, segments per circle, distance type calculation to use, and buffer
method as described.
• Radius — The radius is the width of the buffer you want to create around the object you
selected. The Value and the From Column radio buttons give you different ways to specify
that width.
• Value — Type a value into this field if the radius of the buffer you want to create is a specific
distance. Examples might include 10 feet, 20 kilometers, 50 chains.
• From Column — Select this radio button if the buffer you want to create is specified in a
particular column or is to be calculated by an expression. Then select the column or choose
Expression from the drop-down list.
If you select Expression, the Expression dialog box displays. Specify the expression you
want MapInfo Professional to use to calculate the buffer radius and click OK to return to the
Buffer Objects dialog box.
• Units — Select the units for the buffer from this drop-down list. Options include: inches, links,
feet, US Survey feet, yards, rods, chains, miles, nautical miles, millimeters, centimeters,
meters, kilometers.
• Smoothness — Type the number of segments per circle that determines the resolution of
the curves in the buffer polygon. You can enter a number between 3 and 100. The default
value is 12 segments per circle.
The more segments you enter, the smoother the curve. The fewer segments, the more
jagged the curve. More segments produce a smoother curve; fewer segments make a more
jagged curve.
Note: Creating a buffer is time consuming. The higher the smoothness (more segments), the
longer it takes to create a buffer.
• One buffer of all objects — Select this option to create one buffer for all of the objects you
have selected. For example, if you are buffering Pennsylvania, New York and New
Hampshire, one buffer will be created for all three of these objects.
• One buffer for each object — Select this option to create one buffer for each object you
have selected. For example, if you are buffering Pennsylvania, New York and New
Hampshire, each object will have a separate buffer.
• Buffer Width Distance using Spherical — Select this option if you want the buffer to take
into account the curvature of the Earth. Using this method, MapInfo Professional converts the
data to Latitude/Longitude and then creates a mathematical calculation of the buffer. You
cannot use this method for non-Earth projections.
• Buffer Width Distance using Cartesian — Select this option if you want the buffer to be
calculated as if the map is on a flat plane. Cartesian coordinates are a pair of numbers, (x, y),
defining the position of a point in a two-dimensional space by its perpendicular projection
onto two axes which are at right angles to each other. If you are using a Latitude/Longitude
projection, this option is disabled.
4. When you have completed your entries and selections in this dialog box, press the Next button.
The standard Data Aggregation dialog box displays.
Note: If the editable layer is the Cosmetic layer, the Data Aggregation dialog box will not display
because there is no data in the layer to aggregate. The OK button displays in place of the
Next button. Press OK to begin the buffer operation.
5. Highlight each of the columns to complete the fields in this dialog box.
• No Change — Select this option to keep the value for the selected column in the target row
unchanged. This option only displays when you combine objects into a target object.
• Blank — Select this option to store blank values in the selected column(s). To store blank
values in all displayed columns, select the No Data check box. Only choose the Blank option
to blank out individual columns.
• Value — Select this option to store the value that displays in the edit field in the new row.
When you select this option, enter an appropriate value in the field.
• No Data — Check this check box if you want no data aggregated to any column.
6. After setting the appropriate data aggregation parameters, click OK. MapInfo Professional
calculates the buffer according to the parameters you set and creates the new objects in the
editable layer. The original objects remain unchanged. Once MapInfo Professional has created
the buffer region, it puts it in the editable layer.
Table Variables
If the table containing the selected table and the editable table are either the same table, or contain
the exact same table structure (same number of columns with each column in both tables having the
same name and data type), then the Sum and Average radio buttons do not display. The data is
taken from the current selection, and the results are placed in the editable layer.
If the table containing the selection objects and the editable table are different, and the table
structures are different, then the Sum and Average radio buttons are displayed. In this case, the data
aggregation for the editable destination table column is initially blank, and you needs to select the
column from the input selection table to derive the data from.
1. To create a selection to buffer, select the object in the map. This step is not required if you want
to buffer all objects in a particular table.
2. On the Table menu, click Buffer. The Table Buffer dialog box displays.
Buffer Radius
The buffer radius determines the dimensions of the buffer region. For example, if you want to create
a region that covers an area one mile on either side of a freeway, set your buffer radius to 1 mile. If
you choose to use a field from the table or an expression, MapInfo Professional will calculate the
radius of the buffer based on that value.
You can set the radius to be a constant value or you can choose a data value from the table to be
used as the radius. For example, to create buffers around major cities that reflect the size of their
population, choose the population field as the value.
You can go even further to calculate the buffer radius using an expression. For instance, you want to
create buffers around cities showing the population density. Since you do not have a field containing
population density, you will need to write an expression that can calculate density from population
and area. This is no different than writing an expression for thematic mapping or query selection.
Spherical calculations measure distance according to the curved surface of the Earth. This means
that the distance from the boundary of the original object to the boundary of the new buffered object
may vary from node to node.
Cartesian calculations measure distance on data that has been projected onto a flat, X-Y plane. This
produces buffers that are exact in width, as long as the data is not in a Latitude/Longitude projection.
The availability of the Spherical and Cartesian buttons depends on the type of calculation that is
appropriate to the table’s projection. The Cartesian button will not be available if the table is in a
Latitude/Longitude projection. Conversely, the Spherical button will not be available if the table is in
a Non-Earth projection.
Buffer Methods
You can create a single buffer to include all selected objects, or create individual buffers for each
object. There are two ways you can buffer multiple objects at the same time. The first method is to
create one buffer for all objects. Buffers are produced around each input object, and the resulting
buffer objects are combined into a single output object.
The more powerful method is to create one buffer for each object. For example, you have a layer of
satellite offices. You would like to create a five-mile radius buffer around every satellite office symbol.
You select all office symbols (with either the Select All command or Select tool), on the Objects
menu, click Buffer, and select the option to create one buffer for each object. MapInfo Professional
creates five mile buffer polygons around each point. With this method, MapInfo Professional
considers the resulting buffers as individual region objects and does not combine them into one.
Once you create a buffer region, you can search for objects within it, as with any other boundary.
MapInfo Professional calculates a native decimal degree width (converting from the input
measurement unit) for one location in the object, typically the center of the bounding box. Thus, the
measured On Earth (Spherical) distance from the boundary of the original input object to the
boundary of the new buffered object may vary slightly from node to node. On small objects the
distance may be negligible. On objects that span a large distance, such as the United States, the
distance variation may be measurable.
In MapInfo Professional, you can produce Cartesian calculated buffers. Using this option, the data is
considered to be in a flat-projected coordinate system, and the measured buffer widths are
calculated using Cartesian distances. This produces exact buffers (as measured by the Cartesian
Distance functions) as long as the data in not in a Latitude/Longitude projection.
Types of Buffers
There are two basic types of buffers that we support in MapInfo Professional.
• Concentric ring buffers allow you to create circles around map object(s) or point(s) and
compute aggregated values for underlying data that occur within each ring. You would use
concentric ring buffers to determine the number of customers within a certain radius of a store or
other location.
• Convex hull buffers create a region object that represents a polygon based on the nodes from
the input object. You can think of the convex hull polygon as an operator which places a rubber
band around all of the points. It will consist of the minimum number of points so that all points lie
on or inside the polygon. With convex hull buffers, no inside angle is greater than 180 degrees.
For specific instructions, see Specifying Buffer Calculations in the Help System.
• For specific access instructions, see Concentric Ring Buffer Tool in the Help System.
1. In the Map window, select the object(s) you want to place buffers around.
2. On the Tools menu, point to Concentric Ring Buffers and click Create Ring Buffers. The
Concentric Ring Buffers dialog box displays.
3. To add a ring, specify the radius in the Radius field and click Add Ring. Continue this until you
have added all of the rings you want from the smallest to largest.
5. To set the smoothness of the ring buffer, type a number between 3 and 100 in the Smoothness
field. The larger the number, the smoother and less jagged the curves of the ring.
6. Type the table name and select the path in which you want to store this buffer information.
MapInfo Professional stores the concentric ring buffer information into this table including the
columns containing the ring number, radius value, radius units, area, and area units for each
ring.
Use the Modify Ring and Delete Ring buttons to change the ring settings, or click Clear All to start all
over and create new concentric rings. To change the style of a buffer ring, select it in the Buffer Radii
list, and use the style buttons to change the fill pattern and line style for the buffer. You can also
collect data within each buffer ring using the Calculate Ring Statistics button.
The resulting region object(s) are based on the nodes from the input object. The Convex Hull
operation can be thought of as an operator that places a rubber band around all of the points. It
consists of a minimal set of points such that all other points lie on or inside the polygon. Since the
polygon is convex, no interior angles are greater than 180 degrees. No attribute data is aggregated
in this operation. To use Convex Hull, a Map window must be active, it must have an editable layer,
and objects in the editable layer must be selected.
1. On the Objects menu, click Convex Hull. The Create Convex Hull dialog box displays.
2. Select the type of convex hull objects you want to create. You have two options:
• One output object for all input objects button is the default setting. It creates one convex
hull object around all of the selected objects.
• One output object for each input object button creates a convex hull object around each
selected object.
3. Click OK. Your map redisplays. The convex hull object(s) is displayed over the input objects. If
you want to save this data, save the editable table. The convex hull object is selected when it
displays.
4. To change the fill of the convex hull object, do one of the following:
• Double-click it to display the Region Object dialog box. Click the Style icon at the bottom of
the dialog box to display the Region Style dialog box. Make any changes you like and click
OK.
• Select the convex hull object, if it is not already, and on the Options menu, click Region
Style. The Region Style dialog box displays. Make the changes you want and click OK.
The Set Target editing model in MapInfo Professional allows you to set a map object as the target for
editing, then create a modifying object that will act as the cookie cutter that overlays the target and
performs the editing action on the target. Set Target is located under the Objects menu.
The Set Target model for editing map objects can be broadly described as a three-step process:
2. Choose and select another object or objects to act as the modifying object for the editing
operation. You can also create a new object.
3. Perform the edit operation (combine, split, erase, erase outside, or overlay nodes).
The following table describes valid cutter/target objects for supported object processing operations:
Other
Cutter Target Cutter Target Target non-target
Closed X X X X X X
Linear X X X X X
Text
Points X X X
Multipoints X X X
Collections X X X
You are not limited to working with map objects in the same layer. While the target objects must be in
the Editable layer, you can choose the modifying objects from another layer.
The set target process is essentially the same whether you want to combine objects or create new
objects by splitting objects or erasing portions of objects. Each operation is discussed individually in
this chapter.
In addition to creating new map objects, the Set Target model allows you to control how the data
associated with the target object will be transferred to the new object or objects. The next section
discusses a number of data aggregation and disaggregation methods that give you tremendous
flexibility with editing map objects.
• For specific instructions, see Setting a Map Object as a Target in the Help System.
Theoretically, the size of an object is only limited by the amount of memory in the system, but for
practical reasons, a limit is imposed to work within limits of file size and most system memory limits.
Currently, the object size limit is 1,073,741,823 bytes in memory. This limit is imposed so that an
object of this size can be saved into a MAP file. All MapInfo Professional files have a theoretical limit
of 2GB, but due to header size and other required Map file contents, the actual size limit has to be
somewhat less.
The node limit is 134,217,724 nodes in any object. This is the actual number of nodes that can fit
into this 2GB memory size limit. It will be difficult to reach this node limit because memory allocation
may prohibit it. It may not be possible to create a Map this size on a computer being used to
accommodate an object this size; the program may throw an error when you try it.
When combining objects, you can choose from several methods of data aggregation, including:
• Sum – adds the field values from the original objects to create a total for the field in the new
object.
• Average – averages the field values from the original objects.
• Weighted average – gives more weight to one value over another when averaging. You can
choose a numeric field in your table as the weighting factor or choose area (where the
weighted average is based on the relative geographic area of the regions to be combined).
• Value – stores a specific value in the field of the new object.
• No Change – maintains the value of the target object in the new object.
When splitting or erasing portions of a map object, you can choose from:
The Data Aggregation (or Disaggregation) dialog box displays after you have set the target,
chosen the modifying object, and chosen an editing operation. In these dialog boxes, you must
specify how you want the data calculated for each field. Once you are satisfied with the aggregation
method, you can carry out the editing operation.
• For specific instructions, see Clipping a Region of a Map and Setting Clip Region Options on the
Fly in the Help System.
To toggle between the map and the clipped region, you may find it useful to use the Clip Region On
/Off command.
Note: To clip a raster image, use an object created in the cosmetic layer, or an object from an
existing vector layer.
• For specific instructions, see Saving a Clipped Region of a Map in the Help System.
1. MapInfo Professional geographically combines the selected objects. The new object represents
the geographic union of the original objects. Therefore, if you select two adjacent region objects
and choose Combine, MapInfo Professional combines the regions into a single object, and the
border between the regions disappears.
2. MapInfo Professional performs data aggregation. Data aggregation is a process where MapInfo
Professional calculates what the column values for the new object should be, based on sums or
averages of the values of the original objects.
Perhaps you have a table of sales territories, and the table contains demographic information about
the number of households per territory. Using the Combine command, you can combine two of the
sales territories into one, large territory. In the same operation, MapInfo Professional also can
calculate the number of households in the new territory by adding the values from each of the
original territories.
You should assign a target object if one of the objects you are combining is more important than any
of the other objects. For example, if you want to add small, unnamed islands to an existing
"mainland" region, you should make the mainland region the target object. If you designate the
mainland region as the target, MapInfo Professional is able to retain the mainland region's name
after the objects are combined.
Using Combine with Set Target allows the mainland region to retain its name after the objects are
combined. You can only set one object as the target at a time when using Combine with Set Target.
The modifying object can consist of more than one object.
Keep in mind that the Objects Combine command works with selected map objects. To apply the
combine operation to an entire table, use Select All in the Query menu. To combine into groups
rather than objects, or output to a separate table, use Combine Objects Using Column in the Table
menu.
2. On the Objects menu, click Set Target. The object displays in a different style to indicate that it
is the target object.
3. Select (or create and select) one or more map objects from any layer in the Map window. This is
the modifying object.
4. On the Objects menu, click Combine. The Data Aggregation dialog box displays.
5. Choose the appropriate aggregation method (or No Data) for each field in the Destination list.
See the definitions for these methods in Aggregating and Disaggregating Data on page 387.
Note: To select more than one field in the Data Aggregation dialog box at a time, use these
keystrokes:
• Shift-click to apply the same method to consecutive fields
• Ctrl-click for non-consecutive fields.
When you have chosen the aggregation methods for each field, click OK.
6. Select one or more columns by clicking in the list at the top of the Data Aggregation dialog box.
7. Choose a data aggregation method: Blank, No Change, Value, Sum, Average, or Weighted
Average. (Depending on whether you specified an editing target, some of these aggregation
methods may not be available.) MapInfo Professional updates the column list in the upper half of
the dialog box to show the chosen method.
• For example, if you choose Average, you are telling MapInfo Professional to calculate the
average of the column values of all the selected objects. This average is stored in the column
of the new row.
• Aggregation methods are described below.
8. Repeat steps 6 and 7 for all columns in your table and click OK.
• To simplify this process, select multiple columns at one time by Shift-clicking and/or Ctrl-
clicking in the list of columns. If you select multiple columns, and then choose an aggregation
method, MapInfo Professional applies that method to all selected columns.
If your table contains a large number of columns, it can be time-consuming to specify aggregation
methods for all columns. However, MapInfo Professional remembers your aggregation methods for
the remainder of your session; thus, the next time you choose Combine, you do not need to
respecify all aggregation options.
MapInfo Professional computes the new object and displays it as a single object. Use the Info tool to
view the aggregated data (if any) associated with the object.
• For more information, see Combining Points, Linear, and Closed Objects into a Single Object
and Specifying Collection Object Attributes in the Help System.
You could simply choose OK, without changing any of the default aggregation methods. However,
there is no guarantee that the default aggregation methods will produce meaningful results. By
default, MapInfo Professional uses the Sum method for all numeric columns; however, depending on
your data, it may not make sense to total all of your columns.
For example, perhaps your table contains demographic information, such as median income
statistics. If two adjacent regions have different median income values ($30,000 and $35,000), and
you combine the two regions, it does not make sense to total the two values; instead, you should
choose Average or Weighted Average as the aggregation method.
Clearing a Target
If you do not want to edit an object after it has been set as the target, use Clear Target. The object
will no longer be highlighted or marked for editing. An object will also be cleared as a target
automatically if it has been deleted or modified by Combine, Erase, Erase Outside, Split, Overlay
Nodes, or if you have chosen a new target.
To clear a target:
The Area Proportion radio button is active if the selected field is numeric. Also the Value entry field
is enabled when you select the Value radio button and the drop-down list contains “none”.
Splitting Objects
Splitting Objects allows you to divide the target object into smaller objects, using another object as a
cutter. You can also combine objects into territories using redistricting. For more about the
redistricting process, see Redistricting — Grouping Map Objects into Districts in the MapInfo
Professional Help System. For example, you might use Split to separate a large territory into smaller
units.
You can split either closed objects (regions, ellipses, rectangles, or rounded rectangles) or open
objects (polylines, lines and arcs) using the Split command. You cannot use Split on points or text
objects or to cut objects that are not in editable layers.
As mentioned previously, splitting objects requires that the cutter be a closed object. With Split Using
Polyline, the polyline cutter will first be transformed into a region suitable for the cutter operation.
The region created will be displayed for acceptance. The polyline(s) used as the cutter must be
contiguous and non-branching. In general, if the cutter polylines were to be combined, the result
would be a one single section polyline. If the cutters are not polylines, and are not contiguous and
non-branching, then an error will occur, and the operation will be cancelled.
Note: You cannot use Polyline Split on text objects or to cut objects that are not in editable layers.
• For specific instructions, see Splitting MapObjects Using a Polyline in the Help System.
Remember, when you are combining regions, you are also combining the data associated with the
regions. If you combine regions without somehow aggregating the data associated with the regions,
that data will be lost. For some applications, you might not want to save your data. For example, you
are merging census tract boundaries to create school districts. The census tract data is of no interest
to you; you merely want the boundaries. There is no reason to aggregate the data, but you would
want to apportion the demographic data. For most tasks, you’ll want to save the data associated with
the regions.
1. The first method, Combine, works with objects that are selected.
2. The second method, Combine Objects Using Column, is used to combine objects into groups
based on a specified column.
3. The third method, Redistricting, is covered in Redistricting — Grouping Map Objects into
Districts.
Most frequently, the Combine Regions options are your easiest and quickest options for combining
regions and creating territories.
• MapInfo Professional geographically combines the selected objects. The new object
represents the geographical union of the original objects and the border between the regions
disappears.
• MapInfo Professional performs data aggregation. As described earlier in this chapter, data
aggregation is a process where MapInfo Professional calculates what the column values for
the new object should be, based on sums or averages of the original objects.
Your setup of the Layer Control dialog box depends on whether you want to copy the result object
to another layer (and, thus, save the original objects) or combine the objects in the original layer
(and, thus, lose the original objects).
If you want to copy the result object, make the region’s layer Selectable and another layer Editable.
Specify a target object, then select the objects using any selection method and on the Objects
menu, click Combine. This will display the Data Aggregation dialog box where you tell MapInfo
Professional how to combine the data. Fill in this dialog box and click OK to combine the objects to
combine the objects’ data. This method was discussed earlier in this chapter.
If you want to combine objects in the original layer, make sure that the layer is editable, select the
objects in the layer, and on the Objects menu, click Combine. Do not set a target. The Data
Aggregation dialog box displays. After the operation is complete, a new object will be added to the
layer, and the original objects will be deleted.
For example, you have a layer of states. You want to combine the state boundaries to create
sales territories. The data record associated with each state looks like this:
2. Choose the appropriate column from the Group Objects by Column popup. In our example, you
would choose the SALES_REP column from the Group Objects By Column popup. MapInfo
Professional combines all records that have common data in the column. In other words,
MapInfo Professional combines all records that have the same sales representative.
4. Once you have completed both dialog boxes, press OK. MapInfo Professional combines the
records based on the column specified in the Group Objects By Column list. MapInfo
Professional also aggregates the data and combines any objects associated with the records.
• For specific instructions, see Combining Object Using Column in the Help System.
• For specific instructions and additional related topics, see Creating a Voronoi Polygon in the
Help System.
A Multipoint object consists of a number of points that have been grouped into a single object. The
Multipoint object displays in a Browser window as a single record, and all the points within the object
have the same symbol. One method you can use to create a multipoint object is to select a group of
point objects and combine them.
A Collection object consists of multipoint objects, zero or one polyline objects, and zero or one
region objects that have been grouped into a single object.
• For specific instructions and additional related topics, see Grouping Objects using Multipoint and
Collection Object Types in the Help System.
• Enclosing Objects
• Checking Regions
• Cleaning Objects
• Snapping Nodes and Thinning Objects
• Disaggregating Objects
• Erasing Objects
• Adding Nodes to an Object
• Displaying and Selecting an Object's Nodes
• Moving an Object's Nodes
• Copying and Pasting an Object's Nodes
• Deleting an Object’s Nodes
• Checking Regions/Tables for Incorrect Data
Most of us do not get to make maps solely for our own use. We use the maps
we create in MapInfo Professional® to create presentations, to publish them on
the web, or to include as part of another document. This chapter will help you
create presentation quality maps and prepare you for printing and exporting
your work.
