Opening content E-mail this topicE-mail this topic Print this topicPrint this topic

The map you work with in ArcGIS Explorer contains content that's served from one or more servers. You can add content from several other sources to augment what the map conveys or provide the basis for understanding the place you are investigating more fully. This additional content can come from other servers to which you have access or that's available on your local machine or network. The content can take many forms, including tasks, layers, or results that have been exported from another map; globe and map services available from ArcGIS Servers; data from ArcIMS or WMS servers; file geodatabases; shapefiles; rasters; Keyhole® Markup Language (KML) files. In addition you can use the File Import Wizard from the Tools menu to import text files that contain addresses or latitude/longitude pairs or grid coordinates.

When you first see the Open Content dialog box, you'll notice that it has a list of content types at the left. Clicking a content type changes the appearance of the dialog box and allows you to search for the kind of content you are interested in. With the exception of the Servers type, you'll see a traditional folder/file dialog box filtered by the content type. The Servers content type, on the other hand, has a toolbar at the top of the dialog box that allows you to make a new connection to the kind of server you want. Here is an example of the Open Content dialog box opened to the Servers form of the dialog box:

In addition to starting the Open process from the File menu, you can drag supported file types from Windows Explorer and drop them onto a running instance of ArcGIS Explorer. Once you drop the file, you'll see the first panel of the Open Data Wizard.

If you want to add data from any of these kinds of servers:

or geographically-enabled "really simple syndication" (RSS) feeds: or geodatabases or local data available to you on your own machine or network, such as or application-related data available to you on a server, your own machine or network Choose the name of the source of the data type you're interested in. The dialog box panel changes to reflect the type of content you specify and once you've selected the content, depending on the content type, you'll see the Open Data Wizard. The Wizard displays dialog boxes in which you specify data type-specific information needed prior to adding the content to the map.

These data sources will be described in more detail below.

Note   There are many other data sources that you can add to ArcGIS Explorer. The best strategy for doing this is to take advantage of the support ArcGIS Server has for these data sources and publish globe services (best performance) or map services based on these sources. Some of these data sources are:

About GIS Servers
ArcGIS Server and ArcIMS Internet server are ESRI products that enable organizations to put maps, data, and tools on the Internet. ArcGIS Servers can also be accessed over your local area network. Open Geospatial Consortium, Inc. (OGC), Web Mapping Service (WMS) is an OpenGIS standard specification for interactive mapping based on requesting map images from a server over the Internet. OGC WMS client support in ArcGIS Explorer enables you to access these services over the Internet and add them to your maps as layers.

When you connect to an ArcGIS, ArcIMS, or WMS server, you can browse the services available on that server. These servers let you add data to your maps using the Internet. For example, if you add an ArcIMS service to ArcGIS Explorer as a layer, it will automatically retrieve the data from the service over the Internet each time that layer is drawn. This saves you from having to store and manage the data yourself. You'll see a dialog box that provides a means of connecting to or accessing the data source. It's important to know the URL of the data source. The data provider, your system administrator, or the responsible organization may have provided it to you. Once you've connected, you'll see a list of layers to add in the Open Content dialog box:

Some services may be password protected. To access secure ArcGIS, ArcIMS, or WMS services, you have to provide a user name and password when you make the connection to the server. This is how you access services that are provided on a subscription-only basis. To establish a server connection for the first time, click the appropriate button at the top of the Servers panel. You'll see a dialog box appropriate to the connection type. Here is an example of the dialog box you'll see when you add a new ArcGIS Server connection:

When a connection to a geographic information system (GIS) server hasn't been established, you'll see a small red x on the GIS server's icon. When you start ArcGIS Explorer and look in the GIS Server's folder, all connections will be disconnected; ArcGIS Explorer won't automatically establish connections to those servers. Double-click the GIS server you want to work with to reestablish the connection. Here is a list of servers that are not connected:

Once you connect to a server, you'll see a list of services and folders containing services that you can add to your map. Note that when you select a service and click Open, you'll add all its layers; for example, in the graphic below, selecting PremiumServices2 will add all the layers of the service. The graphic below illustrates the typical elements you'll see:

Note    By default, the Servers content type displays ArcGIS Server instances that provide both map and globe services, as well as IMS and WMS services. If you want to display globe services from ArcGIS Server only, choose Globe Services in the Show of type combo box at the bottom of the dialog box.

WMS Services consist of group layers and sublayers. You can add individual sublayers in the Add WMS layers panel of the Open Data Wizard that appears after you connect to the service.