• To change the style of all regions in the same layer, click to display the Layer Control
dialog box, highlight the layer you want to change and click Display.
Using either method the Region Style dialog box displays.
2. Make the region changes you want to see in your map window in this dialog box and click OK to
save them. If you opened Layer Control, click the OK button in that dialog box as well to see the
results.
Fill
These are the fill options you have in the Region Style dialog box.
Pattern
Choose a palette for patterns. If you do not want to use a pattern, choose the letter N, for
none; the foreground and background color are disabled. If you choose the solid black
pattern, the background color is disabled.
Color
Choose a color for the object(s)’ foreground. The Sample box displays the pattern using the
foreground color you chose. The foreground color is applied to the part of the pattern that
displays as black. Therefore, to make the object a solid color, choose the solid black pattern
in the Fill Pattern palette and a color from the Foreground Color palette. The color you chose
displays in the Sample box as a solid-colored region.
Background Color
Select the check box to display a background color; clear for a “transparent” background.
Choose a color for the object’s background. The background color is applied to the part of the
pattern that displays as white. Background color is grayed if you chose the solid pattern.
Border
These are the border options you have in the Region Style dialog box.
Style
Choose the border line style.
Color
Choose the border line color.
Note: For more information, see Creating Custom Colors in the Help System.
Width
Choose the border line width. In the Pixels field, enter a number from 1-7, each number
represents a line width in pixels. In the Points field, select or enter a point size.
Sample
Displays the sample of the pattern and color selections you have made.
• To change the style of all lines in the same layer, click to display the Layer Control
dialog box, highlight the layer you want to change and click Display.
2. Make the line style changes you want to see in your map window in this dialog box and click OK
to save them. If you opened this dialog box from Layer Control, click the OK button in that dialog
box as well to see the results.
Style
Select the new line style from the drop-down list.
Color
Choose a color for the line from this drop-down list. The Sample box displays the pattern
using the color and line style you select.
Width (in Pixels and Points)
Choose the line width from one of these drop-down lists. In the Pixels field, select a width of
the line in pixels. In the Points field, select a point size from the drop-down list, or enter a
point size.
Interleaved
If you select a line style that uses multiple passes to create it, MapInfo Professional enables
the Interleaved check box. Keep in mind these notes:
• The Interleaved option is not enabled for solid lines
• The Interleaved option is not activated for borders
• The Interleaved option is not appropriate for all multiple pass lines
• To change the style of all symbols in the same layer, click to display the Layer Control
dialog box, highlight the layer the symbol displays in and click Display.
Using either method the Symbol Style dialog box displays.
2. Complete your selections and entries in this dialog box and click OK. If you opened this dialog
box from Layer Control, click the OK button in that dialog box as well to see the results.
Font
Choose a font from the drop-down list. In addition to the symbol sets provided by MapInfo,
the list displays any fonts installed on Windows. The Custom Symbols category lists those
bitmaps you have created and saved to the CUSTSYMB directory.
Size
Choose a size or type a different point size. The maximum size is 240 points.
Symbol
Choose a symbol type from the symbol palette.
Color
Choose a color from this list for the symbol.
Reload
Click this button when you have added your own custom symbols to update the list. If you
restarted MapInfo Professional since adding the new custom symbols you do not need to
select the Reload button.
Full View
Click this button to display large images in a separate window.
Rotation Angle
Specify number of degrees the symbol should be rotated; 0-360.
Background
In this box, you can specify a background. Select one of these:
• None: Click this option to display no background.
• Halo: Click this option to display the symbol with a white border outline.
• Border: Click this option to display the symbol with a black border outline.
Effects
In this box, you can specify special effects for the symbol. Not all of these options display all
the time. You can select one or more of these:
• Bold: Click this check box to draw the symbol in boldface.
• Drop Shadow: Click this check box to draw a drop shadow under the symbol.
• Show Background: Click this check box to display the custom bitmap symbol with the
background with which it was created.
• Apply Color: Click this check box to replace all non-white bitmap pixels with the color you
select from the Color palette.
• Display at Actual Size: Click this check box to display the image at the actual size.
Sample
When you select a symbol style, it displays in this box to show you a sample of the symbol
using the designated selections.
• To change the style of all text entries in the same layer, click to display the Layer
Control dialog box, highlight the layer the text entries display in and click Display.
Using either method the Text Style dialog box displays.
2. Make your selections and entries in this dialog box and click OK. If you opened this dialog box
from Layer Control, click the OK button in that dialog box as well to see the results.
Font
Choose a font from the Font drop-down list.
Size
Choose a point size from the Point Size drop-down list.
Text Color
Display the color palette; choose a text color.
Background
In this box, you can specify background options for the selected text. You can select only one
of these options:
None — Set no specific background for the selected text.
Halo — Display the text outlined in a designated color.
Box — Surround the text with a box in a designated color.
Color — Display the color palette; select a color to halo or box the text.
Effects
In this box, you can specify special effects for the selected text. Not all of these options
display all the time. You can select one or more of these:
Bold — Select this check box to display text in boldface.
Italic — Select this check box to display text in italic.
Labels are always selectable and editable, so you do not have to make the map layer editable or
selectable to work with them. And, since labels are not Cosmetic objects, you do not have to
remember to make the Cosmetic layer selectable or editable to label your map. They are already
part of the map layer.
Saving labels is easy. Because labels are attributes of the map object, you do not have to remember
to save them to a separate table. Any label edits you have pending, or changes you have made to
the Label Options settings, are easily saved to a workspace.
You can label your map automatically through Layer Control, in the Label Options dialog box. All
global settings for labels are controlled in the Label Options dialog box.
Text you create yourself using the Text tool is a text object and behaves like other objects you draw
on your map such as squares and circles. Although labels are no longer text objects, text objects are
still useful for additional map annotation such as titles. For information on text objects, see Working
with Text on the Map in Chapter 8 on page 287.
The Autolabeler tool, available from the Tool Manager (on the Tools menu, click Tool Manager),
creates labels as text objects in the Cosmetic Layer. This application may be useful if you need to
create labels that can be transferred to a permanent table. In addition, you can create text objects
and convert labels into text objects using another tool from the Tool Manager set, the Labeler tool,
which is explained later in this chapter.
The Chr$(13) function adds a carriage return to the first line. Using the Label tool, click a country.
MapInfo Professional labels it with the result of the expression.
• For instructions and examples of this topic, see Creating Labels using Expressions in the Help
System.
1. Choose File > Save Workspace. The Save Workspace dialog box displays. The Save
Workspace dialog box allows you to save information about the tables and windows used in your
current session.
2. Select the drive, folder, and file where you want the workspace saved.
This problem occurs most often when the deleted rows are located near the top of the Browser. To
avoid the problem, pack the table before you create the labels.
Using AutoLabeling
In addition to label content, you control the position, display and look of automatic labels in Layer
Control. The settings in the Label Options dialog box allow you to set conditions for displaying
labels, in what style they will display, and in what position for all the objects in the layer.
• Select the layer or layers in the Layer Control dialog box and select the Auto Label check
box for each layer. When you return to your map, labels display for all layers you selected.
You can easily turn the display of automatic labels on or off. In Layer Control, clear the Auto Label
check box to turn labeling off. Any settings you have specified in the Label Options dialog box will be
deactivated. You can also go into the Label Options dialog box and click Off in the Visibility group.
Either way, when you go back to your map, the labels no longer display. These settings also apply to
labels you have edited.
1. Select a layer in the Layer Control dialog box and select the Label button. The Label Options
dialog box displays.
2. Select the appropriate options for your new labels and click OK to save them.
Visibility — Use these options to indicate whether this label should display.
Display within Range — You can also display labels within a specified zoom range, much the
same way that you display map layers within a certain zoom range. Select a layer, click Label,
and in the Label Options dialog box, click the Display within range button. This activates the
Min. and Max zoom boxes. Fill in the minimum and maximum zoom distances in the appropriate
boxes.
When labeling a dense table of streets such as a StreetPro Display layer, only a few of the
streets will be labeled when the map is zoomed out.
The check boxes on the right side of the Visibility group control which labels display and
determine how they appear on the map.
Allow Duplicate Text — Select the Allow Duplicate Text check box to allow duplicate labels for
different objects to display, for example, Portland, OR and Portland, ME. This option is also used
with street maps to label street segments individually.
Allow Overlapping Text — Select the Allow Overlapping Text check box to allow labels to be
drawn on top of each other. Some labels do not display because they overlap labels that are
have been given higher priority on the map.
Label Partial Objects — Select the Label Partial Objects check box to label polylines and
objects whose centroids are not visible in the Map window.
Maximum Labels — To specify the maximum number of labels you want to display on your
map, type the number in the Maximum labels box.
Styles — In this box, select the styles for the Labels and Lines in the selected layer.
Simple — Create a callout by using a simple line that connects the label to the object’s centroid.
Label lines display after you move the label from where it was originally created.
Arrow — Create a callout by using an arrow and line that connects the label to the object’s
centroid. Label lines display after you move the label from where it was originally created.
Position — Use the Anchor Point and Offset options to specify the label’s placement. The
anchor point is the label’s position relative to the map object. Click one of the buttons to select an
anchor point. The next table describes each of the nine anchor point buttons.
Anchor Point
Button Position Description
Top Left Places the label above and to the left of the anchor point.
Top Center Centers the label directly above the anchor point.
Top Right Places the label above and to the right of the anchor point.
Left Places the label directly to the left of the anchor point.
Right Places the label directly to the right of the anchor point.
Below Left Places the label below and to the left of the anchor point.
Below Center Centers the label directly below the anchor point.
Below Right Places the label below and to the right of the anchor point.
The anchor point is an ongoing attribute of the label. For example, if you anchor a point object’s
label at Center Left and you increase the label’s font size, the text will grow to the left. This way,
the text can never overwrite the point.
The default anchor point varies with the type of map object you are labeling:
• Regions default to Center.
• Lines default to Above Center.
• Points default to Right.
Horizontal label
Select this option to display all labels horizontally.
If you are working with a layer that has line objects such as a street map, check the Rotate Label
with Line or Curve labels along segments box to position the labels along the lines.
Label offset is how far away a label is from its anchor point. Specify the number of points you
want the label to be from the anchor point in the Label Offset box.
The label’s anchor point and offset move a label with respect to its current location and the
current zoom. Whenever you want to make minor adjustments to the label’s position, you should
use these two options.
You can also select and drag a label to move it, but this is not recommended because you are
actually moving the label location on the map. If you drag a label a few pixels, the distance you
move it is in the current map units, regardless of the zoom. For example, if you are displaying a
map of the United States and drag New York state’s label a few pixels, at that zoom, the label
looks fine. However, if the Map Units distance is in miles and you zoom in on New York state, the
label will display much farther away than at the previous zoom.
Note: Affecting Label Priority: Labels display following the order of records in the table. To
change the order of priority for displaying labels, save a copy of the table, sorted in order
of priority -- most important record first -- and use that table for labeling instead of the
original.
In a table sorted alphabetically by street (like the StreetPro Display layer) this often means that
streets with names beginning with A, B, or C are almost the only labeled streets on your map.
Labeling effectively gives a small side street like “Aberdeen Street” priority over “State Highway 177”
or other major roads that might actually be useful in navigating or orienting a viewer. This will be
true for any dense StreetPro Display layer.
• See Set Font Anti-Aliasing Options for Labels for more information in the Help System.
1. Choose Map > Layer Control to display the Layer Control dialog box.
4. Position the Text tool where you want the arrow or line to point and type the text you want as the
call-out.
5. Double-click the text with the Select tool. The Text Object Attribute dialog box displays.
7. Click OK.
8. Select the text object and position it where you please. A line is drawn from the new position of
the text object to its original position.
Note: You can double-click the text and set the label line in the Text Object dialog box.
Label Styles
The Text Style dialog box gives you a number of choices for label and text object styles. You can
also change the styles of multiple selected labels at a time.
To make style changes for all the labels, click the Style button in the Label Options dialog box to
display the Text Style dialog box.
To change the styles of a selected label or labels, select the label(s) and either on the Options
menu, click Text Style, or click the Text Style button in the Drawing toolbar to display the Text Style
dialog box. If you change the styles of multiple labels at once, hold down the Shift key as you select
each label.
Make the style changes you want. When you return to the map, the selected labels display with the
style changes you specified. The available styles are explained in the next table.
Option Description
When you choose either the Box or Halo backgrounds, the Color list is activated. Click it to display
a palette of colors for the halo or the background. The color you choose corresponds to the button
that is currently activated. The color displays in the box and in the Sample. Click OK to accept a
color.
Labeling Interactively
Although you will probably do most of your labeling automatically, you will need interactive labeling
to edit and create individual labels.
Editing Labels
It is very easy to edit individual labels, either those you have displayed automatically or those you
have created interactively with the Label tool. Using the Select tool, double-click the label. The Label
Style dialog box displays. The changes you make in Label Style dialog box apply only to the selected
label. Changes you want to apply to all the labels must be done through Layer Control in the Label
Options dialog box.
.
The Label Style dialog box allows you to make changes to the text, position, and angle of the labels.
You can also make changes to callouts, add, or delete them.
To change the label content, simply type the new label text into the Text box. The other controls in
this dialog box work the same way as in the Label Options dialog box.
Moving a selected label is the same as moving other objects; simply drag them with the mouse. If
you move a label that has a callout, the line will reappear automatically after you move the label.
You can also rotate the label manually about its anchor point. When you select the label, use the
rotation edit handle that appears to the lower right of the label.
• For more information, see Moving Labels You Created Manually in the Help System.
The Labeler tool in the MapInfo Professional Tool Manager helps you use text objects to perform
several common labeling tasks:
• Convert labels into text objects, so that they can be saved in a permanent table.
• Create labels for only the currently-selected objects.
• Draw text objects one at a time using the Text Label button. This allows you to create
multiple annotations for a single map feature, which is something you cannot do using labels.
• For more information about the Labeler tool, see the Tools section of the Help System.
Saving Labels
Whenever you manually edit automatic labels (including deleting using the Edit menu, and click
Clear or press the Delete key), change the settings on automatic labels, or create labels with the
Label tool, you will need to save your map to a workspace to have them display in your next session.
For example, label settings are deactivated by default. You check the Auto label attribute in Layer
Control to display automatic labels on your map and do not save the change when you close the
table. The next time you display your map, the labels do not display because the settings go back to
the defaults. As with the other Layer Control options, label settings are temporary unless you save
the table to a workspace.
Manually edited labels and labels created with the Label tool behave differently. These are edits to
the table, not temporary settings. If you close a window or a table and you have label edits pending,
MapInfo Professional will specifically prompt you to save the session to a workspace.
This also applies to labels you have deleted using the Edit menu, click Clear or press the Delete
key. You may not have any labels visible on your map, but because deleting a label is an editing
operation, MapInfo Professional will ask you if you want to save the edits to a workspace.
While you can print individual Map, Browser, and Graph windows directly without the Layout window
(on the File menu, click Print), you can only print a thematic legend by first adding it to a Layout
window. You can also print the data contained in the Info tool, statistics and message windows from
the Layout Window.
The Layout window is available as soon as you open MapInfo Professional. On the Window menu,
click New Layout window to access it. When the Layout window is active, MapInfo Professional puts
a Layout menu on the menu bar, allowing access to a number of layout features.
When you add your windows to the Layout window, MapInfo Professional places them inside layout
frames. Using frames to hold your maps and browsers allows you to resize and reposition your
windows with ease. The contents of the frame match the contents of the corresponding Map,
Browser or Graph window.
The Layout window provides dynamic linking between it and a parent window. For instance, if you
change the zoom in a Map window, that map will be updated in the Layout window once you make
the Layout window active again.
The rest of this chapter is devoted to learning how best to create a layout, move around in the
Layout window, and customize your layout using a variety of options.
You can put a maximized Map window into a frame in a Layout. The frame object’s dimensions are
created according to the Map window’s size instead of the page layout size. MapInfo Professional
also allows the map’s image to completely fill the frame, preserving the map’s center and zoom
settings. If you double-click on the frame, you will notice that the Frame Object dialog box has a
check box: Fill Frame with Contents. This allows the map image to fill the entire frame. The box is
checked by default for all Map windows in frames.
4. Click OK. The selected objects align according to the settings you specified.
Note: Your alignment settings are saved from one use to the next within a session. Be sure to
check both the vertical and horizontal settings before you click OK.
If you are creating a multi-page layout, MapInfo Professional displays the page breaks by default. If
you wish to turn off the page breaks, clear the Show Page Breaks box in the Options dialog box.
In order to better position or resize layout objects, you may want to change the zoom level of the
Layout window to see more detail. Keep in mind that you are changing the overall zoom of the
Layout window, not the zoom of individual windows in frames. (If you want to change the zoom level
on a frame containing a Map window, change the zoom for the Map window itself.)
There are four ways to change the zoom level of the Layout window:
• Use the Zoom-in and Zoom-out tools. These tools work exactly as they do in the Map window.
You can click the Layout window with the tools or draw a marquee box around the areas of the
Layout window.
• On the Layout menu, click Change Zoom to set the zoom. You can set the zoom anywhere
between 6.3% and 800%.
• Use the number keys (1–8) on your keyboard to set the zoom level. As the numbers increase,
the zoom increases geometrically. For example, press 1 to get a zoom of 6.3%, press 2 to get a
zoom of 12.5%, and press 3 to get a zoom of 25%. (Remember to use the number keypad, and
make sure Num Lock is on.)
• Use the View commands in the Layout menu: View Actual Size, View Entire Layout, Previous
View.
In order to display your objects properly, you may need to bring an object forward in front of other
objects.
You can use the Bring to Front and Send to Back commands to change the order of objects. Click an
object with the Select tool. Choose the Bring to Front option to move the object into the foreground.
Choose the Send to Back object to move the object into the background.
When you select an object using the Ctrl key along with the Select tool, MapInfo Professional
selects the object one layer down. Selecting again chooses the next layer.
For example, in a MapInfo Professional session, if you want two views of a map, you may simply use
the Grabber tool and shift to a different location, and then return via Map menu (click Previous
View). To get two views of the same map for a Layout, you must have two separate Map windows.
There are many techniques that can be used to prepare the windows to make output easier.
Note: Some of the files described in this example may refer to MapInfo Professional Tutorial data,
which is available on the MapInfo web site, www.mapinfo.com/miprotutorial.
2. Choose the area you want to show in detail and zoom in on it. The Map window contains the
detailed view.
3. As stated previously, there must be a separate Map window for each view you want to include in
a layout. Instead of re-opening the tables to re-create the Map window, on the Map menu, click
Clone View to create a duplicate Map window.
4. A new Map window displays. Zoom out on this map to create the overview map.
The new Map window is independent of the original Map window. You may add or
remove layers without changing the original map.
When you create a map to place in a Layout window, you usually need to spend more time making
your labels look aesthetically pleasing. It is also more likely that you will want to save these labels to
a separate layer. With the default labeling, label styles can be changed; however, customized labels
are not saved in their own layer for future use or editing. To create labels that can be easily saved,
use Autolabel.mbx or Labeler.mbx. These MapBasic applications allow you to create labels that can
be saved to a separate layer for future use.
• For instructions on using the AutoLabeler tool, see the Tools section of the Help System.
You bring your windows into the Layout window by adding them to placeholders, or frames. A frame
is a graphic object through which you can view a window. Each frame may contain the contents of
one Map, Graph, Browser, or Legend window.
First, decide what you want to put in the Layout window. You can choose whether you want to
display all, some, or none of your open windows.
When no windows are open, MapInfo Professional creates a blank Layout. When there are
windows open, MapInfo Professional displays the New Layout Window dialog box.
Situation Description
One Frame for MapInfo Professional places a single open frame in the center of the layout.
Window You select the contents of this frame through the drop-down menu that lists
all open windows.
If you choose a Map or Graph window from this list and there is an active
map legend, MapInfo Professional automatically places the legend in the
layout. You can reposition or delete this legend from the layout. Legends are
positioned in the same way as Map, Browser, and Graph windows. Their
relative locations are preserved on the screen.
Frames for all This option tells MapInfo Professional to place all open windows in the layout.
Currently open Since MapInfo Professional places windows in the approximate location and
Windows size as they appear in the MapInfo Professional window, you should arrange
and size the windows before you bring them into the layout.
No Frames If you prefer, you can create a blank layout by choosing the No Frames
option. If you do not have any windows open, choosing New Layout Window
automatically creates a blank layout. The New Layout Window dialog box
does not display.
When MapInfo Professional first opens a Layout, it sets the page size and orientation (portrait or
landscape) according to the current setting for your printer. The current setting for your printer is
determined by the printer specifications designated in Options > Preferences > Printer. You can
change the printer settings for the active Layout window through File > Page Setup, or by using the
Set Window Printer command in the MapBasic window. When you later open that Layout when the
printer setup is different, the Layout uses the page size and orientation for that printer setup. The
sizes and positions of objects in the Layout are the same, but the way the Layout is broken into
pages is different.
After you create a Layout, that Layout is the currently active window. MapInfo Professional places
the Layout menu item on the menu bar. Use the Layout menu to choose options for working with
Layouts.
Note: If you draw a frame when no windows are open, MapInfo Professional places a blank frame
in the Layout window.
1. Click the Frame button in the Drawing toolbar and the cursor becomes a small cross.
3. Click and hold the mouse button and drag the cursor diagonally until the dashed box outlines the
area where you want the frame.
4. Release the mouse button. When there are no windows open, an empty frame displays with "No
Window" inside. When there are one or more open windows, the Frame Object dialog box
displays.
This dialog box is slightly different for each type of frame. The Map Scale options are
only available when you select a Map window in the frame.
Note: The Fill Frame check box does not display for Browser, Cartographic Legend, and Graph
windows.
The Frame Object dialog box allows you to change the width, height, and center of the frame and
to set a specific scale for a map. When there are several windows open on the screen, MapInfo
Professional displays its choice in the Window drop-down list. This list allows you to choose
which window you would like in your frame.
5. In the Window drop-down list, select the window you want to add and review the options for
creating this frame.
• Bounds X1 and 2, Bounds Y1 and Y2 — Use these fields to define the x and y boundaries
for the new frame. When you change bounds entries, the Center, Width, and Height entries
change accordingly. When you change the bounds entries, the Map Scale changes as well.
• Center X, Y — Use these fields to define and adjust the center point of your new frame.
Note: When you make a change to the Center X or Y entries, the Width and Height bounds do
not change.
• Width, Height — Use these fields to define and adjust the width and height of the new frame.
• Change Map Zoom — Click this radio button to implement the correct map scale without
changing the size of the frame. This option changes the zoom of the actual Map window so
that the Layout frame is in the correct scale. This option is selected by default. Type the scale
you want within this frame in the Scale. The units are set by the Paper Unit setting in the
System Preferences dialog box.
Note: Changing the map scale with this option will not change the values in the Bounds fields or
the Width and Height fields because there is no change to the size of the frame, only the
look of the map within the frame. To undo the change to the map zoom, return to the Map
window and click Previous View.
Once you have created a frame, you treat it much like any other graphic object. You can change its
size and position, its line style and fill pattern, and you can cut, copy, and paste it.
• You can access instructions for making a frame transparent in the Help System.
When you resize a legend frame to make it smaller, it crops the legend rather than shrinking it to fit.
The text styles (for example, font, size) used in the cartographic and theme legend windows are
preserved in the layout.
Adding a legend to the Layout window is a different process, depending on the type of legend. You
can add a theme legend to a layout even when no theme legend displays in the MapInfo
Professional desktop.
To do this, make sure the Layout window is active and click the Frame button.
1. In the Layout window, click and drag to draw the frame for your theme legend. When you release
the mouse, the Frame Object dialog box displays.
2. In the Window drop-down list, select the theme legend and click OK. The theme legend displays
in the layout frame. This is also how you add other types of windows on your desktop to the
current layout.
In cartographic legends, you must create the legend on your desktop (on the Map menu, click
Create Legend) before you can add it to the Layout window.
To move a frame:
1. Click the frame with the Select tool and hold down the mouse button.
2. When the cursor becomes a four-headed arrow (after about one second), drag the frame to the
new location and release the mouse button.
Choose the objects you want to align and on the Layout menu, click Align Objects. The Align
Object dialog box displays.
Specify the appropriate vertical and horizontal alignment. Choose from the following options:
Distribute Distribute
Each alignment can be performed with respect to each object or to the entire layout. When you
choose the entire layout, the objects are aligned with respect to the top, bottom, left, and right edges
or margins of the layout.
If you want to align objects with respect to each other, the objects are aligned with respect to an
imaginary rectangle, called the bounding rectangle, that completely encloses the objects. The
horizontal and vertical settings you choose position the objects at the top, bottom, left, right, and
horizontal or vertical center lines of the bounding rectangle, rather than at the edges of the layout.
The Distribute option tells MapInfo Professional to distribute the vertical and horizontal space
between objects evenly. You can perform multiple alignments in one layout.
• For more examples, see Examples of Aligning Objects in a Layout Window in the Help System.
Note: The Map Window Preference setting Use Cartographic Scale affects the entries in the
Change View dialog box.
Accurate scale is more important on the printed map. To get the correct scale for output, you must
coordinate the Map window with the Layout window. You must also decide on the desired end result.
For example, you may want a map that has a 1:25000 scale and fits in a nine inch Layout frame. If
this is the case, you will have to alter the zoom level of your map to fit these conditions. Or, in the
case where you must show a set distance across the map, you may have to allow for a larger page
size. The following two formulas will help you set the right map zoom, scale, and frame width.
For example, you need to make a map that will be in a scale of 1:24000 and fit in an eight inch
frame. You need to determine the zoom level that will accommodate the map scale and frame width.
Calculate the following:
On the Map menu, click Change View and enter 3.03 miles as your new zoom level.
For example, you need to make a map that will be in a scale of 1:100000, and you must view a
twenty mile zoom level. You need to determine the frame size that will accommodate the scale and
zoom. Calculate the following:
Your frame needs to be 12.67 inches wide. If your printer is not large enough to handle this, change
your layout size to spread over two pages.
• For more information, see Creating a Simple Scale Bar in the Help System.
Note: Cloned windows in a workspace are written as MapBasic commands to the .WOR file. These
command statements cannot exceed 32,000 bytes.
Now that you have completed your professional looking layout, printing is a simple matter.
1. Selecting Layers
The layers listed in the Legend Frames group of the Create Legend – Step 1 of 3 dialog box are
all the layers that will be included in your legend. All the layers in your Map window are included
by default.
In Step 2 of the Create Legend wizard, you specify the settings for your Legend window and the
default settings for the legend frames.
3. Legend Attributes
The Create Legend wizard allows you to create attribute-driven legends. This makes creating
text descriptions easier because they can be automatically generated from values in an attribute
column. In addition, the process by which the legend is generated can be saved to the map table
metadata in the underlying map layer, or from a joined table. The metadata is then used as the
default attribute settings for the selected legend frame. These settings can be different for each
frame. The metadata defaults override the Legend Frame defaults in Step 2 of the wizard. If no
metadata keys exist in the table, the Legend Frame defaults from Step 2 are used as the default
values.
• For more information and related topics, see Creating a Cartographic Legend and Saving
Legend Attributes to Metadata in the Help System.
Page Setup
First check that your page setup is what you want. Any changes to the page setup will likely affect
the layout, so it is a good idea to view the effect of the changes on your layout before printing. On the
File menu, click Page Setup. Here, you can specify the page orientation (portrait or landscape) and
margins. You can also specify the paper size and its source.
In addition, you can override your default printer setting and choose a different printer for this print
job. Click the Printer button to display the Page Setup dialog box for your printer. The printer that
initially displays is the default printer that you set in the Printer preferences (on the Options menu,
point to Preferences and click Printer). This will either be the Windows default printer, or the
MapInfo Professional preferred printer that you selected. Make any changes you want to the printer
and its properties, and click OK. The settings available in the Printer Properties dialog box will vary
according to the printer you are using.
Printing Options
Changes you make to these settings override the default settings from the Output Preferences.
1. Make sure the Layout window is active. On the File menu, click Print. The Print dialog box
displays.
2. Choose the number of copies you want to print and whether you want all pages or a specific
range of pages to print. As in the Page Setup dialog box, the Print dialog box also allows you to
override the default printer settings.
3. Click the Name drop-down list in the Print dialog box to select a printer. All of the printers
available on your system display in the list. You can specify printer properties here as well, plus
specify whether to print to a file.
4. To use the advanced print settings to take advantage of additional output options that help you
control transparency and color, particularly for raster images, click the Advanced button. The
Advanced Printing Options dialog box displays.
a. Indicate whether you want to print your Layout using the Enhanced Metafile format, or Print
Directly to Device.
b. Indicate how you want to handle transparency. If you have transparent vector fill patterns and
symbols, check the Internal Handling for Transparent Vector Fills and Symbols box to
have MapInfo Professional handle the transparency internally.
If you are using transparency in a raster image, clear the Use ROP Method to Display
Transparent Raster box to have MapInfo Professional handle the transparency internally.
The image will be broken down into small rectangular regions that do not contain
transparency. It is recommended that you check this option because printers do not always
handle transparent raster images correctly. This method may produce large plot files.
c. If you are using 24-bit, true color raster images, select the Print Raster in True Color When
Possible check box, and select a dither method from the Dither Method list.
Note: The Print Border for Map Window check box is not available for Layout windows. You
can control the border for each frame by selecting the frame and setting by selecting the
Options menu, clicking Region Style.
More and more often, users want to export their maps electronically to files rather than print them.
Exporting a Layout
The easiest way to make electronic copies of maps and layouts from MapInfo Professional is to use
the Save Window As command. You can export to Windows Bitmap, Windows Metafile, Windows
Enhanced Metafile, JPEG File Interchange Format, JPEG 2000, Portable Network Graphics Format,
Tagged Image file Format (TIFF), CMYK, and Photoshop 3.0. When using the Save Window As
command, keep in mind that all additions and edits must be made in the Map window. When you
have the Map window the way you want it, then create the Layout window. You can use the
advanced export options to produce better quality output. The same transparency and raster options
are available when you print your Layout as when you export the Layout. Click the Advanced button
in the Save Window As dialog box to display the Advanced Exporting Options dialog box. The same
check box settings are available.
Changes you make to the Advanced Export settings override the default settings in the Output
preferences. See Setting your Output Setting Preferences in Chapter 3 on page 130 for more.
1. Open a Map, Layout, Browser or Graph window you want to save in the new format.
2. From the File menu, click Save Window As to display the Save Window to File dialog box.
3. Select the type you want to save it in from the Save as type drop-down list.
• GIF
• TIFF LZW
• TIFF CCITT Group 4
4. Type the name of the file in the Filename field and click Save to save your entries.
2. In Printer Setup choose Add Printer. The Add Printer Wizard displays.
3. Follow the wizard for the setup. Choose a postscript printer from the printer list, and select FILE
as the available port. Enable the option to specify EPS.
4. Once the postscript driver is installed on your system, use that printer to print the map or layout
to a file from MapInfo Professional.
5. From the File menu, select Print. The Print dialog box displays.
7. The Print to File dialog box displays. Give your file a name and choose Save.
We have added the ability to smooth or anti-alias images during the export process. You can use this
capability with all types of windows such as Map windows, layouts, legends, and graphs.
Note: You cannot anti-alias images you are exporting to .EMF or .WMF format, because these are
not true raster formats.
There are three smoothing options you can use to customize your raster image:
1. Smooth using a Filter value. You can set a flag that selects one of six filters that allow you to
choose the direction the filter is applied to the image from.
2. Smooth using a Mask value. You can select a value that indicates the size of the area you want
to smooth. For example, to create a 3x3 pixel mask value, you would enter a 3 in this field. This
would limit the amount of change in the color of the pixels. Typically mask sizes would be 2-3
pixels when exporting at screen resolution. If you are exporting at a higher resolution, a larger
mask might be appropriate.
3. Smooth using a Threshold value. You can select a threshold value to indicate which pixels to
smooth. Each pixel in an image has a value based on its color. The smaller the pixel value, the
darker the color. Select this option to smooth all of the pixels above the threshold you enter in
this field. When you set this value to 0, MapInfo Professional will smooth all of the pixels.
You must either set a global preference for these anti-aliasing options or set them locally during the
export process (using the Advanced button).
1. From the Options menu, select Preferences and Output Settings to display the Output
Preferences dialog box.
3. To use anti-aliasing automatically, select the Use Anti-aliasing check box and select from these
options:
Smooth using a Filter value
Choose a filter for the smoothing you want to use. Select from these filters:
• Vertically and Horizontally (Smooths the image vertically and horizontally)
• All Directions (1) (Smooths the image in all directions)
• All Directions (2) (Smooths the image in all directions using a different algorithm)
• Diagonally (Smooths the image diagonally)
• Horizontally (Smooths the image horizontally)
• Vertically (Smooths the image vertically)
1. When you have completed your work on a window, select the File > Save Window As menu
option. The Save Window to File dialog box displays.
2. Type the name and indicate the path of the file you are saving in this dialog box. Click Save to
continue. The Save Window As dialog box displays.
If you are exporting an EMF or WMF image, the Use Anti-Aliasing check box is
disabled.
3. Select the Use Anti-aliasing check box and do one of the following:
• Click Save to use the anti-aliasing options you selected in the Output Preferences dialog box
• Click Advanced and choose new anti-aliasing options for this particular map. Click OK to
return to the Save Window As dialog box. Click Save to save these settings and the file.
Note: If you do not select the Use Anti-aliasing check box, the anti-aliasing options in the
Advanced Exporting Options dialog box are disabled.
In this Chapter:
Working with Raster Images . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .430
Opening a Raster Image . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .433
Printing/Exporting Translucent Raster Images . . . . . . . . . . . . . .438
Working with Raster Images
Some graphics software packages let you save or export images into raster file formats, such as
TIFF (Tagged Image File Format). So if you can create a TIFF file with your draw or paint package,
you can display it in MapInfo Professional.
You can also purchase raster images from MapInfo Professional or other commercial vendors.
Some data vendors also offer scanning services.
If your map does not show a graticule, you may be able to determine map coordinates by locating
prominent map features, for example, the Northwest corner of a region, and then using another
MapInfo Professional table as a reference to determine the coordinates of those prominent features.
For a discussion of this process, see Choosing Control Points from an Existing Map in the Help
System.
There are many different raster image file formats. MapInfo Professional can read the following
types of raster image files: JPEG, GIF, TIFF, PCX, BMP, TGA (Targa), and BIL (SPOT satellite).
The first time you open a raster image file within MapInfo Professional, MapInfo Professional
displays the Register Raster Image dialog box. By completing this dialog box, you tell MapInfo
Professional how to register the raster image and determine the coordinate system for the image.
MapInfo Professional stores the raster image's registration information in a table file for future re-
use. The next time you run MapInfo Professional, you can re-open the raster table without repeating
the registration process. Thus, you only need to register each raster image once.
Raster image files provided by MapInfo Professional are already registered. You do not need to
perform the registration process when you display the sample raster data included with MapInfo
Professional.
• filename.ADF
• filename.FLT
• filename.TXT
• filename.ASC
• filename.GIF (Graphics Interchange Format)
• filename.JPG (JPEG format)
• filename.JP2 (JPEG 2000 format)
• filename.TIF (Tagged Image File Format)
• filename.PCX (ZSoft Paintbrush)
• filename.BMP (Windows bitmap)
• filename.TGA (Targa)
• filename.BIL (SPOT satellite images)
• filename.SID (MrSID format)
• filename.WMF (Windows Metafile format)
• filename.EMF (Enhanced Metafile) format
• filename.PNG (Portable Network Graphics format)
• filename.PSD (Photoshop 3.0)
• filename.ECW (ECW 2.0 format handler)
• filename.GEN (ADRG format)
• filename.GEN (ASRP 1.2 format)
• filename.* (CADRG format)
• filename.* (CIB format)
• filename.NTF (NITF format)
MapInfo Professional also supports AirPhotoUSA raster images taken at different elevations for
particular areas in the United States. The AirPhotoUSA map handler allows MapInfo users to open
and display the imagery contained in AirPhotoUSA Map files as a layer. MapInfo Professional treats
these images like any other raster file. The MAPINFOW.PRJ file has been updated to accommodate
the AirPhotoUSA changes.
Note: The Arc Grid Handler does not support the Arc Grid Export format (*.e00 extension) in
MapInfo Professional.
• For more information, see Color Options for Raster Images in the Help System.
You usually register the image the first time you open it. However, you do not need to register the
image if you do not plan to use vector data with it, or if it already contains georegistration
information.
• A fully registered image, containing control points and a projection (for example, GeoTIFF
file).
• A partially registered image containing control points, but missing a projection (for example,
an image with an associated World file).
• An unregistered image missing control points and a projection.
Once the image is registered, opening it again requires a slightly different procedure. Opening both
unregistered and registered images is explained in the next section.
For more information, see these related topics in the Help System.
Control points are the coordinates you identify on the raster image that MapInfo Professional can
use later to match up to other layers. It is very important to provide accurate control point information
when registering a raster image, so MapInfo Professional can display raster images without
distorting or rotating them. Later, when you overlay vector data, MapInfo Professional distorts and
rotates the vector data so both layers can line up properly. Identifying significant control points
makes this match up process easier. We suggest you use highway/street intersections and
prominent landmarks as control points, as they rarely move.
Specifying the correct projection of the raster image is also important for accurate display. Images
that do not have known projections, such as unrectified aerial photographs, are less suitable for use
with vector data.
There are two ways to register a raster image in MapInfo Professional. Each involves specifying the
map coordinates of control points on a reference map and matching them with equivalent points on
the raster image. To determine map coordinates, you can:
MapInfo Professional performs the raster reprojection when you open a registered raster image
inside of an existing Map window with a different projection or when you change the projection of a
Map window. During the raster reprojection process, MapInfo Professional recalculates the pixel
values of the source image to make them display correctly in the destination image. In this
resampling process, MapInfo Professional tries to restore every pixel value of the image based on
the pixels around it. In MapInfo Professional there are two methods for calculating the pixel values of
the destination image: Cubic Convolution and Nearest Neighbor. These are industry-standard terms
used by GIS professionals all over the world. These methods are described later in this section.
Due to this feature, these are the precedence rules for Map window projection.
Both vector and raster layers have “equal rights”, that is, every new layer (without regard for type) is
reprojected into the current Map window’s projection. That is, which ever map is opened first takes
precedence for projection.
Note: You can change the projection of a Map window containing a mix of raster and vector layers
by setting the image processing reprojection preference to Always or Optimized.
When you are working with palette raster images (like a scanned map), an image might contain all
256 colors. If you display this image in the Adjust Image Styles dialog box and clear the Transparent
check box, the color “white” becomes transparent. If you do not want this display behavior, select the
Transparent check box and choose another transparent color (using Select Color).
1. On the File menu, click Open and Raster Image file format.
2. Choose the raster image file and click Open. The Display/Register dialog box displays.
3. Click Register. The Image Registration dialog box displays. A preview of the raster image
appears in the lower half of the dialog box.
4. Choose the Projection button to specify the image’s projection. If you do not set the projection,
MapInfo Professional defaults to Longitude/Latitude or to the default table projection set in the
Map Window Preferences.
5. To add control points, click the Add button to add a control point entry to the Control Points list.
6. Click the Pick from Map button and select a location in the Map window that matches a location
in your raster image. MapInfo Professional updates the Map X and Map Y fields in the Edit
Control dialog box with the new coordinates. Click OK to save this entry and close the dialog
box.
Note: When the Pick from Map button is disabled, you can select locations directly from the
open map. If a map is not open, you can select another tool (like the Select tool) and use
that tool instead of the Pick from Map functionality.
7. Highlight the entry in the Control Points list and click the matching control point location in the
image pane. The Edit Control Point dialog box displays showing the control point’s location in
pixels in the Image X and Image Y fields. Click OK to save these entries.
Note: Remember to type a meaningful description of this location in the Label field.
8. Repeat this process until you have identified three or four non-linear points in the preview pane
of the Image Registration dialog box.
9. After you have defined all of the control points, click OK in the Image Registration dialog box.
The raster image displays in the Map window under the vector layer.
Use the Layer Control feature to position the raster map appropriately with your vector layers.
• For details on converting degree/minutes/seconds coordinates to decimal degrees, see the Help
System.
When using two raster images with different projections, keep in mind that MapInfo Professional will
use the projection of the image that is opened first. This means that the second image is only
positioned approximately.
Using the Adjust Image Styles dialog box does not modify the raster image file; instead, it changes
the way MapInfo Professional displays the raster image file. If you change an image’s display style,
MapInfo Professional records the new display style in the table file (for example PARCELS.tab) or in
the workspace for per layer styles, but MapInfo Professional does not alter the contents of the raster
image file (PARCELS.GIF) in any way.
If you change an image’s display style and choose OK, the new display style is applied immediately.
It will also affect all Map windows in which the image is displayed if you select the Table menu, and
point to Raster and click Adjust Image Styles. You do not need to choose Save to save the
changes.
• No Data Saved with Raster Images A raster table does not have columns, therefore, you cannot
attach text or numeric data directly to a raster table, and you cannot perform queries, such as
Find, on a raster table. You can, however, overlay a conventional (vector-based) MapInfo
Professional table on top of the raster image, and attach data to the conventional table.
• Map Projections and Reprojections with Raster Images: When a raster image file displays in a
Map window, the file that is opened first determines the projection of the map. If two raster
images in a Map window use different map projections, MapInfo Professional will use the
projection of the map that is opened first. The Map window will redraw slowly when you overlay
other map layers on top of a raster image. The map redraws slowly because MapInfo
Professional is re-calculating map coordinates so that the vector map objects conform to the
projection of the raster image.
Every raster image table consists of two files: a raster image file (e.g. photo.gif), and a table file (e.g.
photo.tab). When you change the image display styles, MapInfo Professional stores the new style
settings by modifying the table file. MapInfo Professional does not modify the raster image file in any
way.
If you change the display options and choose OK, MapInfo Professional stores the new display
styles immediately; you do not need to choose File > Save.
• For instructions, see Adjusting the Contrast or Brightness of a Raster Image in the Help System.
• For specific instructions, see Adjusting the Translucency of a Raster Image in the Help System.