GeoRSS Feeds
Many sources of changing information use RSS as a means of syndicating their content and making it available to subscribers in what is known as a 'feed'. In the same way that news aggregators or other RSS-aware applications can keep up with and check a feed for changes and react to the changes in an appropriate way, you can use ArcGIS Explorer to subscribe to a service that provides content that is geographically tagged with encodings in one of the supported GeoRSS formats. At present ArcGIS Explorer supports point geometries only from the following feed types and in the following formats:
  1. GeoRSS supported feed types
    • RSS 2.0
    • Atom 1.0

  2. GeoRSS supported formats
    • W3C Geo
    • GeoRSS-Simple
    • GML
ArcGIS Explorer displays the elements of the feed on the map as results after you set the interval at which the application should check for updates to content and position. Note that the minimum interval time for refreshing GeoRSS feeds is 10 minutes.
Geodatabases

When you select Geodatabases in the list of content types, you'll be able to browse for a file geodatabase or create and connect to an SDE database to access its contents.

File Geodatabases
A file geodatabase is a collection of various types of GIS datasets held in a file system folder. This is the recommended native data format for ArcGIS stored and managed in a file system folder. Intended for a single user or a small workgroup, each dataset is a separate file on disk, and the file geodatabase is a file folder on disk that holds its dataset files. The primary goals of a file geodatabase are to:
  • Provide a widely available, simple, and scalable geodatabase solution for all users.
  • Provide a portable geodatabase that works across operating systems.
  • Scale up to handle very large datasets.
  • Provide excellent performance and scalability; for example, to support individual datasets containing more than 300 million features and datasets that can scale beyond 500 GB per file— all with very fast performance.
  • Use efficient data structure that is optimized for performance and storage. File geodatabases use about one third of the feature geometry storage required by shapefiles and personal geodatabases.
  • Outperform shapefiles for operations involving attributes and scale the data size limits way beyond shapefile limits.
File geodatabases also include a read-only compression option that allows users to create a read-only, highly compressed, and optimized geodatabase.

The graphic below is a conceptual illustration of the folder structure of a File Geodatabase; note, however, that you navigate the structure by opening each successive level:

Note:  In the current version of ArcGIS Explorer, you can add both vector and raster content stored in a file geodatabase.

Once you add a dataset the Open Data Wizard appears.

ArcSDE Geodatabases

ArcSDE is ESRI's technology for accessing and managing geospatial data within relational databases. ArcSDE technology supports reading and writing of multiple standards, including (among other data storage options) Open Geospatial Consortium, Inc. (OGC) standards for simple features, the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) standard for spatial types, and the Oracle Spatial format.

This release of ArcGIS Explorer supports vector data and raster dataset data types in three tier connection types; however two tier connections, Direct Connect, are not.

Connecting to an ArcSDE geodatabase

The following steps provide a generic overview of creating a Database Connection and connecting to it, once it's been established. Your system administrator may have already created a Database Connection for you and in many cases, may have already created a map file (.nmf) that has all the necessary connection information in it.

  1. In the File menu click Open...
  2. In the dialog that appears click Geodatabases.
  3. At the top of the dialog click the dropdown list and select Database Connections:



  4. If there are any existing connections you'll see them listed below the dropdown list:




  5. If there are no connections available or you want to create a new connection, click the Create Database Connection button at the upper right of the dialog:



  6. You'll see the Spatial Database Connection dialog. Use it to supply the parameters for connecting to a database on your server.



Shapefiles
Shapefiles are a simple, nontopological format for storing the geometric location and attribute information of geographic features. Geographic features in a shapefile can be represented by points, lines, or polygons (areas). The workspace may also contain dBASE tables, which can store additional attributes that can be joined to a shapefile's features.

When you choose Shapefiles in the list of content types, you'll be able to browse your local machine and network for shapefiles. They'll appear as in the illustration below:

Once you add a shapefile, the Open Data Wizard appears.

Rasters
ArcGIS Explorer supports the display of many raster formats, including: Imagine image (.img), bitmap (.bmp), JPEG (.jpg, .jpeg), Portable Network Graphics (.png), Graphics Interchange Format (.gif), Tagged Image File Format (.tif, .tiff), ARC/INFO and Space Imaging BIL (.bil), ARC/INFO and Space Imaging BIP (.bip), ARC/INFO and Space Imaging BSQ (.bsq), DTED Level 0-2 (.dted), ERDAS 7.5 LAN (.lan), ERDAS 7.5 GIS (.gis), JP2 (.jp2), MrSID (.sid), RAW (.raw), NTIF (.ntf), USGS ASCII DEM (.dem), X11 Pixmap (.xpm), PC Raster (.map), PCI Geomatics Database File (.pix), JPC (.jpc), J2C (.j2c), J2K (.j2k), HDF (.hdf), BSB (.kap).