Projection - An equation or set of equations that contain mathematical parameters for a map. The
exact number and nature of the parameters depends upon the type of projection. You can think of a
projection as a method of reducing a map’s distortion caused by the curvature of the Earth, or more
precisely, a projection compensates for the shortcomings of depicting maps in two dimensions when
the coordinates exist in three dimensions.
Coordinate System - When parameters of a projection are assigned specific values, they become a
coordinate system. A coordinate system is a collection of parameters that describe coordinates, one
of which is a projection.
Displaying Coordinates
There are two places where coordinates display:
• In the Status Bar by cursor location (set in the Map Options dialog box or by clicking on the
Status Bar).
• In dialog boxes that display area measurements, such as a Point Object, Region Object etc.
Note: Coordinates can only be entered in the Object Info dialog boxes when a layer is editable.
• Projection Types
• Datums
• Units
• Coordinate System Origin
• Standard Parallels (Conic Projections)
• Oblique Azimuth (Hotine Oblique Mercator)
• Scale Factor (Transverse Mercator)
If you transfer the touch points from the globe surface onto the cylinder and roll out the cylinder onto
graph paper, the result is a map as in the figure below. In the map that would be created from this
cylinder, the Equator is 0 degrees all the way around the globe and the points on that line are
completely accurate.
When you add longitude and latitude lines at 15 degree increments to each side of the Equator and
the Prime Meridian you create a reference grid. The lines furthest from the Prime Meridian are +180
degrees toward the right and -180 degrees to the left. This map projection is commonly called the
Longitude/Latitude projection.
This is often considered the default projection. It is the most effective map for areas nearest the
Equator but measurements further away tend to increase in distortion.
Because many people do not live near the Equator, other projections came into use to create more
accurate local maps. Accuracy depends upon how you project the globe onto the cylinder. If you turn
the cylinder so that it touches the Prime Meridian instead (or any line of longitude, 90 degrees away
from the Equator) you have a Transverse Projection. The closer you are to the place the cylinder
touches the globe, the more accurate the measurements are.
Transverse projections allow us to make maps that are more North-South line accurate, as long as
you compensate for the distance from the new “Equator” which in this case is the Prime Meridian.
A third type of projection attempts to resolve the distortion problem in another way. Conic projections
use a cone shape instead of a cylinder to create the “touch points” .
This type of projection is much more accurate for large regions or countries that wider in the East-
West direction than in the North-South direction. There is much less distortion regionally because
the touch points of a cone are closer to the map surface than those of a cylinder.
As you can see from the previous figure, the conic maps are best for small regional areas. The
larger-scale map has too much distortion to be useful.
A fourth type of projection, the Azimuthal projection, does not use cones or cylinders but a simple
circle that goes all the way around the globe over a particular point. This projection provides a “view
from space” over a particular point.
This type of projection is most useful when you need to work with a particular hemisphere. A
hemisphere need not be North-South or East-West based. The next figure uses the North Pole as
the center point for the Azimuthal Projection.
You can use more than one projection that rotates a cylinder slightly along the Equator. This style is
used in the Universal Transverse Mercator (UTM) projection. UTM maps the Earth with a transverse
cylinder projection to create standard "UTM Zones". By rotating the cylinder around the globe in six
degree increments, the UTM assures that all spots on the Earth are within 3 degrees of the center
line. (The Gauss-Kruger system is a European system akin to UTM that also uses a transverse
cylinder rotated in six degree steps).
Almost all projections you will use are one of these types. They are either cylindrical (regular or
transverse), conic, or azimuthal projections and are customized by slightly different projection
parameters. Projection parameters are options that describe how the projection is arranged.
You can further customize projections by specifying different parameters for the projection you want
to use. For example, you can specify the longitude and latitude of any point on the Earth to create
your own Azimuthal projection of that point. You can customize conic projections by specifying the
parallel of latitude at which the cone should be tangent.
For a complete list of common coordinate systems and their necessary parameters, see
Projections and Their Parameters in Chapter C on page 524
Projection Types
The following list names the projection types used in the MAPINFOW.PRJ file. These projection
types indicate the type of map you are using as the basis for your projection.
Number Projection
30 Cassini-Soldner
2 Cylindrical Equal-Area
14 Eckert IV
15 Eckert VI
17 Gall
Number Projection
1 Longitude/Latitude
10 Mercator
11 Miller Cylindrical
13 Mollweide
27 Polyconic
26 Regional Mercator
12 Robinson
16 Sinusoidal
20 Stereographic
“UTM Zone 10”, 2008, 74, 7, -123, 0, 0.9996, 500000, 0, 100000, 400000,
200000, 450000
To define a Longitude / Latitude coordinate system with bounds of (-50, 30) to (-48, 35), use this line:
1000 Affine transformations Affine units specifier and coefficients appear after the
regular parameters for the system.
2000 Explicit bounds Bounds appear after the regular parameters for the
system.
3000 Both affine transformations Affine parameters follow system’s parameters; bounds
and bounds follow affine parameters.
Example:
In this example we use the Transverse Mercator coordinate system with the NAD 1983 datum. You
might have this line in your MAPINFOW.PRJ file:
If you want to account for an affine transformation for this system, you would add the constant to the
projection type and append the parameters of the affine transformation as listed below:
Therefore, the new entry to append the parameters of the affine transformation would be:
where:
Entry Description
1008 Achieved by adding the constant (1000) to the projection type (8)
To supply explicit bounds to the coordinate system (x1, y1, x2, y2)=(-500000, 0, 500000, 1000000),
the required line entries would be:
"UTM Zone 1 (NAD 83) - bounded", 2008, 74, 7, -177, 0, 0.9996, 500000,
0, -500000, 0, 500000, 1000000
where:
Entry Description
2008 Produced by adding the constant (2000) to the projection type (8)
To customize the coordinate system using both the affine transformation and explicit bounds, the
entry in the MAPINFOW.PRJ would be:
"UTM Zone 1 (NAD 83) - rotated and bounded", 3008, 74, 7, -177, 0,
0.9996, 500000, 0, 7, 0.5, -0.866, 0, 0.866, 0.5, 0, -500000, 0, 500000, 1000000
where:
Entry Description
3008 Produced by adding the constant (3000) to the projection type (8)
-500000, 0, 500000, 1000000 Explicit bounds parameters (See Accounting for Affine
Transformations and Explicit Bounds in Projection Types on
page 448.)
Datums
A datum is established by tying a reference ellipsoid to a particular point on the earth. The following
Datums table lists the details for each datum:
Note: To create a custom datum, see Defining Custom Datums in the Help System.
After the NAD 83 datum was introduced, NOAA developed a program called NADCON, which
stands for North American Datum CONversion. This is a very specialized program that converts
coordinates only from NAD 27 to NAD 83 and vice versa. For this specialized task, it's much more
accurate than the Molodensky general-purpose method; NADCON is accurate to about 0.1 meter,
and Molodensky is accurate to only 10-30 meters. Most U.S. government agencies, including the
Census Bureau, have standardized on NADCON for converting between NAD 27 and NAD 83.
The NADCON algorithm is used to convert coordinates between NAD 27 and NAD 83 if those
coordinates lie within the areas covered by NADCON (United States, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin
Islands).If the coordinates lie outside those areas, or if they use datums other than NAD 27 or NAD
83, MapInfo Professional uses the Molodensky or Bursa-Wolfe conversion methods.
Due to the file access required, the NADCON conversion method can be slightly slower than the
Molodensky method. If you want to turn off the NADCON conversion, add a “NADCON” entry to the
registry. The registry entry should have this path:
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\MapInfo\MapInfo\Common\NADCON
If this entry is set to zero, then the Molodensky conversion method will be used instead of NADCON.
NADCON=0
Units
The units indicate the measurement that the projection uses to keep track of space. To find a
complete list of units and their corresponding projection entries, see Units in Appendix C on
page 535.
For the Transverse Mercator projection, the origin’s longitude defines the central meridian. In
constructing the Transverse Mercator projection a cylinder is positioned tangent to the earth. The
central meridian is the line of tangency. The scale of the projected map is true along the central
meridian.
In creating a Hotine Oblique Mercator projection it is necessary to specify a great circle that is not
the equator nor a meridian. MapInfo Professional does this by specifying one point on the ellipsoid
and an azimuth from that point. That point is the origin of the coordinate system.
You may see the scale factor expressed as a ratio, such as 1:25000. In this case it is generally
called the scale reduction. The relationship between scale factor and scale reduction is:
In the days of the tall ships, these calculations and computations were done by hand. Using positive
and negative signs made these calculations more complicated. The terms “false easting” and “false
northing” were used to remove these signs and refer to the absolute value of the X and Y
coordinates. MapInfo Professional handles these computations, but these parameters still have to
be accounted for in the projections that use them.
The Polyconic projection, usually called the American Polyconic in Europe, achieved its name
because the curvature of the circular arc for each parallel on the map is the same as it would be
following the unrolling of a cone which had been wrapped around the globe tangent to the
particular parallel of latitude, with the parallel traced onto the cone. Thus, there are many (”poly-
”) cones involved, rather than the single cone of each regular conic projection.
The Polyconic projection is neither equal-area nor conformal. Along the central meridian,
however, it is both distortion free and true to scale. Each parallel is true to scale, but the
meridians are lengthened by various amounts to cross each parallel at the correct position along
the parallel, so that no parallel is standard in the sense of having conformality (or correct angles),
except at the central meridian. Near the central meridian, distortion is extremely small.
This projection is not intended for mapping large areas. The conversion algorithms used break
down when mapping wide longitude ranges. For example, World.tab, from the sample data
shipped with MapInfo Professional, may exhibit anomalies if reprojected using Polyconic.
This is a basic list of the elements of a coordinate system, for review. There are some projections
that do not require all of the elements in the list. Following this list, you can see some entries from
the .PRJ file.
1. The first element in each list is the name of the projection in quotes.
2. The second element in each list is the number that identifies the projection number as indicated
in Projection Types on page 446.
3. The third element in each list is the datum ID that identifies the appropriate datum for the
projection. See Datums on page 449 for a complete list of supported datums.
4. The fourth element in each list is the units, which indicate the units of the projection. See Units
on page 535 for a current list of the supported units.
5. The next element in some lists is the coordinate system origin. See Coordinate System Origin
on page 450 for a complete description of this entry.
6. The remaining elements are specific to particular types of projections. You can see their
descriptions in Standard Parallels (Conic Projections) on page 451, Oblique Azimuth
(Hotine Oblique Mercator) on page 451, Scale Factor (Transverse Mercator) on page 451,
False Easting and False Northing on page 451 and Range (Azimuthal Projections) on
page 451.
Note: Each element in a projection entry is separated by a comma.
Let’s look at some specific coordinate systems to prepare you to create your own projection. It is
important to remember that the elements of a projection are different for each projection. Here are
some examples we have already seen:
where:
To create a new projection entry for the coordinate system in the MAPINFOW.PRJ file:
1. Open MAPINFOW.PRJ in a text editor or word processor. In this file, you are going to add the
new projection entries.
Figure: MAPINFOW.PRJ in Notepad
2. Scroll down in this list to find the type of projection you want to base your map on. See
Understanding Coordinate Systems on page 441 for descriptions of the different projection
types.
3. Add a new line at the end of the projection list you are modifying.
For example, to add a new Universal Transverse Mercator projection (Australian Map Grid using
AGD66 datum), scroll down to that entry and type the new projection at the end of the list.
Figure: Adding a Line in the MAPINFOW.PRJ File
4. On a new line, type the new parameter entries based on the required parameters described for
that projection type in the table Projections and Their Parameters on page 524.
• If the name of your projection does not appear in the Common Map Projections list, consider
the kind of projection you are creating (Latitude/Longitude, Conic, Transverse, etc.) and
follow the table entries for the type of projection you want.
• Remember to include constant values (Accounting for Affine Transformations and
Explicit Bounds in Projection Types on page 448) to indicate an affine transformation,
specific bounds, or both if appropriate or necessary.
Note: The order of parameters is vitally important. Remember to separate each parameter with
a comma.
5. Save your edited MAPINFOW.PRJ file in the directory in your user directory.
Note: In the past the MAPINFOW.PRJ file was saved in your installation directory but this did not
allow different users to have different PRJ files. This new file placement permits this.
• You must record the X and Y coordinates of the origin point in decimal degrees.
• Remember to include a negative sign for west longitudes and south latitudes.
• You must list the origin longitude first in the MAPINFOW.PRJ file entry.
• Carry out decimals to at least five (5) places for greater accuracy.
• Do not use commas to represent thousands or millions in large numbers. Only use commas
to separate parameters from one another.
• When specifying projection, datum and units, use the number that represents the parameter.
These numbers are listed in the table for each parameter earlier in this appendix. In our
example, 6 represents Equidistant Conic projection; 74 represents NAD 83 datum, and 7
represents meters.
2. From the Map menu, select Options to display the Map Options dialog box.
3. Click the Projections button to display the Choose Projection dialog box.
Note: To change the projection of a tab file and all of the map objects in it, use the File > Save
Copy As command and select the new projection.
4. Select the new projection from the list and click OK to confirm. The Map Options dialog
redisplays.
Units 7, meters
3. Type the name of your new coordinate system in quotes, followed by a comma.
You can use your custom coordinate system just as you would use any of the coordinate systems
that come with MapInfo.
There are other ways you can edit this file. To shorten the list, remove coordinate systems from the
file. You can also change the names, change group headings and reorder the file to suit your needs.
Note: Group headings are distinguished by the hyphen at the beginning of the name. Names of
coordinate systems cannot begin with a hyphen or a space.
What is Precision?
The most basic component of any GIS is the spatial data that defines the map features. This spatial
data could not exist without the coordinate systems that are used to specify the location information.
Coordinate precision is a measure of storing spatial data as accurately as possible. Of course, this
can be no more precise than the original data provided. Precision is a measurement of how
accurately you can store and retrieve the spatial data and has nothing to do with the quality of the
data. The number of reliable digits in your coordinate is termed significant digits. Precision is
measured in terms of these significant digits.
• For topics related to precision and map bounds, see Understanding Precision in MapInfo
Professional in the Help System.
where
MapInfo Professional provides the definitions for scale, translation, rotation, reflection, and shearing
necessary to support an optional affine transformation for any coordinate system definition.You can
also define a coordinate system with bounds and/or with an affine transformation. This is described
in detail in Accounting for Affine Transformations and Explicit Bounds in Projection Types on
page 448.
• For more information, see Understanding Affine Transformations in the Help System.
The scale factor of a transformation indicates the distance between the fixed points of one map
versus the fixed points of the second map. If the only difference between two maps is the scale, the
affine transformation of the derived map is only the same map zoomed in or out around a fixed point.
The orientations of the lines connecting the points, and the angles between these lines, remain the
same. The scaling in the case of the figure below is around the 0,0 point.
A
B
0,0 0,0
The difference between these images is the scale. To create an affine transformation
that maps the base image (A) to the derived image (B), change only the scale.
The translation factor of a transformation is when every point on an image follows a parallel path and
no rotation takes place.
B
0,0 0,0
The rotation factor of a transformation indicates that the image turns on a particular point. The next
figure shows a 25-degree rotation of the map around the 0,0 point.
A B
0,0 0,0
The difference between these two images is not the scale, because the size of each
image is the same. The difference is the rotation of the derived image (B).
The shearing factor of a transformation indicates that one of the coordinates of one image should
change proportionally to the other. You can apply a shear transformation either on the x-axis as
shown in the next figure or on the y-axis. As you can see the vertical scale of the image has not
changed, and the corner of the figure at 0,0 has not moved -- but points higher up on the figure are
shifted progressively further to the right.
A B
0,0 0,0
The reflection factor of a transformation indicates that the derived image is the mirror image of the
base image, that is, all the points in the base image should be reflected across some straight line,
such as the x-axis or y-axis. In the figure below, the derived image (B) is the reflection of the base
image (A).
0,0
The difference between these two images is that the derived image (B) is a reflection
of the base image (A) along the x-axis.
Sinusoidal (Equal-Area)
• Overlay your map onto any maps that MapInfo Professional supplies.
• Use or change projections.
• Specify objects on the map in terms of longitude and latitude.
A non-earth map contains objects that have no specific location on the earth’s surface. Floor plans
are typical examples of non-earth maps. A non-earth map has a coordinate system, but since its
map points are not referenced to locations on earth, the coordinate system does not contain a
projection. Even though the floor plan describes a building that may be located somewhere on the
Earth, the coordinates of objects in the floor plan are generally not referenced to positions on the
Earth. Rather, the object’s coordinates are referenced to the floor plan itself, generally representing
distance from the lower left corner of the floor plan. The next figure depicts a floor plan and is an
example of a non-earth map.
1. Ensure that your non-earth map is open and that it is the active window.
2. Choose Map > Options. The Map Options dialog box displays.
3. Click the Projection button. The Choose Projection dialog box displays.
4. Choose Non-Earth from the Category drop-down list, and choose a unit from the Category
Members drop-down list to specify the bounds and units for your non-earth coordinate system.
The Non-Earth Coordinate Bounds dialog box allows you to specify the bounds and units for your
non-earth coordinate system. You can use positive or negative numbers to specify the minimum and
maximum X and Y values.
1. From the Options menu, select Toolbars to display the Toolbar Options dialog box.
2. Select the Web Services check box in the Show column. Click OK.
Figure: Web Services Toolbar
1 2 3 4 5 6
1 Open WMS Table button 2 Open WFS Table button 3 Find Address button
4 Geocode Using Server button 5 Create Driving Regions button
6 Web Services Preferences button
For more information about these buttons, see the Accessing Web Services in
MapInfo Professional topic in the Help System.
Enter the appropriate user name and password and select the Remember my password check box
to have the site “remember” your password for you. Click OK to enter the site. If you do not have a
valid user name and password, you cannot connect to the site.
Note: The WMS sites that MapInfo includes in this documentation or in the standard installation of
MapInfo Professional have been verified as part of the testing process. We cannot guarantee
that these sites will remain active, only that they were active as of this writing.
But What if a WMS Definition Already Exists or I am not Working in a Map Window?
• If you are retrieving a WMS map and there was a previous WMS definition (or you are
modifying a WMS map), MapInfo Professional uses the coordinate system that matches the
current projection (not necessarily the Map window’s coordinate system).
• If there was no previous WMS definition, the current Map window’s coordinate system is
selected if it can be found in the Projection list.
• If the Map window’s coordinate system is not in the Projection list or you are retrieving a
WMS map when you are not working in a Map window, MapInfo Professional tries to default
to EPSG:4326.
• Finally, if none of these projections are found, the first item in the Projection list is selected.
• PNG
• JPEG (JPG)
• TIFF (GeoTIFF AND TIFF)
• GIF.
Note: Not every format will be available from every Web Map Service.
The OGC WMS specification supports transparent pixel definition for image formats. This allows you
to use the images you retrieve as overlays and not solely as the bottom layer of your map.
To set the background to transparent, click the Transparent check box in the Open WMS Table or
the WMS Table Properties dialog boxes. You can also control the transparency and translucency of
the image via Layer Control > Display > Style Override > Adjust Image Styles.
The following table lists and explains WMS-related error messages. Some messages consist of two
parts, separated by a colon. The information up to the colon is generated by the MapInfo WMS
client. The raw data following the colon comes directly from the WMS server. For clarification on
those messages, please contact the service provider of the WFS server.
XML Parsing Error: <message from XML The most likely cause is badly formed XML from the server.
parser> The raw data following the colon is transmitted by the
MSXML 4.0 parser.
The WMS Server issued the following The raw data following the colon is transmitted by the WMS
exception: <message from server> server. This may help you analyze the problem.
The following error was issued while There could be a problem with the URL, the server may not
attempting to access the WMS server: be available, or it may have timed out.
<message from server>
The WMS Server returned no data in MapInfo issued a service request, but nothing was received
response to the request. from the server.
Unable to retrieve capabilities from the The GetCapabilities request from the server failed. This
WMS Server. message usually appears paired with another message in the
same message window.
The WMS Server returned HTML data The raw data following the colon is transmitted by the WMS
rather than the requested format. The server. This may help you analyze the problem.
specified address may not be a WMS
The server you are accessing may not be a WMS server. You
Server or the server could not process the
may see this message after accessing a WFS server and
request: <message from server>
seeing a list of WFS layers. This can occur because the
Capabilities document provided by the server may contain
additional URLs that redirect you to another server (not the
one you explicitly selected). That “redirected” server may be
down or have another problem.
The WMS Server returned data which was The raw data following the colon is transmitted by the WMS
neither in the requested format nor a server. This may help you analyze the problem.
recognized WMS service exception:
The exception message from the server could not be
<message from server>
understood. For example, the exception message may not
have been in XML format.
Error accessing temporary file. It is possible that your disk is full or you might have deleted
the temp file while Mapinfo Pro was running.
The WMS Server does not return The server may not support GetFeatureInfo.
GetFeatureInfo data in a format supported
by MapInfo.
The WMS Server does not support The server may not provide GetFeatureInfo in a format
GetFeatureInfo requests. understood by MapInfo Pro.
There are no queryable layers in the WMS The server may not have a queryable layer. It is possible that
table for GetFeatureInfo request. a queryable layer changed between the time that you first
created the WMS table and subsequently reopened the table.
The WMS Server returned data in MapInfo requested data in the format that the server claims it
<formatA> rather than the requested format supports, however the server is returning a different format.
of <formatB>. For clarification, contact the service provider of the WMS
server.
Unable to retrieve feature information from The GetFeatureInfo request from the server failed. This
the WMS server. message usually appears paired with another message in the
same message window.
WFS is similar to WMS (Web Map Service), in that both can provide geographic data via the
Internet. But while a WMS server provides raster maps, a WFS server provides raw coordinate data
that the client uses to produce a map.
Note: The MapInfo WFS client has been developed in accordance with OGC WFS Specification
1.0.0. Using this client you cannot retrieve data from sites that are compliant with earlier or
later versions of the OGC specification.
The WFS client supports GML2 (OGC GML V2.1.1). The OGS WFS Specification states that all
servers should support GML2, but may also support other formats. The server provides information
on the formats available, and the client makes the request for the data in the format it can use. If the
server does not support GML2, it will not be supported by the MapInfo WFS client.
GML2 does not contain any style information. You can provide style information to associate with a
particular WFS table.
A WFS request contains a description of query operations that can be applied to one or more
features. The client generates the request and posts it to a WFS using HTTP. The web feature
server then reads and executes the request.
The GetCapabilities operation queries the WFS server for capabilities. Then the MapInfo
Professional WFS client can generate a query appropriate for the WFS server and table.
Each table in the WFS server can result in a single MapInfo table. The mapping is always 1-to-1
(unlike WMS, which is many-to-1).
The TAB file retrieved from a WFS server resembles a read-only DBMS linked table. It contains a
MAP file and a DAT file, and acts like a read-only native table. Information is stored so that the table
can be refreshed from the WFS server.
1. After sending a GetCapabilities request to a WFS server, the server returns a list of WFS layers
(FeatureTypes) that it can provide.
2. The user picks a WFS layer to fetch from the server, MapInfo Professional then sends a
DescribeFeatureType request to the server. This response is an XML schema that describes
the feature.
3. The user can then select which columns and/or rows to fetch.
4. MapInfo Professional sends a GetFeature request to the WFS. If the user did not select a subset
of columns, all columns will be requested by default.
5. The response is a GML document containing the feature collection. Each feature represents one
“record” in the MapInfo table.
There is a list of WFS servers in the client to help you get started in using this functionality.
Note: Since the data you retrieve using the WFS is remote, it may change from time to time. You
can refetch your WFS data manually using the refresh process. See Refreshing your WFS
Data in the Help System for more information.
• Support V1.0.0 of WFS. The MapInfo Professional WFS client sends the initial GetCapabilities
and specifies version 1.0.0. If the server you are requesting information from does not support
the 1.0.0 version, MapInfo Professional cannot use that server and no further operations will be
allowed.
• An XML Schema that contains the information for the table specified only. If the server
returns a schema that contains descriptions for multiple tables, MapInfo Professional cannot
parse it correctly, and the operation will fail.
• A Valid XML Schema. If not, no further operations can be allowed for that feature type. Without
a valid schema, MapInfo Professional cannot create or populate the table. In this case you can
either select another table, select another server, or cancel the WFS dialog box.
Note: MapInfo Professional may not handle schemas that are “well formed” but contain
invalid XML.
MapInfo Professional checks that the schema returned for DescribeFeatureType is well formed
XML, but does not validate the XML. Our WFS client works correctly with many servers that return
schema's which contain invalid items, and our developers thought that eliminating these servers
because they didn't contain 100% valid XML was too limiting.
Note: MapInfo Professional cannot successfully handle schemas that contain invalid items, such as
an invalid character in an element name - for example, "City Type" where the space in the
element name isn't valid XML.
While MapInfo Professional may be able to process a schema that contains well-formed but invalid
XML, this may cause problems elsewhere, such as during the GetFeature processing. This may
cause some confusion. If the XML returned during GetFeature doesn't match the schema, MapInfo
Professional may create an empty table without displaying an error.
MapInfo Professional:
• Doesn't process xsd:include. All element types must be defined in the schema returned from
the DescribeFeatureType request or derived from GML base types.
• Supports all row filters that the server advertises in the GetCapabilities response with the
following constraints:
• The filters are OGC-defined filters as specified in the OGC WFS Specification or the OGC
Filter Encoding Implementation specification.
• The filter takes 0 or 1 arguments beyond the column name. This is a user interface
constraint. MapInfo Professional’s interface is currently not set up to address such filters.
This includes the A Between filter, which requires 2 values.
• Supports MaxFeatures, but not all WFS servers seem to support this option. While the
OGC WFS Specification states that the server should implement this option, our experience has
been that some servers ignore MaxFeatures.
• Treats the Geometry column as mandatory. While you can filter specific columns, MapInfo
Professional always requests the Geometry column from the server. Many servers seem to treat
the Geometry column as mandatory and return this column whether it is requested or not.
Note: The GML returned during the GetFeature request should validate against the schema
returned during the DescribeFeatureType request. If this is not the case, then MapInfo
Professional may not be able to create a table.
If a MapInfo WFS table is open, the user interface automatically enables the refresh process. During
the refresh process, users can not change the query that is sent to the WFS server. The data will be
refetched from the server using the original query. This refreshed information can then be saved to
the table.
For retail customers, an advanced geocoder could be the difference between finding your product in
a local store or wasting a trip.
For financial services customers, it could mean locating your best customers quickly when you have
an opportunity to share with them.
You can use MapInfo Professional to connect to MapMarker and Envinsa servers to handle
advanced geocoding functions.
Geocoding is the process of assigning geographic coordinates to your data, which can be street
addresses. Point values assigned to each address turn each record into a geographic object that
MapInfo Professional can display on a map. Visualizing your records on a map can make the
relationships among your data clearer. You can display your geocoded records against a street map,
a postal code centroid map, a county map, or whatever is most appropriate to your needs. You can
then use the wide variety of functions available in MapInfo Professional mapping software to perform
querying, create thematic maps, create territories, and perform many other types of geographic
analysis.
Using the MapMarker and Envinsa Web Services, you have more choices for geocoding. For
example, you can choose to geocode your records by street address or by postal code centroid, or
by geographic centroids. If you have geocoded some records and some did not geocode
successfully, you can set fallback conditions to locate those records. If you geocode and there are
no results, poor results, or multiple equal close results, the geocoding server can present you with
interactive options so you can select among possible matches or change your input. Further, these
web services allow you to set multiple matching conditions when more than one record matches the
records you are geocoding and set offsets for placing points right in the geocode properties.
For companies and organizations that use MapMarker and Envinsa servers as a geocoding engine,
you can take advantage of the geocoding servers available to your whole enterprise. If your
organization makes this server available on your intranet or over the Internet, you can use our
geocoding web services from within MapInfo Professional to perform more sophisticated and
accurate data geocoding.
Note: IMPORTANT: MapInfo may not have a Geocoding Server with data that includes the
geography you are interested in. Please check with your local MapInfo sales personnel to
ensure that web services exist for your geography.
There are many reasons why using a geocoding service with MapInfo Professional is a good
business solution.
• Multiple Data Formats OK! Since MapInfo Professional can import or open data in many different
formats, you can geocode almost any kind of geographically enabled file. You can take
advantage of MapMarker or Envinsa’s advanced geocoding options using Shapefiles, Excel
files, ASCII, Access tables, Oracle and SQL Server tables.
• Data filtering. You can use the selection and subselection capabilities of MapInfo Professional to
create input for the service using any MapInfo Professional "table," including queries created
using SQL Select or tools. For example, if you want to geocode your data based on more than
one column, you can specify an input address based on a MapBasic expression that could skip
irrelevant characters.
• Geocode a Little or a Lot. You can geocode individual records or in batch mode.
• Choose your own Symbols. You have the full range of MapInfo Professional symbols to choose
from when plotting your points, or you can create your own custom symbols for the points you
are geocoding.
• Undo works! Because all of the geocoded results are transacted, you can use MapInfo
Professional’s revert capabilities to undo the transactions. You can save the geocoded results in
the source table or into a completely new table.
Note: IMPORTANT: MapInfo may not have online services with data that includes the geography
you are interested in. Please check with your local MapInfo sales personnel to ensure that
web services exist for your geography.
• For specific instructions, see Geocoding a Single Address using a Geocoding Service in the
Help System.
For S and Z categories, the first two characters represent the positional accuracy of the match, that
is, where the point for the record would spot on a street map. For the S category matches there are
eight additional characters that indicate the individual components in the input address that
matched. If the geocoding service did not match on a particular address component, the code would
contain a dash for that element. For example, a single close match to a street address that matched
to all address components except house number would look like: S5-PNTSCZA.
S2 matched to a Primary Postal Code centroid (centerpoint of the Primary Postal Code
boundary)
M4 multiple matches, point located at the center of a shape point path (shape points define
the shape of the street polyline)
M5 multiple matches, point located at a street address position (highest accuracy available)
N Category: Non-matches
N No close match
• For specific instructions and related topics, see Geocoding a Table using a Geocoding Service in
the Help System.
The Drivetime web service uses the latest road networks and fast search algorithms to show the
buffer boundaries in time (isochrone) or distance (isodistance) from a specified location. These
buffers are different from other MapInfo Professional object or table buffers because they are based
on road networks and not straight line distances. Driving region time and distance buffers are
calculated based on the speed limits of the individual roads and highways in the road network and
the distance or time values you request. Isochrones and isodistances are collectively called
isograms.
You can only access this Drivetime data and calculation functionality on an Envinsa 4.0 routing
server. The Driving Regions web service helps you create isochrone and isodistance buffers using
points in your own data.
An isochrone or a time buffer is a region that shows the area that a driver can reach from a starting
point in a specific amount of time based on the speeds specified in the routing network. For
example, if you wanted to put together an event and invite the customers who live within an hour’s
drive of the event site, you could create a time buffer for known customers within an hour’s drive.
The service would then use the average driving speeds defined in the road network to calculate the
time buffer from your event. You can then display your data within those buffer regions using a
Select or SQL Select statement.
An isodistance or a distance buffer is a region that shows the area that a driver can reach from the
starting point in the same distance. For example, if you want to contact all of the customers who live
within 50 miles of the event instead of one hour, you could calculate the distance using the Drivetime
web service, using similar logic.
Effectively, you are creating buffers from a point or table of points based on the server’s road
network for specified times or distances. Using the Driving Region service options, you can control
the way this information displays and the number of time and distance buffers you create at a time.
• For more information, see Creating Time or Distance Buffers for a Table and Rules when Adding
a Driving Value in the Help System.
You can travel further on a limited access highway than a local road in the same
amount of time due to the difference in speed limits.
In it, you can see limited access highways, major roads with buildings on them, and local streets with
homes. The speed limits on these streets vary depending upon their size and use. The routing
server manages the speeds for each road type and uses those speeds to calculate the distance a
driver could travel in a specific amount of time. For example a driver could get further in an hour on a
highway, than on a local road, due to the average speed limits on those roads.
If you think of these speed limits and distances in spatial terms, starting from a particular point, the
region the web service could create along a highway would be longer and narrower than the region
you would create using a more local road based on the same amount of time or distance request.
Holes
Areas within the larger boundary that cannot be reached within the specified time or distance,
based on the road network.
Island
Small areas outside the main boundary that can be reached within the specified time or
distance.
Offroad Travel
Offroad travel refers to streets that are not part of the server’s road network, such as
driveways, private roads, or access roads.
Before you begin this process, we recommend that you set up your own default routing server using
the instructions in Setting the Routing Server Preferences on page 142. If you do not have
access to your own routing server, you can access and subscribe to Envinsa Online Services from
MapInfo to take advantage of this functionality. To activate your free Envinsa Online Services trial
account, see Accessing Envinsa Online Services at MapInfo on page 476.
Note: IMPORTANT: MapInfo may not have online services with data that includes the geography
you are interested in. Please check with your local MapInfo sales personnel to ensure that
web services exist for your geography.
• For specific instructions and related topics, see creating Time or Distance Buffers for Objects in
the Help System.
There are two ways to access these web services from within MapInfo Professional. First, when you
enter the geocoding or driving regions dialog boxes for the first time, the Configure Service dialog
box displays.
To sign up for this service click Activate and follow the instructions to receive a user ID and
password, which you can enter into this dialog box. Decide whether you want the system to
remember your password1 and whether you want to use a secure server2. Then click Add Account
to begin using the EOLS server.
You can also access the EOLS is through the Help menu. Select Help > Connect to Envinsa
Online Services to get started. A landing page will provide you with further instructions, including
user name and password information. When you complete your trial period, the Envinsa Online
Services will stop accessing the server and you will have the option of subscribing for further use of
this service.
Note: IMPORTANT: MapInfo may not have online services with data that includes the geography
you are interested in. Please check with your local MapInfo sales personnel to ensure that
web services exist for your geography.
1. The password will be saved in the MapInfo services configuration file (MIRoutingServers.xml). These
passwords are encrypted.
2. When you choose the secure connection option, you add the step of encrypting all of the communication to
and from the server. Consider whether you prefer this option to the standard HTTP connection.
MapInfo Professional’s OLE embedding capability turns your applications such as word processors
and spreadsheets into “mini-MapInfo” programs where you can create, display and edit a map for
presentation, reporting or publishing. OLE is a process known as Object Linking and Embedding
whereby a server application (such as MapInfo Professional) provides information that is stored in a
client application that can accept OLE information (such as a word processor). MapInfo
Professional’s OLE embedding functionality allows you to embed a Map window in any application
that accepts OLE objects and use some of MapInfo Professional’s features to create, display and
edit the map directly in that application.
With MapInfo Professional OLE Embedding you can build the map directly in your OLE container
application, or you can create it in MapInfo Professional and drag the Map window into your
application for additional editing or output. Because the MapInfo Map Object is a live OLE object,
you are in fact running MapInfo Professional in the background. When the Map window is active in
the container, the menu and toolbar of your application change to reflect the MapInfo Professional
features that become available. This subset of features is called MapInfo Map. (Some OLE
containers will create a separate window for the object.) With the click of a button or by choosing a
menu command, you have MapInfo Professional functionality in your application where you need it.
• For more information about OLE features and requirement in MapInfo Professional, see the
MapInfo Professional Help System.
System Requirements
MapInfo Map is an OLE server application that runs under 32-bit MapInfo Professional. You must
install MapInfo Professional 32-bit to engage MapInfo Map. On the client side, only container
applications that support OLE embedded objects can run MapInfo Map.
• For more about the specific commands available when working with Map windows, see the Help
System.
Limitations of OLE
Although MapInfo Map enables you to build a map very easily in your container application, not all of
MapInfo Professional’s features are available in the context of map embedding. Among them are
editing map objects such as regions or polylines, querying a table for further analysis, geocoding to
a table in the Map window, or displaying tables in other types of windows (Browser, Graph or Layout
windows).
However, with MapInfo Professional’s drag and drop capabilities you can still perform these
functions in MapInfo Professional and bring over the Map window to your OLE container application
for final viewing, formatting and editing enhancements.
Although containers vary in their handling of OLE objects, there are some behaviors that are
common to all. There are three ways that containers accept embedded OLE objects such as a Map
window:
• On the Insert menu, click Object to choose the object to embed from a list.
• On the Edit menu, click Paste (or Paste Special) to embed an object that was previously copied
to the Clipboard.
• Drag and drop from the application to the container using the Drag Map Window tool.
The method you choose depends on which application you are in at the moment (server or client)
and how much you want to do to create the final map.
• For more information and related topics, see Creating a New Map Window in your Container and
Bringing a Map Window into your Application in the Help System.
printed, reformatted, reorganized, and saved with no special handling required for the map. The map
itself can even be resized or repositioned. You cannot, however, change the content of the map
since it is not an active OLE object.
To activate the map for editing on another system, your colleague must have access to 32-bit
MapInfo Professional and the data used to create the map. Double-click the map to activate the OLE
object. MapInfo Professional will prompt for the location of the data files if it cannot find the original
location. If the data is not available, cancel out of the Locate Data dialog box. The metafile image is
replaced with the MapInfo Professional world map in the active state. To retrieve the original metafile
image, close the document without saving and reopening it.
Note: Sharing MapInfo Professional and map data on other systems is limited to the extent of your
license agreement(s).
• For more information, see MapInfo Map Objects vs. Data Map Objects in the Help System.
If you have created your own MapInfo Professional tables, you can use your tables in Data Map.
However, before you can display your table in Data Map, you must set up your table using the Data
Map Data Installer. To launch the Data Installer, double-click the file DATAINST.EXE. (To locate this
file, click the Windows Start button, and then click Find.) Once you have launched the Data
Installer, complete the dialog boxes that appear on the screen.
Note that some MapInfo Professional tables cannot be used with Data Map. Specifically:
Using active objects and the HotLink tool, you can launch files and Internet URLs directly from
objects or labels on your map. Active objects provide you with a powerful display tool that allows you
to bring information from the Web and other applications together in your map.
These additional sources of information can give your analysis or presentation greater impact. For
example, you can link a location on your map to a Web site that gives more information about the
location or to an image file that shows certain aspects of the location in more detail.
In addition, you can use the maps you create in MapInfo Professional in your Web pages. The HTML
Image Map tool converts a MapInfo Professional map into an HTML image map. Visitors to your
Web page will be able to click any region to link to other HTML pages specific to that region.
The active object in this map (red triangle) is linked to a webcam web site that displays
an erupting volcano.
• For more about selecting columns for landing pages and Tooltips, see the Help System.
When you perform redistricting, you create a number of districts. The exact number of districts
needed depends on the nature of your work. You can assign a unique name to each district; thus, if
you want to work with four districts, you might call the districts Northeast, Southeast, Northwest, and
Southwest. Each district appears as one row in the Districts Browser.
The Districts Browser is different from other Browser windows in several respects:
• You only can select one row at a time from the Districts Browser. You cannot shift-click to select
multiple rows.
• The Districts Browser always has one row selected; you cannot cancel the selection of this row
by choosing Unselect All.
• When you select a row from the Districts Browser, that row becomes the target district. The
target district is the district that will be affected by subsequent redistricting operations.
Once you have selected a target district, you assign map objects to that district by selecting the map
objects. You can select objects by pointing and clicking, or by performing queries such as SQL
Select.
When you select map objects, MapInfo Professional tentatively assigns the selected objects to the
target district. MapInfo Professional then recalculates the totals for each district, and displays the
new totals in the Districts Browser. You can then examine the contents of the Districts Browser to
decide whether you want to make the district assignments permanent.
To cancel the tentative district assignment, cancel the selection of the map objects.
To make the tentative district assignment permanent, choose Redistrict > Assign Selected
Objects. When you choose Assign Selected Objects, MapInfo Professional stores the target
district's name in the rows of the selected objects. Thus, if you assign map objects to a district called
Northwest, MapInfo Professional stores Northwest in each object's row.
Each district has its own set of fill, line, and symbol styles. When you assign a map object to a
district, the object subsequently appears in the style of the district. Thus, if you choose a solid blue
fill for the Northeast district, objects that you assign to Northeast appear in solid blue.
For example, if you have a layer of states, you might want to combine the state boundaries to create
sales territories. Each state record includes a field, TOT_SALES, which contains the total sales for
the previous year. You would ultimately like to sum up the TOT_SALES field for each state in a given
sales territory. Redistricting is gives you the tools for creating the sales territory and combining those
TOT_SALES fields from each state’s data into one table.
Note: The STATES table used in this example is from the MapInfo Professional Tutorial data, which
is available from the MapInfo web site, www.mapinfo.com/miprotutorial.
But that is only one part of the redistricting process. The real power lies in the Districts Browser
where you can see on-the-fly updates of district record counts and data totals when you click a map
object and assign it to another district. This allows you to perform visual “what if” analysis to achieve
district realignments, a process sometimes referred to as load balancing.
When you are satisfied with the distribution, you can make the district assignments permanent.
Later, as the need arises, you can change the assignments and try out new distributions.
Redistricting does not create new map objects or permanently change the style of the map objects.
Redistricting is simply a dynamic grouping tool that displays map objects that share the same district
information as a group. While the map objects are not permanently affected, you can make the
district assignments permanent by saving the table.
You can redistrict any mappable table containing region, line, or point objects. The redistrict map will
reflect the appropriate fill, line, or symbol style for the objects. The Redistricter limits the number of
districts in a table to 594.
You can use redistricting in a wide variety of applications such as creating and managing sales
territories, school or voter districts, emergency service coverage areas, delivery routes, natural
resource management areas, etc. Use it wherever there is a high degree of fluctuating data and the
need to try out different realignment scenarios.
You can use redistricting whether you need to create districts from scratch or realign existing
districts.
Before we get into the process, however, there are two key concepts to introduce: the Districts
Browser and Target District.
The Browser window lists the districts as specified in your table, the record count for each district,
and aggregate expression columns that contain the net total values of your data. You specify these
columns in the New Redistrict window dialog box when you begin the redistricting session.
• For more instructions about creating and adding redistricting features and other related topics,
see the Help System.
For additional topics in Redistricting, see Setting up the Target District in the Help System.
Using Redistricting
When you calculate the percentage of partial columns (such as population columns that cite income,
gender, age, ethnic background, or religious affiliation) you have two calculation methods available.