When you choose Rasters in the list of content types, you'll be able to browse your local machine and network for all the supported raster types. Note that they must be georeferenced. They'll appear as in the illustration below:

Once you add a raster file, the Open Data Wizard appears.

KML or KMZ data
Keyhole Markup Language (KML), is an XML grammar and file format for modeling and storing geographic features such as points, lines, images, and polygons. You can add an uncompressed .kml or a compressed .kmz file to ArcGIS Explorer by choosing KML on the Open Content dialog box. ArcGIS Explorer always places KML or KMZ data above layers stored with the map at original publication time.

Learn more about working with KML files

Learn more about controlling the appearance of these kinds of layers with the Swipe and Transparency commands

When you choose KML in the list of content types, you'll be able to browse your local machine and network for .kml or .kmz files. They'll appear as in the illustration below:

In addition, you can specify the URL of a .kml or .kmz file in the Dataset text box, for example:

Tip  Adding a KML file to the current map by specifying an URL in the Open Content dialog and then saving the map will retain the path to the location of the KML file should you copy or e-mail the .nmf to someone else. This is not the case if you add a KML file by clicking a link on a Web page to add the file to ArcGIS Explorer. If you plan on saving the map you're working with and are browsing for KML files on the Web, select the link to the KML/KMZ file on the Web page and then, in Internet Explorer, use Copy Shortcut, in Firefox, use Copy Link Location, and in Safari use Copy Link; then paste the URL of the KML that's on the Clipboard into the Open Content dialog.

If you see this symbol next to a KML file, it signifies that the KML file contains invalid KML or non-supported KML features. Its associated contents window may be empty.

ArcGIS Explorer Files
A .nmf file is a simple XML document that may contain the connection information for tasks, layers (local data or server data) and some layer properties that ArcGIS Explorer supports, or results. Resolution, maximum and minimum scale range, labeling, and symbology information are all defined within this xml format. A layer in ArcGIS Explorer, stored in a .nmf file, should not be confused with a layer in ArcGIS, stored in a .lyr file.

Choosing ArcGIS Explorer Files provides you with a way to browse for .nmf files and select the content types you want to add to the map. For example, a .nmf map may contain one or more kinds of content types. These .nmf files are available either from a server or your local machine or network. For each of these content types, the appropriate information is included in the .nmf; for example, results that have been exported by you or someone else for use in other maps or to share with others contain all the information needed to reexecute the original task that created the results. ArcGIS Explorer places the newly derived result in the Result window of the current map.

You can create your own content types and save them as .nmf files by right-clicking layers in the Contents window and choosing Export Layer, selecting tasks on the Manage Tasks dialog box and clicking Export Task, or right-clicking results in the Results window and selecting Export Result.

If you add a .nmf file containing a result derived from a Custom Task to a new map, make sure to rerun the task that created the result by right-clicking the result and choosing Rerun Task. To display the full context menu for the result, add the task that created the result to the map.

When you choose ArcGIS Explorer Files in the list of content types, you'll be able to browse your local machine and network for .nmf files. They'll appear as in the illustration below:

To learn more about .nmf files and their schema, see Creating ArcGIS Explorer .nmf files.

Open Content Wizard

To assist in the process of adding local data, ArcGIS Explorer provides several dialog boxes appropriate to the data type added. These dialog boxes, collectively known as the Open Data Wizard, appear after you've added the content to the map. The following table indicates which dialog boxes appear for each data type. Click on the column headings to display additional information about each dialog box. Note that if you add a globe service layer no dialog boxes appear. If you or your site administrator determine that you and/or your colleagues add data of a certain type repeatedly and specify the parameters for that content the same way each time, use the Open Content Settings panel in the Options dialog box to control how ArcGIS Explorer handles values that are set in the Open Data Wizard.

      
Layer Type Options Level of Detail Raster Cell Size Add WMS Layers Imagery Format Add IMS Layers Feature Layer Symbol Size Disk Caching Options Selecting Feature Layer Symbols
Globe service layers                
Map service layers (not cached)              
Map service layers (fully cached)                
WMS data            
ArcIMS data          
GeoRSS feeds       if draped (rasterized)  
Raster data (RGB)              
Raster single band              
KML or KMZ              
Vector lines and polygons (shapefile, file GDB)        
Vector points (3D symbols or rasterized)       if draped (rasterized)