One method calculates the percentage by column so that the sum of all of the entries in every
column would be 100%. Another method calculates the percentage by row based on your selected
row entry (or sum of entries) so that each percentage entry in the row is calculated based on that
row (or sum of entries). For example, in the following table:
A B C
1 1 1
2 2 2
Options in Redistricting
To control the order of districts in the Districts Browser, on the Redistrict menu, click Options. The
Redistricter Options dialog box displays. Choose your preferred sort order from among: most
recently used, alphabetical, or unordered. You can also choose to show the Browser grid lines and
save the options as your default.
As mentioned earlier, the Most Recently Used option can greatly aid you if you have more districts
than the Districts Browser can display in a window. Whenever you select a map object that belongs
to a district that is not currently visible in the Browser, MapInfo Professional will move that record
near the top of the Browser window. You can then more easily set the new target district or view the
changes in the data fields as you carry out your load-balancing scenario.
Changing the display of your districts is simple. Click the fill pattern, line style, or symbol in the
Districts Browser that represents the district. The Region Style, Line Style, or Symbol Style dialog
box displays, where you can change the tools used to display the district.
To save the style changes, you must save the redistricting session as a workspace. Save Table will
only save the district assignment changes. The styles belong to a thematic layer, not to the table
itself. The district changes are applied to the table and, thus, can be saved to the table.
If you have numerous records without graphic objects in your table, it may be best to create and
save a subset of the table and run the Redistricter on the new table.
Creating Expressions
Formulating expressions is something like writing sentences. There is a vocabulary of words from
which you can draw, and these words have to be combined according to syntactic rules. The syntax
of expressions is much simpler than the syntax of English, and the vocabulary is vastly smaller.
However, most of us have been using English for years and so it seems easy and natural whereas
formulating expressions is, at first, sometimes a bit difficult.
However, just as English has simple sentences and complex sentences, so there are simple
expressions and complex ones. Even if you don’t get the hang of formulating complex expressions,
you can still use all the MapInfo Professional® commands that use expressions. That is because
formulating simple expressions is very easy and, at the same time, allows you to work with your data
in powerful ways.
• Most of the procedural information for Creating Expressions is available in the Help System.
Expressions are used in the following commands: Select, Update Column, Thematic Mapping, and
Layer Control (Labels > Label Options, Label drop-down list). The expression serves a different
purpose in different commands.
For example:
• In the Select command the expression states a condition that a record in a table must meet in
order to be included in a query table.
• In Update Column the expression calculates a value that is then entered into a table.
• In Thematic Mapping the expression calculates a value that is then displayed on a map.
• In Label Options, you use expressions containing string functions to fine tune your labels.
The expressions fall into two broad categories:
Expressions that simply calculate some value never have a comparison operator and generally do
not have multiple clauses. Use these expressions to calculate values for Thematic Mapping, Update
Column, and Label With Column in Layer Settings.
1. POP_1990
2. STATE
You could use such an expression in Thematic Mapping to indicate what data is to be represented
on the map. In Update Column such an expression would tell MapInfo Professional what data to use
in updating a column in the target table.
6. POP_1980 * 1.2
7. POP_1990 / TOTAL_AREA
8. round(POP_1990/TOTAL_AREA,.1)
The first three examples use comparison operators. The first tests to see whether the 1990
population is greater than (>) some constant (17893). The second tests to see whether the value of
one column, POP_1990, is less than or equal to (<=) the value of another column, POP_1980. The
third tests to see whether or not the county is Orange. When the county does not equal (<>)
“Orange” the record is selected. You could use any of these expressions in Select or in the Where
Condition clause of SQL Select. These commands allow you to select a subset of the records in a
table. The expression defines the characteristics of the subset.
Examples 6 and 7 use arithmetic operators. Example 6 multiplies (*) the value of POP_1980 by a
constant (1.2) while example 7 divides one column, POP_1990, by the value of another column,
AREA.
Example 8 uses the round function to round the value of the expression “POP_1990/TOTAL_AREA”
to the nearest tenth (.1).
Expressions 6, 7 and 8 don’t have comparison operators and therefore they would not be suitable for
use in Select or in the Where Condition clause of SQL Select. However, you could use them alone in
Thematic Mapping, Update Column, or Select columns in SQL Select.
The Where Condition field can contain two or more logical expressions if the expressions are
separated by the word And or by the word Or. If the expressions are joined by the word And,
MapInfo Professional only selects the rows that satisfy both criteria. If the expressions are joined by
the word Or, MapInfo Professional selects any row that satisfies either criterion.
Filter criteria can use any column in your base table(s), regardless of whether you included the
column in the Select Columns field.
Columns can be referred to by name or by number, where the number designates the order the
column has in Select Columns. Thus, "col1" and "col6" refer to the first and sixth columns,
respectively. The number must be preceded by the letters "col".
• For more instructions and related topics, see the Using Expressions to Create a New Column
topic in the Help System.
When you add or subtract a month, you use 30 or 31.When MapInfo Professional subtracts a date
from a date, the result indicates a number of days.
”Ms.” + Last_Name
When MapInfo Professional evaluates this as part of an expression it places “Ms. “in front of each
last name. Note that the string constant (“Ms. “) is in quotes. Similarly,
”Hello,” + ”world”
gives you “Hello, world.” And
”4”+”5”
gives you “45.”
Operators Description
= “equals”
• Numerical Comparison
• String Comparison
• Date Comparison
• Logical Comparison
The geographic operators go between the objects being specified. Select the geographic operators
from the Operators menu. Here are the geographic operators:
Contains Object A Contains object B if B’s centroid is anywhere within A’s boundary.
Contains Entire Object A Contains Entire object B if B’s boundary is entirely within A’s boundary.
Contains Part Object A Contains Part object B if B’s boundary is partly within A’s boundary.
Entirely Within Object A is Entirely Within object B if A’s boundary is entirely within B’s
boundary.
Partly Within Object A is Partly Within object B if A’s boundary is partly within B’s boundary.
Intersects Object A Intersects object B if they have at least one point in common.
“Contains Part” and “Partly Within” are exactly equivalent to “Intersects” -- these are all treated the
same way by MapInfo Professional, so the standard syntax “Intersects” is almost universally used.
“Contains Entire” and “Entirely Within” are concerned with the area covered by a region object; the
location of the centroid doesn't matter.
Similarly, a polyline can not contain a point, but it can intersect a point; a point can not be within a
polyline, but it can intersect a polyline.
Note: MapInfo Professional can perform a simple Contains or Within comparison more rapidly than
a Contains Entire or Entirely Within. Therefore, unless you must be absolutely sure that
objects are completely inside other objects you should use Contains and Within rather than
Contains Entire or Entirely Within.
Operator Description
and is “true” if (and only if) both of its arguments (the expressions it joins together) are
true. A record must satisfy both of these conditions if it is to be selected.
or is “true” if either one, or both, of its arguments (the expressions it joins together) are
true. A record need satisfy only one of these conditions if it is to be selected. It is
also selected if both of its conditions are satisfied.
not is “true” if its argument (the expression it applies to) is false. A record is selected if
it does not meet the stated condition.
Suppose you want to select all properties that are worth $250,000 or more and are in Columbia
county. Each record has to meet two criteria, each of which can be formulated as a simple
expression:
You could perform one selection for all properties worth $250,000 or more. Then you could perform
another selection on that result, looking for all properties in Columbia county. However, it is easier to
combine the two operations into one using the logical operator “and”.
When MapInfo Professional examines a record to see whether or not it meets the condition set by
this expression, it makes the two tests: Does COUNTY equal Columbia? Is the VALUE equal to or
greater than 250000? When the answer to both of these questions is true (or yes), then the record is
accepted into the current selection. When the answer to one or both of the questions is no (or false),
then the record is not accepted into the current selection.
Now, what if you want all properties worth $250,000 or more and not in Columbia county? You can
use “not” to negate the first clause of expression 33, yielding expression 34:
Only records where the county is not Columbia satisfy the first clause of expression 34. Now
consider expression 35:
Expression 35 is simply the negation of expression 33. Any record that would satisfy 33 does not
satisfy 35. Any record that does not satisfy 33 satisfies 35.
You can use “or” when you want to specify alternative conditions, such as:
Any record evaluated against this condition is accepted if its county is any one of the two specified
counties. One could, of course, use numerical tests as well. For example:
This tests to see whether the area is greater than 40 or the value is greater than 250000. When
either one is true of a record, then that record is accepted into the selection.
In formulating expressions using logical operators you have to be careful how you use them. The
following expression, while it seems OK, does not work:
Judging from its English translation—COUNTY equals Columbia or Greene—this expression should
operate just like expression 36 and give us any record containing Columbia County or Greene
County. But the rules of computational logic and the rules of English are a bit different.
When MapInfo Professional reads expressions it reads them from left to right. One of the things it
has to do is to determine how the items in the expression are grouped. Think of this operation as
inserting parentheses into the expression. MapInfo Professional reads expression 35 as though it
were grouped like expression 39, which is what we intend.
It reads expression 38 as though it were grouped like 40, which is not at all what we want.
Both 39 and 40 have the same first clause. But their second clauses (after the “or”) are quite
different. The second clause of 40 is simply a literal string, “Greene.” By convention, MapInfo
Professional evaluates a record against a literal string as being true if that record is not blank. When
MapInfo Professional evaluates records against expression 40, all non-blank records are evaluated
as true and be accepted into the selection. It does not make any difference how a record evaluates
on the first clause. Any non-blank record evaluates as true on the second clause, and one “true” is
all it takes to evaluate the entire expression as true.
Let us consider one final example, which is the negation of expression 36:
• Numeric Clauses
• String Clauses
• Date Clauses
• Keyword Clauses
Operators at the same level of precedence are evaluated from left to right.
Exponentiation
Negation
Multiplication, Division
Addition, Subtraction
Not
And
Lowest Priority: Or
For example, the expression 3+4*2 produces a result of 11. That is because multiplication has a
higher precedence than addition and is performed first, in effect:
3+4*2=
3+8=
11
We can add parenthesis to force MapInfo Professional to do the addition first:
(3+4)*2=
7*2=
14
Now consider expression 60, which is intended to select all records July or September of 1989.
Because “and” has higher precedence than “or”, MapInfo Professional treats this expression as
though “year(RECEIVED)=89 and month(RECEIVED)=7” was enclosed in parentheses.
In this case, any record for July of 89 or for September of any year would be selected. That’s
probably not what you want. However, by adding parentheses to the second expression, you can get
this:
In this expression, the parentheses tell MapInfo Professional that “month(RECEIVED)=7” and
“month(RECEIVED)=9” are alternatives in the second clause of the expression. MapInfo
Professional treats this the same as it treats number 53 above.
Note: When you are not sure how MapInfo Professional evaluates an expression with several
operators, you should use parentheses to group elements as you want them.
SomeFunction(parameters)
Most of MapInfo Professional’s functions take one or two parameters. A parameter can be a column
or another expression. MapInfo Professional uses the keyword “obj” or “object” with the geographic
functions: Area, CentroidX, CentroidY, ObjectLen, and Perimeter. This keyword tells MapInfo
Professional that it has to get values based on graphical objects in the table rather than tabular data.
• For more information about specific functions, see the Help System.
The MapBasic window is limited to selected commands from the MapBasic programming language.
The MapBasic window can take commands line by line. It does not include the capability for looping,
interapplication communication, and other more complex commands. If you find yourself using the
MapBasic window often, you may want to consider transferring your code to a MapBasic application
that will automate the process.
Note: There is a comprehensive list of MapBasic functions and statements you can use from the
MapBasic window in the Help System.
1. Open the MapBasic window and then open the WORLD table.
3. Type in the expression Pop_1994 > 1000000. Make sure that the Browse Results box is
checked.
4. Click OK. The syntax for these commands appears in the MapBasic window as follows:
Open Table ”C:\MAPINFO\DATA\WORLD\WORLD.tab” Interactive
Map From World
select * from World where Pop_1994 > 1000000 into Selection
browse * from Selection
The first line is a result of opening the WORLD table. The second line of code is written
automatically because the WORLD table displays in a Map window by default. The third line is the
syntax for the select statement. The fourth line is the result of checking the Browse results box.
You can also enter MapBasic commands into the MapBasic window. Position your cursor under the
browse from Selection line. Type the following:
As stated before, the MapBasic window was primarily designed to assist MapBasic programmers.
You can statements and functions in the MapBasic window such as Buffer( ) function or Insert
statement.
Refer to the MapBasic Reference Guide, which is located in the Documentation subfolder of your
installation directory to find the appropriate usage and syntax for these statements and functions. It
provides a comprehensive guide to MapBasic programming statements and functions along with
examples.
1. Choose Tools > Run MapBasic Program. The Run MapBasic Program dialog box displays.
2. Choose a directory.
3. Choose an application from the list (MapBasic applications have an .mbx extension).
4. Click OK.
4. Place this file in your MapInfo Professional program directory or in your home directory.
Term Definition
3DMap A window that allows you to view your maps containing continuous grids from various
viewpoints in 3D Format.
Add Node Use the Add Node button to add a node to regions, polylines, and arcs. You can add
Button nodes when the Reshape tool is in effect. Adding nodes can give more precision to your
object.
Address The search dictionary used for matching addresses during geocoding.
Dictionary
Alias The name assigned to an expression or a column when you are working in the Select
Columns field in the SQL Select dialog box. This name appears as the column title for
that expression or column in a Browser.
Application A computer program used for a particular kind of work, such as word processing.
Application is often interchangeable with the word program.
Arc Button The Arc button allows you to access the Arc tool. Use the Arc tool to draw an arc the size
and shape of one quarter of an ellipse. Once you have created an arc, you can reshape it
to the desired size.
ASCII The acronym for American Standard Code for Information Interchange. ASCII is a
standard code used in most microcomputers, computer terminals, and printers for
representing characters as numbers. It not only includes printable characters, but also
control codes to indicate carriage return, backspace, and so forth.
Assign Use this button to permanently assign all selected map objects to the target district.
Selected
Objects Button
Axis Used in a graph, these are graduated lines bordering the plot area of a graph. Location
coordinates are measured relative to the axes. By convention the X-axis is horizontal, the
Y-axis is vertical.
Bar Chart A type of thematic map that displays a bar chart of thematic variables for each record in a
table from which the map is based.
Base Map Usually the dominant or underlying layer in a given map. (These are typically the data
layers that MapInfo® offers as ready products.) Users usually layer their own data on top
of these base maps or use these base maps to geocode or to make new layers. Examples
are joining industry data to postal code boundaries for analysis and then combining
arrangements of the postal codes into new territory layers.
Base Table A permanent table, which is part of a map, as opposed to a query table, which is
temporary. You can edit the contents of base tables, and you can change their structure
(by editing, deleting, reordering columns and adding or deleting graphic objects).
Term Definition
Bitmap A screen image displayed as an array of dots or bits. Software usually generates either bit-
mapped (raster) or object-oriented (vectored) files. MapInfo Professional can work with
both.
Boundary In GIS a boundary is a region on a map enclosed by a border. Cambria County, Manitoba,
Region and Argentina would all be represented as boundaries on a map. Note that a single
boundary could encompass several polygons. Thus, Indonesia is a single boundary but
consists of many polygons.
Boundary The Boundary Select button allows you to access the Boundary Select tool. Use the
Select Button Boundary Select Tool to search for and choose all the objects within a given region, such
as a state or county boundary, a police patrol district, a sales territory, and so forth.
Browser A window for viewing a table (or database, spreadsheet or text file) in tabular form.
Buffer A type of proximity analysis where areas or zones of a given distance are generated
around selected map objects. Buffers are user-defined or can be generated for a set of
objects based on those objects’ attribute values. The resulting buffer zones form region
objects representing the area that is within the specified buffer distance from the object.
Cadastral A map set used to graphically define the cadastre or land ownership in a given area. A tax
map is an example of a cadastral map. The land registration, assessment roles, and tax
maps comprise the cadastre.
Cancel Button A command button for closing a dialog box without making changes.
Cartesian A coordinate system using an x,y scale not tied to any “real-world” system. Most CAD
drawing uses this method of registering objects (for example, a drawing of a ball-bearing
assembly, floor plans). If a drawing uses Cartesian coordinates, one corner of the drawing
probably has coordinates 0, 0.
Cartographic A MapInfo Professional legend window that enables you to display cartographic
Legend information for any map layer in the Map window.
Cartography The art and science of making maps. In GIS it is also the graphic presentation and visual
interpretation of data.
Term Definition
Centroid Usually the center of a map object. For most map objects, the centroid is located at the
middle of the object (the location halfway between the northern and southern extents and
halfway between the eastern and western extents of the object). In some cases, the
centroid is not at the middle point because there is a restriction that the centroid must be
located on the object itself. Thus, in the case of a crescent-shaped region object, the
middle point of the object may actually lie outside the limits of the region; however, the
centroid is always within the limits of the region.
In MapInfo Professional, the centroid represents the location used for automatic labeling,
geocoding, and placement of thematic pie and bar charts. If you edit a map in Reshape
mode, you can reposition region centroids by dragging them.
Change View This button allows you to change the zoom, map scale, and window centering aspects of
Button the Map or Layout that currently displays.
Check Box A small square box that appears in a dialog box. You can click in the check box or on the
text in order to select the option. Check boxes are generally present when multiple options
can be selected at one time.
Column A column in a Browser corresponds to a field in a table. A column contains a specific type
of information about an object, such as Name, Abbreviation, Land area, Price, Population,
and so forth. The information for each object is listed on a row in the Browser.
Command A word or phrase, usually found in a menu, that displays a dialog box and/or carries out an
action.
Conflict When conflicts exist between the data residing on a remote database and new data that
Resolution you want to upload to the remote database via a MapInfo Professional linked table. The
conflict resolution process is invoked whenever an attempt to save the linked table detects
a conflict in an update.
Control Menu A menu activated through the Control Menu Box located in the upper left corner of all
windows. The control menu is used to resize, move, maximize, minimize, or close the
window.
Control Points The points on a raster image whose coordinates serve as a reference for associating earth
coordinates with any location on the image. See Registration on page 510.
Term Definition
Cosmetic Layer The topmost layer of a Map window. Objects may be placed in this layer such as map titles
and graphic objects. It is always displayed, and all objects placed in the Cosmetic Layer
must be saved to a new or existing layer.
Data A process that occurs when combining separate map objects into a single object. MapInfo
Aggregation Professional calculates what the column values for the new object should be, based on
sums or averages of the values of the original objects.
Data A process that occurs when splitting a map object(s) into smaller parts where MapInfo
Disaggregation Professional splits the data associated with the map object(s) into smaller parts to match
the new map objects.
Data Sources An ODBC data source is an SQL database and the information you need to access that
database. For example, an SQL Server data source is the SQL Server database, the
server on which it resides, and the network used to access that server.
Database Any organized collection of data. The term is often used to refer to a single file or table of
information in MapInfo Professional.
Decimal Degree The decimal representation of fractions of degrees. Many paper maps express
coordinates in degrees, minutes, seconds (for example, 40_30i10I), where minutes and
seconds are fractions of degrees. 30 minutes equal half a degree, and 30 seconds equal
half a minute. MapInfo Professional, however, expresses coordinates in decimal degrees
(for example, 72.558 degrees), where fractions of degrees are expressed as decimals.
Thus, the longitude: 40 degrees, 30 minutes, would be expressed in MapInfo Professional
as 40.5 degrees.
Default The value or option used in the absence of explicit specification. Often the original setting
or value for a variable.
Degrees Degrees (longitude and latitude) are coordinates used to represent locations on the
Longitude, surface of the earth. Longitude, or X-coordinate, represents a location’s east-west
Degrees position, where any location west of the prime meridian has a negative X value. Latitude,
Latitude, or Y-coordinate, represents a location’s north-south position, where any location south of
Decimal the equator has a negative Y value.
Degrees
Derived In a table created through the SQL Select, a derived column is one created by using an
Column expression. The column is derived in the sense that it isn’t just a copy of the data in one of
the tables being accessed by the SQL Select command.
Term Definition
Deselect The process of undoing a selection. The object or area you deselect will not be affected by
subsequent commands. Performed by selecting another area, by clicking in a blank area,
or by executing the Unselect All command.
Digitizer, An electronic device that lets you trace a paper map into a GIS or CAD package. The
Digitizing digitizer consists of a table (or tablet) onto which you attach a paper map. You then can
Tablet trace the map by moving a hand-held, mouse-like device known as a cursor, or puck,
across the surface. Digitizing a map produces vector data as the end result.
Districts A special browser that displays when redistricting. It differs from other Browser windows in
Browser the following respects: one row can only be selected at one time, one row is always
selected, and the selected row becomes the target district into which you can add other
objects.
Dot Density A type of thematic map that carries information by showing a large number of tiny dots,
Map wherein each dot represents some specific unit quantity. For example, for a population dot
density map each dot might represent 10,000 people.
Drawing A MapInfo Professional window containing twelve buttons that access tools for drawing
Toolbar and modifying objects on your map or layout.
Edit Handle The small boxes that appear at the four corners of the minimum bounding rectangle of an
object in an editable layer of a Map window or in a Layout window.
Ellipse Button The Ellipse button allows you to access the Ellipse tool. Use the Ellipse tool to create
elliptical and round objects.
Export The process whereby a program saves information in a file to be used by another
program.
Expression A statement containing two parts: 1) column names and constants (i.e., specific data
values), and 2) functions (for example, area) and operators (for example, +, -, >), in order
to extract or derive information from a database. Expressions are used in Select, SQL
Select, Update Column, Create Thematic Map, and Label with Column.
Field A field in a table corresponds to a column in a Browser. A field contains a specific type of
information about an object, such as, name, abbreviation, land area, price, population, and
so forth. The record for each object consists of that object’s values for each of the fields in
the database.
File A collection of information that has been given a name and is stored on some electronic
medium such as a tape or disk. A file can be a document or an application.
Fill Pattern The design and color used to fill a closed object.
Font A character set based on a particular style used for text characters.
Term Definition
Frame Button The Frame button allows you to create frames in a layout. Each frame can display a map,
graph, Browser, map legend, graph legend, Info window, statistics window, and message
window or, it can be an empty frame.
Generalization The process of simplifying a data set to a size that can be easily manipulated and
represented. For example, a river may have many twists and turns; however, if a map
covers a very large area, the river may be represented as a straight line. Similarly, in a
map of a very large area, a city might be represented as a point marker.
Geocode The process of assigning X and Y coordinates to records in a table or database so that the
records can be displayed as objects on a map.
Geographic An organized collection of computer hardware and software designed to efficiently create,
Information manipulate, analyze, and display all types of geographically or spatially referenced data. A
System (GIS) GIS allows complex spatial operations that are very difficult to do otherwise.
Grabber Button The Grabber Button allows you to access the Grabber tool. Use the Grabber tool to
reposition a map or layout within its window.
Graduated A type of thematic map that shows symbols (point objects) in a variety of sizes to indicate
Symbols Map which objects have higher or lower numerical values.
Graph window A window that displays numerical data in the form of a graph.
Graticule A grid of horizontal (latitude) and vertical (longitude) lines displayed on an earth map,
spaced at a regular distance (for example, every five degrees, every fifteen degrees).
Used to establish a frame of reference.
Grid Surface A type of thematic map that displays data as continuous color gradations across the map.
Map This type of thematic map is produced by an interpolation of point data from the source
table. A grid file from the data interpolation is generated and is displays as a raster image
in a Map window.
Heads-Up A method of digitizing where the user creates vector objects by tracing over a raster image
Digitizing displayed on the screen. Thus, heads-up digitizing does not require a digitizing tablet.
Help Button Bar A bar located at the top of the Help Window that contains buttons you use to move to Help
topics.
Horizontal The Horizontal scroll bar appears at the bottom of the MapInfo Professional window. Use
Scroll Bar the horizontal scroll bar to move left and right. The scroll box inside the scroll bar indicates
your horizontal location. You can use the mouse to scroll to other parts of the window.
Hot Views MapInfo Professional technology that automatically updates all the windows you have
open for a particular table when you make a change in any one of the windows. For
example, if an item is selected in a Map window, it will be selected in all other Map
windows and Browsers you have open for that table.
Import The process whereby a program loads a file that is the output of another program.
Term Definition
Individual A type of thematic map that shades records according to individual values.
Values Map
Inflection The process of deviating the color in ranged thematic maps to emphasize some numerical
significance. In thematic mapping we insert a new color between the top and bottom color
for second interpolation of data.
For example, suppose we were showing population growth with blue representing an
increase in population growth and red representing a decrease in population growth.
We could have white as the inflection color for a range that has zero or almost zero
population growth, so that lighter shades of blue would represent a smaller population
growth and lighter shades of red would represent a smaller decline in population.
Info Button The Info button allows you to access the Info tool. Use the Info tool to select a location on
your map, including multiple overlapping objects and display a list of all objects at that
location. You can then choose an object from the list and view the tabular data for that
object.
Islands Small areas outside the main boundary that can be reached within the specified time or
distance.
IsoChrone An IsoChrone is a polygon or set of points representing an area that can be traversed from
a starting point in a given amount of time along a given road network.
IsoDistance An IsoDistance is a polygon or set of points representing an area that can be traversed
from a starting point travelling a given distance along a given road network.
Isogram An Isogram is a map that displays a set of points that satisfy a distance or time condition.
Isograms are either IsoChrones or IsoDistances.
Join The process of creating a relational link between two tables (databases).
Latitude The horizontal lines on a map that increase from 0 degrees at the Equator to 90 degrees
at both the North (+90.0 degrees) and South (-90.0 degrees) poles. Used to describe the
North-South position of a point as measured usually in degrees or decimal degrees above
or below the equator.
Layer A layer is a basic building block of MapInfo Professional maps and consists of a table with
graphic and text settings like style override, labeling, and zoom layering. Maps are made
of one or more superimposed layers (for example, a layer of street data superimposed
over a layer of county or postal code boundaries) which you can design to convey
geographical or statistical information. Typically, each map layer corresponds to one open
table. Cosmetic Layers contain map objects that represent temporary map annotations
(for example, text objects). Cosmetic Layers contain map objects that represent temporary
map annotations (for example, labels). See Cosmetic Layer on page 501 and Table on
page 512.
Term Definition
Layer Control The Layer Control Button allows you to access the Layer Control dialog box. This dialog
Button box allows you to specify how the various tables in a Map window are layered and
displayed. See Accessing Layer Control on page 162.
Layout Window A window where you arrange and annotate the contents of one or several windows for
printing.
Legend The part of a map, which explains the meaning of different colors, shapes, or fill patterns
used on the map. See also Cartographic Legend on page 499.
Legend Frames Each legend window contains one or more legend frames each corresponding to a style or
theme layer in the Map window.
Legend A window containing legend frames. You can create more than one legend window for
Window each map. The legend window can contain more than one frame. For example, you can
have one legend window containing four legend frames, or you can have four legend
windows, each containing one legend frame.
Legend Use the Legend Window button to display the Legend window associated with maps or
Window Button graphs.
Line, Line A map object defined by a set of sequential coordinates that may represent the
Object generalized shape of a geographic feature (for example, street centerlines, railroads,
cables). A MapInfo street map is a collection of thousands of line objects.
Line Button The Line button allows you to access the Line tool. Use the Line tool to draw straight lines.
Line Style Use the Line Style button to access the Line Style dialog box. The Line Style dialog box
Button allows you to set the line type, thickness and color of line objects (lines, arcs and
polylines) and borders of closed objects. You can also change the type, thickness and
color of objects you are editing.
Linked Table A linked table is a special kind of MapInfo table that is downloaded from a remote
database and retains connections to its remote database table. You can perform most
operations on a linked table that you do for a regular MapInfo table.
Longitude The vertical lines on a map, running from the North to South poles, used to describe the
east-west position of a point. The position is reported as the number of degrees east (to -
180.0 degrees) or west (to +180.0 degrees) of the prime meridian (0 degrees). Lines of
longitude are farthest apart at the Equator and intersect at both poles, and therefore, are
not parallel.
Longitude/ MapInfo Professional’s default coordinate system for representing geographic objects in a
Latitude map.
Main Toolbar A window containing buttons for choosing tools, accessing dialog boxes, and showing or
hiding windows.
Term Definition
Map Catalog The MapInfo map catalog stores information about the location of spatial columns on the
DBMS. There must be one catalog per database. The EasyLoader application can create
this catalog for each database: Oracle 8, 9, Informix, SQL Server, and MS Access.
Additionally, you can create a map catalog manually with instructions in the MapInfo
Professional User Guide. This is a one-time only task per database and is required before
any tables on that database can be mapped in MapInfo Professional.
Map Scale A statement of a measure of the map and the equivalent measure on the earth. Often
expressed as a representative ratio of distance, such as 1:10,000. This means that one
unit of distance on the map (for example, one inch) represents 10,000 of the same units of
distance on the earth.
The term scale must be used carefully. Technically, a map of a single city block is large–
scale (for example, 1:12,000), while a map of an entire country is small–scale (for
example, 1:1,000,000). A 1:1,000,000 map is considered small-scale because of the small
numeric value obtained when you divide 1 by 1,000,000.
Map Segment In a street map, a segment is a single section of the street. In urban maps, segments are
generally one block long. Address ranges are stored at the segment level.
MapBasic The programming language used to customize and/or automate MapInfo Professional. To
create MapBasic applications, you need the MapBasic compiler, which is a separate
product. However, you do not need the MapBasic compiler to run a compiled MapBasic
application.
Map Scale A statement of a measure of the map and the equivalent measure on the earth and often
expressed as a representative ratio of distance, such as 1:10,000. This means that one
unit of distance on the map (e.g., one inch) represents 10,000 of the same units of
distance on the earth.
The term scale must be used carefully. Technically, a map of a single city block is large-
scale (e.g., 1:12,000), while a map of an entire country is small-scale (e.g., 1:1,000,000).
A 1:1,000,000 map is considered small-scale because of the small numeric value obtained
when you divide 1 by 1,000,000.
Meridian A line or a portion of a line running from the North to the South pole. A longitudinal line.
Term Definition
Military Grid The U.S. Military Grid Reference System (MGRS) is a grid reference system that MI Pro
Reference supports when displaying maps in a Map window. It is the military version of the civilian-
System use Universal Transverse Mercator (UTM) grid system. Military grid references are very
similar to the mathematical Cartesian x,y system in which coordinates are giving in terms
of x (easting) and y (northing).
In this system, the world is generally divided into 6° by 8° geographic areas, each of which
is given a unique identification, called the Grid Zone Designation. These areas are
covered by a pattern of 100,000-meter squares. Each square is identified by two letters
called the 100,000-meter square identifications. A reference keyed to a gridded map of
any scale is made by giving the 100,000- meter square identification together with the
numerical location. Numerical references within the 100,000-meter square are given to the
desired accuracy in terms of the easting (E) and northing (N) grid coordinates for the point.
The Grid Zone Designation usually is prefixed to the identification when references are
made in more than one grid zone designation area.
Minimum For any given map object, the smallest rectangle that completely encompasses the object.
Bounding
Rectangle
(MBR)
Native The projection in which a map’s coordinate points are stored. MapInfo Professional allows
Projection you to display maps in other projections, but not as fast as displaying maps in their native
projection.
Node An end-point of a line object, or an end-point of a line segment which is part of a polyline
or region object.
Non-Earth Map A map in which objects are not explicitly referenced to locations on the earth’s surface.
Floor plans are typical examples.
ODBC Drivers An ODBC driver is a dynamic-link library (.DLL) file that MapInfo Professional uses to
connect to an SQL database. Each type of SQL database requires a different ODBC
driver.
Term Definition
OSGB Many of our international customers want to display MasterMap GML files developed by
MasterMap the Ordnance Survey of Great Britain (OSGB). We provide support for some of the
GML Files Topography features (OSGB version 2.0), Topographic Area, Lines and Points,
Cartographic Symbols and Boundary Lines.
We maintain support for these features and add support for Cartographic Text and
Departed Features. MapInfo Professional will continue to support GML files as the OSGB
updates the schema that underlies the GML technology.
As the GML format gets more sophisticated in its support of additional layers, feature
types, and attributes, we will continue to provide full support for those changes. Currently,
we support the OSGB recommended styles by mapping the style definitions to existing MI
Pro styles. Where it is not possible to render complicated fill patterns, we use the simple
dot screen that the OSGB recommended to us. The OSGB style mapping to MapInfo
styles is hard coded so it cannot be changed.
Outer Join A type of multi-table join where all the records in the specified tables are included in the
result table, even records that do not match the join criteria. MapInfo Professional does
not perform outer joins.
Pack The process of compressing MapInfo tables so that they use less disk space.
Pie Chart Map A type of thematic map that displays a pie chart of thematic variables for each record in
the table from which the map is based.
Pin Map, Push- A type of map named after the practice of inserting push-pins into a wall map. A pin map
Pin Map features point objects. Geocoding a database is one way of creating a pin map.
Pixel The acronym for picture element. The smallest dot that can be displayed on a computer
screen. If a screen is described as having a resolution of 1,024 x 768, the screen shows
1,024 pixels from right to left, and 768 pixels from top to bottom. Each character, object, or
line on the screen is composed of numerous pixels.
Point, Point A map object defined by a single X,Y coordinate pair. Each point object is represented by
Object a symbol style (for example, circle, square, triangle, etc.).
Point Size A unit of measurement equal to 1/72 of an inch. Used to measure character size.
Polygon, A simple bounded region, simple in the sense that it does not consist of more than one
Polygon Object polygon (where a boundary can consist of more than one polygon). The Polygon tool
creates a single polygon.
Polygon Button The Polygon button allows you to access the Polygon tool. Use the Polygon tool to draw
polygons one side at a time.
Term Definition
Polygon A spatial operation that merges overlapping polygons from two layers to analyze those
Overlay intersected areas or to create a third layer of new polygons.
Polyline, A linetype object made up of many line segments. It contains more than two nodes, that is,
Polyline Object more than its end points. The Polyline tool creates a single polyline. In contrast, the Line
tool only draws a single straight line (that is, a line defined by two nodes).
Polyline Button The Polyline button allows you to access the Polyline tool. Use the Polyline Tool to draw
polylines (a connected sequence of lines that are not closed).
Projection A mathematical model that transforms the locations of features on the earth’s surface to
locations on a two-dimensional surface, such as a paper map. Since a map is an attempt
to represent a spherical object (the earth) on a flat surface, all projections have some
degree of distortion. A map projection can preserve area, distance, shape or direction but
only a globe can preserve all of these attributes. Some projections (for example, Mercator)
produce maps well suited for navigation. Other projections (for example, equal-area
projections, such as Lambert) produce maps well suited for visual analysis.
Query Table A temporary table produced as the result of a Select, SQL Query, or by choosing objects in
a Map window or records in a Browser and mapping, graphing, or browsing that selection.
You cannot make edits and structural changes on query tables, but you can edit a selected
set of rows in your source table through a query table. See Selection on page 511 and
Base Table on page 498.
Radius Select The Radius Select button allows you to access the Radius Select tool. Use this tool to
Button select all of the objects within a certain radius. See Using the Radius Select Tool on
page 306.
Ranged Map A type of thematic map that displays data according to ranges set by the user. The ranges
are shaded using colors or patterns.
Raster Image A type of computerized picture consisting of row after row of tiny dots (pixels). Raster
images are sometimes known as bitmaps. Aerial photographs and satellite imagery are
common types of raster data found in GIS. A computer image can be represented in raster
format or in vector format. See Scanning on page 510 and Vector Image on page 514.
Record All the information about one object in a database or table. A record in a table corresponds
to a row in a Browser.
Rectangle The Rectangle button allows you to access the Rectangle tool. Use the Rectangle tool to
Button draw rectangles and squares.
Redistricting The process of assigning map objects to groups. As you assign map objects, MapInfo
Professional automatically calculates totals for each group and displays the totals in a
special Districts Browser. This process is sometimes known as load-balancing.
Term Definition
Region, Region An enclosed area defined by one or more polygons. If a region contains one or more lakes
Object or islands, each lake or island is a separate polygon. A region is an object created with the
Polygon tool.
Region Style Use the Region Style button to access the Region Style dialog box. The Region Style
Button dialog box allows you to specify the color, pattern, and borderline style of closed objects.
You can also change the color and pattern of objects you are currently editing.
Registration Usually the first stage of the digitizing process or when opening a raster image for the first
time in MapInfo Professional. Before you can digitize a paper map or work with a raster
image, you must point to several control points across the map, and enter their
coordinates (for example, longitude, latitude). After you have registered the map, MapInfo
Professional can associate a longitude, latitude position with any point on the map
surface; this allows MapInfo Professional to perform area and distance calculations, and
overlay multiple map layers in a single map. CAD systems as well as GIS systems utilize
this process. See Control Points on page 500.
Reshape The Reshape button toggles you in and out of Reshape mode. Use reshape to edit
Button regions, polylines, lines, and points by moving, adding, and deleting nodes that define line
segments. You can also copy and paste selected nodes to create new polylines. Reshape
is very useful when you are creating sales territories or other merged boundaries. For
example, you are merging ZIP Code boundaries to create school districts. Some ZIP Code
boundaries fall into more than one school district. Use the Reshape button to reshape the
school district to incorporate a section of the ZIP Code boundary. See Reshaping Map
Objects on page 293.
Result Code Result codes indicate whether a geocode match was made and the type of match it was,
and conveys information about the quality of the match. The result code is an
alphanumeric code of 1-10 characters.
Rounded The Rounded Rectangle button allows you to access the Rounded Rectangle tool. Use the
Rectangle Rounded Rectangle tool to draw rounded rectangles and squares.
Button
Ruler Button The Ruler button allows you to determine the distance between two points and the length
of some path.
Run MapBasic The Run MapBasic Program button accesses the Run MapBasic Application dialog box
Program where you specify the MapBasic program you want to run.
Button
Scale Bar A map element that graphically depicts the map scale (for example, 0 —— 5 —— 10 km).
Scanning The process of inputting data into a raster format using an optical device called a scanner.
Scroll Bar Bars along the right and bottom sides of each window that allow you to scroll the window
view. Clicking on the shaded area moves one window screen at a time.
Term Definition
Select Button The Select button allows you to access the Select tool. Use the Select tool to select one or
more objects or records for analysis. You can also use the Select tool to edit a map, layout
or browser. See Selecting a Single Object from a Map or Layout on page 305.
Selection A data item or set of data items chosen for inspection and/or analysis. Regardless of the
kinds of windows on the screen, selections can be made using the Select and SQL Select
Query commands in MapInfo Professional’s Query menu. In Browsers and Map windows,
items can be placed in the selection set by clicking on them individually. Map windows also
have special tools for selecting multiple items on a spatial basis.
Set Target Use this button to make the selected object's district the new target district. See
District from Redistricting on page 509.
Map Button
Show The MapBasic window button allows you to display or hide the MapBasic window. You can
MapBasic perform many different tasks by typing commands into the MapBasic window. Choosing
Window Button items from MapInfo Professional’s menus could instead perform those same tasks. There
are times, however, when it is easier to type commands into the command window.
Snap To Nodes A feature that helps in drawing, moving and positioning map objects. In Snap mode (S
key) the cursor snaps to a node of a map object when it comes within a certain distance.
Source Table A permanent table, as opposed to a query table, which is temporary. You can edit the
contents of source tables and you can change their structure (by editing, deleting,
reordering columns and adding or deleting graphic objects).You cannot make edits and
structural changes on query tables but you can edit a selected set of rows in your source
table through a query table.
Spatial An operation that examines data with the intent to extract or create new data that fulfills
Analysis some required condition or conditions. It includes such GIS functions as polygon overlay
or buffer generation and the concepts of contains, intersects, within or adjacent.
Spherical Latitude and longitude values that represent objects on the surface of the globe.
Coordinates
SQL A standard language used for analyzing information stored in relational databases.
(Structured MapInfo Professional’s database engine is based on the SQL standard.
Query
Language)
SQL Query The selection of information from a database according to the textual attributes and object
relationships of the items. In MapInfo Professional, queries are created with the SQL
Select and Select commands or with MapBasic commands in the MapBasic window.
Standard A measurement of the variation of a set of data values around the mean.
Deviation
Term Definition
Standard A window containing buttons for quick access to the most commonly used menu
Toolbar commands such as Cut, Copy, and Paste.
Statistics Use the Statistics button to display the Statistics window. The Statistics window tallies the
Button sum and average of all numeric fields for the currently chosen objects/records. The
number of records chosen is also displayed. As the selection changes, the data is re-
tallied, and the statistics window is updated automatically. See Redistricting on page 509
Statistics A window containing the sum and average of all numeric fields for the currently selected
Window objects/records. The number of records selected is also displayed. As the selection
changes, the data is re-tallied, and the statistics window updates automatically.
StatusBar A bar at the bottom of the screen that displays messages that help in using MapInfo
Professional. The StatusBar also displays messages that pertain to the active window. In a
Map window, the StatusBar indicates what layer is editable, the zoom display of the map,
and the status of Snap and Digitizing modes. In a Browser window, the StatusBar
indicates the number of records currently displaying and the total number of records. In a
Layout window, the StatusBar indicates the zoom display as a percentage of the actual
size of the map.
Structured A standard language used for analyzing information stored in relational databases.
Query MapInfo Professional’s database engine is based on the SQL standard.
Language
(SQL)
Subselect A select statement that is placed inside the Where Condition field of the SQL Select dialog
box. MapInfo Professional first evaluates the subselect and then uses the results of the
subselect to evaluate the main SQL Select statement.
Symbol, A small, relatively simple shape (for example, square, circle, star, push-pin) used to
Symbol Object graphically represent a point object (for example, a customer location).
Symbol Button The Symbol button allows you to access the Symbol tool. Use the Symbol tool to place
point symbols (push pins) on your map
Symbol Style Use the Symbol Style button to access the Symbol Style dialog box. The Symbol Style
Button dialog box allows you to display symbols and specify attributes for symbols. The attributes
you can specify are size, color, and symbol type. You can change the attributes of existing
symbols and specify attributes for new point objects before you create them. The point
objects must reside, or be created in an editable layer. See Symbol, Symbol Object.
Table A table is made up of data in rows and columns. Each row contains information about a
particular geographic feature, event, etc. Each column contains a particular kind of
information about the items in the table. You can display tables with graphic information
stored in them as maps. See Base Table on page 498 and Query Table on page 509.
See also Layer on page 504.
Term Definition
Table Row In a table, a row contains all the information for a single item. It corresponds to a record in
a table.
Target District The district that is selected in a Districts Browser to be affected by subsequent redistricting
operations.
Text Button Use the Text Button to add titles, labels, and annotations to maps and Layouts. You can
also use the Text Tool to rotate text with its edit handle.
Text Cursor A blinking vertical bar that shows the position where text can be edited, inserted, or
deleted.
Text Style Use the Text Style button to access the Text Style dialog box. The Text Style dialog box
Button allows you to choose a font and font settings for your text.
Thematic Layer A layer containing the thematic settings for a map layer. Thematic layers are drawn
directly over the map layer on which the thematic settings are based. They are also drawn
in a particular order, depending on the number of thematic layers you have and the type of
thematic map objects you are creating.
Thematic Map A type of map that uses a variety of graphic styles (for example, colors or fill patterns) to
graphically display information about the map’s underlying data. Thus, a thematic map of
sales territories might show one region in deep red (to indicate the region has a large
number of customers), while showing another region in very pale red (to indicate the
region has relatively few customers).
Thematic Map objects — points, lines, regions — that have been shaded, using a pattern and/or
Shading color, according to some point of information about the object, or theme (population, size,
annual rainfall, date, and so forth).
Thematic The data values displayed on a thematic map. A thematic variable can be a field or
Variable expression.
Theme Legend MapInfo Professional’s original style legend that allows you to display legends for thematic
maps and graphs. MapInfo Professional automatically creates a theme legend window for
a thematic map. Customize its display through the Modify Thematic Map dialog box. See
Cartographic Legend on page 499.
Toolbars MapInfo Professional windows that contain a variety of buttons used to access tools and
commands for mapping and drawing. There are four Toolbars: the Standard Toolbar
provides tools for commonly performed tasks, the Main Toolbar provides primary tools (for
example, Zoom-in, Select, Info, etc.) and the Drawing Toolbar contains all drawing tools.
The Tools Toolbar contains the Run MapBasic Program and the Show/Hide MapBasic
Window buttons. Toolbars may be reshaped and hidden.
Transformation The process of converting coverage coordinates from one coordinate system to another
through programmatic translation. The transformation of CAD generated Cartesian
coordinates into earth coordinates is an example.
Term Definition
Ungeocode The process of removing X and Y coordinates from records in a table or database. Can
also describe a table that has not been geocoded, such as an ungeocoded table.
Vector Image A coordinate-based data structure commonly used to represent map features. Each object
is represented as a list of sequential x,y coordinates. Attributes may be associated with
the objects. A computer image can be represented in vector format or in raster format. See
Raster Image on page 509.
Vertical Scroll The Vertical scroll bar appears at the right of the most windows. Use the vertical scroll bar
Bar to move up and down. The scroll box inside the scroll bar indicates your vertical location.
You can use the mouse to scroll to other parts of the window.
Web Feature A Web Feature Service (WFS) client retrieves geospatial GML (Geography Markup
Services Language)2 data using HTTP GET and HTTP POST requests over the Internet or through
a private intranet. The WFS client was developed in accordance with the 1.0.0 OpenGIS®
Web Feature Service Implementation Specification, which is available online:
http://www.opengis.org/docs/02-058.pdf.
Web Map A Web Map Service (WMS) is a technology that gives you a source for data over your
Services Intranet or over the Internet. This innovation is based on a specification from the Open
GIS Consortium (OGC) and allows you to use raster map images from servers that also
comply with the specification. An important element of this is that the WMS images are
registered using the data’s coordinate system so the WMS layer can be used with vector
and other registered raster images.
This specification supports transparent pixel definition for image formats as well. This
allows you to use the images you retrieve as overlays and not solely as the bottom layer of
your map. This is a very new technology and WMS may not exist for the geography you
are looking for. Further, the WMS Server determines the data that is provided. See
Retrieving Map Data from Web Map Services in the Help System.
Web Service A web service is a software system that is accessible using an intranet or Internet
connection. Web services allow you to retrieve data that others are sharing internally or
world-wide. The power of web services is that you can use them to create more powerful
maps or in the case of geocoding or drive region services get more accurate and precise
results using the same data.
Weighted An average that gives more weight to one value over another when averaging. A method
Average of averaging that uses a separate column of information to define the relative importance
of each data value. The formula for a weighted average is:
SUM(DATA*WEIGHT)/SUM(WEIGHT)
where DATA is the column of data values and WEIGHT is the column of weights. If
WEIGHT contains all 1’s (or other non-zero values) this reduces to a simple average.
Window In MapInfo Professional, Map windows, Browser windows, Graph windows and Layout
windows are the major types of windows. They display the data stored in tables. The
Toolbars, map legends, and the Info tool window are other types of windows.
Term Definition
Zoom-in Button The Zoom-in button allows you to access the Zoom-in tool. Use the Zoom-in Tool to get a
closer area view of a map or a layout. See Zoom Layering.
Zoom-out The Zoom-out button allows you to access the Zoom-out tool. Use the Zoom-out tool to
Button get a wider area view of a map or a layout. See Zoom Layering.
Zoom Layering A setting that determines the range (for example, 0–3 miles, 2–5 miles, etc.) at which a
layer is visible in a Map window.
In this Appendix:
Shortcuts for File Menu Items . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .518
Shortcuts for Edit Menu Items . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .518
Shortcut to Tools Menu Items . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .518
Shortcuts to Objects Menu Items . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .519
Shortcuts for Query Menu Items. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .519
Shortcuts for Options Menu Items . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .519
Shortcuts for Map Menu Items . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .520
Shortcut for Layout Menu Item . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .520
Shortcuts for Window Menu Items . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .520
Shortcuts by Keystroke . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .521
Directory of MapInfo Professional Shortcuts
Shortcuts by Keystroke
Standard Parallel 1
Standard Parallel 2
Origin, Longitude
Projection Type
Origin, Latitude
False Northing
False Easting
Scale Factor
Azimuth
Datum
Range
Units
Albers Equal-Area Conic 9 X X X X X X X X
Azimuthal Equidistant 28 X X X X* X
Cassini-Soldner 30 X X X X X X
Double Stereographic 14 X X X X X X X
Eckert IV 15 X X X
Eckert VI 6 X X X
Equidistant Conic 17 X X X X X X X X
Gall 7 X X X
Longitude-Latitude 10 X
Mercator 11 X X X
Miller 13 X X X
Mollweide 18 X X X
Polyconic 31 X X X X X X
Regional Mercator 26 X X X X
Robinson 12 X X X
Standard Parallel 1
Standard Parallel 2
Origin, Longitude
Projection Type
Origin, Latitude
False Northing
False Easting
Scale Factor
Azimuth
Datum
Range
Units
Sinusoidal 16 X X X
Stereographic 20 X X X X X X X
Transverse Mercator 8 X X X X X X X
* MapInfo supports the Azimuthal Equidistant and Lambert Azimuth Equal-Area projections in the
polar aspect only. The Origin Latitude for these projections must be either 90 or -90.
† Versions of MapInfo prior to 6.0 support the Azimuthal Equidistant and Lambert Azimuthal Equal-
Area projections in the polar aspect only. The Origin Latitude for these projections must be either 90
or -90. An Oblique Azimuthal Equidistant projection supports all Origin Latitudes, including the poles.
A new Lambert Azimuthal Equal-Area projection has been added that also supports all Origin
Latitudes, including the poles.
Projection Types
The projection type is the equation or equations used by a coordinate system. The following list
names the projections MapInfo uses and gives the number used to identify the projection in the
MAPINFOW.PRJ file:
30 Cassini-Soldner
2 Cylindrical Equal-Area
31 Double Stereographic
14 Eckert IV
15 Eckert VI
17 Gall
1 Longitude/Latitude
10 Mercator
11 Miller Cylindrical
13 Mollweide
27 Polyconic
26 Regional Mercator
12 Robinson
16 Sinusoidal
20 Stereographic
Projection numbers in the MAPINFOW.PRJ may be modified by the addition of a constant value to
the base number listed in the Projection table, above. Valid values and their meanings are in the
next table:
1000 System has affine transformations Affine units specifier and coefficients appear
after the regular parameters for the system.
2000 System has explicit bounds Bounds appear after the regular parameters
for the system.
3000 System with both affine and bounds Affine parameters follow system’s
parameters; bounds follow affine parameters.
Example:
Assume you want to work with a simple system based on the Transverse Mercator projection and
using the NAD 1983 datum. You might have a line such as the following in your MAPINFOW.PRJ
file:
Alternatively, if you want to bound the system to (x1, y1, x2, y2)=(-500000, 0, 500000, 1000000), the
required line is:
"UTM Zone 1 (NAD 83) - bounded", 2008, 74, 7, -177, 0, 0.9996, 500000, 0, -500000, 0, 500000,
1000000
To customize the system using both of these modifications, the line is:
"UTM Zone 1 (NAD 83) - rotated and bounded", 3008, 74, 7, -177, 0, 0.9996, 500000, 0, 7, 0.5, -
0.866, 0, 0.866, 0.5, 0, -500000, 0, 500000, 1000000
Projection Datums
The datum is established by tying a reference ellipsoid to a particular point on the earth. The
following table lists these details for each datum. More specific datum information is available in
Basic and Custom Datums in the Help System.
119 Antigua Island Astro 1943 Antigua, Leeward Islands Clarke 1880
12 Australian Geodetic 1966 (AGD Australia and Tasmania Island Australian National
66)
13 Australian Geodetic 1984 (AGD Australia and Tasmania Island Australian National
84)
125 Fort Thomas 1955 Nevis, St. Kitts, Leeward Islands Clarke 1880
126 Graciosa Base SW 1948 Faial, Graciosa, Pico, Sao Jorge, and International 1924
Terceira Islands (Azores)
134 ISTS 061 Astro 1968 South Georgia Island International 1924
135 Kusaie Astro 1951 Caroline Islands, Federated States of International 1924
Micronesia
137 Montserrat Island Astro 1958 Montserrat, Leeward Islands Clarke 1880
64 North American 1927 (NAD 27) Bahamas (excluding San Salvador Clarke 1866
Island)
65 North American 1927 (NAD 27) San Salvador Island Clarke 1866
66 North American 1927 (NAD 27) Canada (including Newfoundland Clarke 1866
Island)
68 North American 1927 (NAD 27) Caribbean (Turks and Caicos Clarke 1866
Islands)
69 North American 1927 (NAD 27) Central America (Belize, Costa Rica, Clarke 1866
El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras,
Nicaragua)
71 North American 1927 (NAD 27) Greenland (Hayes Peninsula) Clarke 1866
73 North American 1927 (NAD 27) Michigan (used only for State Plane Modified Clarke
Coordinate System 1927) 1866
74 North American 1983 (NAD 83) Alaska, Canada, Central America, GRS 80
Continental U.S., Mexico
140 Observatorio Meteorologico Corvo and Flores Islands (Azores) International 1924
1939
143 Porto Santo 1936 Porto Santo and Madeiras Islands International 1924
xxx Provisional South Chilean 1963 South Chile (near 53°S) International
96 Timbalai 1948 Brunei and East Malaysia (Sarawak Everest (India 1830)
and Sabah)
99 Viti Levu 1916 Viti Levu Island (Fiji Islands) Clarke 1880
Units
The following table lists the available coordinate units and the number used to identify the unit in the
MAPINFOW.PRJ file:
Number Units
6 Centimeters
31 Chains
Number Units
2 Inches
1 Kilometers
30 Links
7 Meters
0 Miles
5 Millimeters
9 Nautical Miles2
32 Rods
4 Yards
For the Transverse Mercator projection the origin’s longitude defines the central meridian. In
constructing the Transverse Mercator projection a cylinder is positioned tangent to the earth. The
central meridian is the line of tangency. The scale of the projected map is true along the central
meridian.
In creating a Hotine Oblique Mercator projection it is necessary to specify a great circle that is not
the equator nor a meridian. MapInfo Professional does this by specifying one point on the ellipsoid
and an azimuth from that point. That point is the origin of the coordinate system.
You may see the scale factor expressed as a ratio, such as 1:25000. In this case it is generally
called the scale reduction. The relationship between scale factor and scale reduction is:
Polyconic Projection
The following description is copied from “Map Projections – A Working Manual”, USGS Professional
Paper 1395, by John P. Snyder.
The Polyconic projection, usually called the American Polyconic in Europe, achieved its name
because the curvature of the circular arc for each parallel on the map is the same as it would be
following the unrolling of a cone which had been wrapped around the globe tangent to the particular
parallel of latitude, with the parallel traced onto the cone. Thus, there are many (”poly-”) cones
involved, rather than the single cone of each regular conic projection.
The Polyconic projection is neither equal-area nor conformal. Along the central meridian, however, it
is both distortion free and true to scale. Each parallel is true to scale, but the meridians are
lengthened by various amounts to cross each parallel at the correct position along the parallel, so
that no parallel is standard in the sense of having conformality (or correct angles), except at the
central meridian. Near the central meridian, distortion is extremely small.
This projection is not intended for mapping large areas. The conversion algorithms used break down
when mapping wide longitude ranges. For example, WORLD.TAB, from the sample data shipped
with MapInfo Professional, may exhibit anomalies if reprojected using Polyconic.
Lithuanian and Latvian Coordinate Systems. We added the following Latvian Coordinate
Systems to the PRJ file: LKS-92, and Longitude/Latitude (LKS-92). We added EPSG codes to the
following Lithuanian Coordinate Systems: LKS-94, Baltija-92, Longitude / Latitude (LKS-94) and KS-
1942 Zone 4. These are the coordinate system parameters:
Guernsey Grid Coordinate System. We added a new transverse mercator coordinate system
called the Guernsey Grid to the .PRJ file. This coordinate system is comprised of these 8
parameters: 8, 104 , 7, -2.416667, 49.500000, 0.999997, 47000, 50000
Hellenic Geodetic Reference System. We added a new datum called the Hellenic Geodetic
Reference System # 153. This coordinate system is comprised of these 8 parameters: 8, 153, 7, 24,
0, 0.9996, 500000, 0
Baltic Projections (Lithuanian and Latvian). We added a new datum called the Lithuanian
Pulkovo 1942 # 1018.
New Zealand Geodetic Datum 2000. We added 28 new meridional circuits in terms of NZGD2000
on Transverse Mercator projections.
Belgian Coordinate System. We have added a new 7-parameter datum called the Belgian National
System 1972 # 1019. There are 7 parameters: 3, 1019, 7, 4.3674866667, 90, 49.8333339000,
51.1666672333, 150000.013, 5400088.438
British National Grid Coordinate System. We have added a second British National Grid
coordinate system that has tighter bounds than the original. The new coordinate system is called
British National Grid (1 mm accuracy) and are comprised of these 7 parameters: 2008, 79, 7, -2, 49,
0.9996012717, 400000, -100000, 0, 0, 2000000, 2000000
American Cartographic Association. Matching the Map Projection the Need. Falls Church, VA:
American Congress on Surveying and Mapping. Special Publication No. 3. 1991.
American Cartographic Association. Which Map is Best? Projections for World Maps. Falls Church,
VA: American Congress on Surveying and Mapping. Special Publication No. 1. 1986.
John P. Snyder. Map Projections—A Working Manual. Washington: U.S. Geological Survey
Professional Paper 1395. 1987
John P. Snyder and Philip M. Voxland. An Album of Map Projections. Washington: U.S. Geological
Survey Professional Paper 1453. 1989.
Contact Information
The Department of Geography at the University of Colorado at Boulder has made available "The
Geographer's Craft" project, a website devoted to explanations of map projections, geodetic datums,
and coordinate systems. It is particularly valuable because many of the explanations were presented
using MapInfo Professional.
The materials may be used for study, research, and education. If you link to or cite the materials
below, please credit the author: Peter H. Dana, The Geographer's Craft Project, Department of
Geography, The University of Colorado at Boulder.
http://www.colorado.edu/geography/gcraft/notes/datum/datum.html
http://www.colorado.edu/geography/gcraft/notes/coordsys/coordsys.html
http://www.colorado.edu/geography/gcraft/notes/mapproj/mapproj.html
Africa
Source: MapInfo Corporation From National Imagery and Mapping Agency (NIMA)
Source: http://data.geocomm.com (Free off the internet) All countries appended to one table and
thinned for size purposes)
Asia
Australia
Source: Copyright and Intellectual Property in the attached data sets rests with one of the following:
The Australian Government represented by the Australian Bureau of Statistics; The Government of
New South Wales represented by The Land Information Centre. MapInfo Australia Pty Ltd and
PSMA Australia Ltd.
Data: Locations of the state boundaries and capitals and over 4000 major and minor cities. Map of
major rivers and major roads.
Sydney feature points, rivers, suburbs, towns, census collection district and postcode boundaries,
and customer database.
Streetworks samples
Source: MapInfo from Digital Chart of the World
Source: MapInfo Corporation from National Imagery and Mapping Agency (NIMA)
China
Source: MapInfo from Digital Chart of the World
Data: Over 5,000 major and minor cities and major highways.
Source: MapInfo Corporation from National Imagery and Mapping Agency (NIMA)
Japan
Source: GisNET data licensed to MapInfo by GISdata Limited. © GDC Ltd 1993
Data: 142 major and minor cities including all prefecture capitals.
Source: MapInfo Corporation from National Imagery and Mapping Agency (NIMA)
India
Source: Risk Management Solutions, Inc.
Europe
Data: StreetPro Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Deutschland, Espana, France, Italy, Netherlands,
Norway, Portugal, Sweden, and Switzerland.
Source: GisNET data licensed to MapInfo by GISdata Limited. © GDC Ltd 1993
Source: MapInfo Corporation from National Imagery and Mapping Agency (NIMA)
Data: Country Boundaries (Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Deutschland, Espana, France, Italy,
Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, Sweden, Switzerland, Europe and United Kingdom.)
Great Britain
Source: 2001 Tele Atlas B.V. 's-Hertogenbosch. All Rights Reserved. This product includes mapping
data licensed from Ordnance Survey (R). (c) Crown 2001. License number 100020348
North America
Canada
Source: Portions (c) 2004 GDT-Canada, Inc.
Data: (Prince Edward Island) Airports, Census subdivisions, Major Primary and Secondary
Highways, Institutions, Large Areas land use, Parks, Road Buffers, Streets, Transportation points,
Urban Agglomeration, Province, Railways, Utility lines and Water areas.
Data: Over 3000 major and minor cities and generalized map of major highways.
Mexico
Source: MapInfo Corporation
United States, DC
Source: Tele Atlas (GDT, Inc.) Portions (c) 2004 Tele Atlas, Inc. (GDT, Inc.)
Source: Tele Atlas (GDT, Inc.) Portions (c) 2004 Tele Atlas, Inc. (GDT, Inc.)
Source: © MapInfo Corporation 2001. Aerial Photography used with permission of RSC Group, LLC
2001. All rights reserved.
Data: Shields in StreetPro. Listing of NPA/NXXs covered in DC. Competitive, Local Exchange
Carriers (CLEC), Personal Communications Services (PCS) markets, cellular telephone service
areas as defined by the FCC, Local Exchange Carriers (LEC), Local Access Transport Areas
(LATAs), Competitive Local Exchange Carriers (CLEC), rate center locations and wire center serving
boundaries, Point Of Presence (POP) locations for long distance telephone carriers. Area Codes.
POPINFO and ObstacleInfo.
Point file showing wireless (Cellular, Paging, PCS and SMR) switch locations.
Wireless samples for Sprint, ATT, Bell Atlantic, PGNT_P, PGMT_P, Nextel and GTE.
Current hazardous waste notifiers, Superfund Cleanup and National Priority List sites as defined by
the EPS.
United States
Source: 1997- 1998 Schlosser Geographic Systems, Inc. ©
States.tab and USA.tab to include the Census 2000 data. Further, there is a point ZIP codes file
(US_ZIPS.tab) to assist you with more accurate geocoding. This file contains the data from our
popular ZipInfo product. Source: Tele Atlas, Inc. (GDT, Inc.)
Data: Postal code boundaries (updated to October 2005) and Postal code points (updated to April
2007).
Data: Sample customer database in various database formats. State boundaries with the states of
Alaska and Hawaii inset.
Data: Location of the state capitals and the location of 8875 cities. Point elevation data in feet and
meters.
Data: Updated County boundaries from Census 2000 including Puerto Rico. Map containing the
location of 125 major cities and locations of 208,857 points of interest and landmarks.
Data: MapInfo grid file of Mt. St. Helens before and after eruption. MapInfo grid file of Crater Lake,
Oregon
Data: Raster image of Alaska, DC, Big Bend TX, Florida, Gulf Coast, Mid-Atlantic, Mississippi River,
North Central, Northeastern US, Northern US Northwestern US, Rockies, Southwestern US.
World
Source: MapInfo Corporation
Data: Military Grid Reference System 84 NL to 80 SL, North & South Polar Regions. Grid of latitude
and longitude at 15 degree increments.
Data: Location of world capitals and point locations for major and minor cities.
Source: MapInfo Corporation from National Imagery and Mapping Agency (NIMA)
Z
zoom layering
defined 515
labeling 406
raster layers 437
setting raster and grid layer defaults 121
specifying in layer control 165
zoom level
displaying in status bar 19
Layout windows 413
Zsoft Paintbrush (*.pcx ) files
raster format 432