Geography 353 Cartography and Visualization

...to Geog 353 Main Page and Course Description
...to Geog 353 Syllabus
...to Geog 353 Course Schedule and Lecture Outlines
...to Geog 353 Laboratory Information and Student Projects


Geog 353 Lab 8: ArcGIS Layouts and Graphic File Export
Update: 11/11/09
Due: Wednesday December 2

Before beginning this joyous lab, you should have the following in ArcGIS:


Our next goal is to create graphic files in .gif format (one of the most common graphic file formats for the WWW). The means to this end is ArcGIS's Layout view, where ArcGIS allows you to arrange your map, add titles, legends, and export your maps to more generic graphic file formats. In Lab 9 you will animate the graduated color, symbol, and dot density maps and prepare them for the WWW. Your proportional symbol maps are not really comparable, but we will include them on your WWW pages as 10 static images.

Lab 8 Goal: Export your various population maps and legends using ArcGIS's Layout feature and use whatever means to get them into GIF format. Your GIF files should have good color, text, and exact sizing ready for animation (in Lab 9).


The Details:

1) As tidiness is still a virtue, create a new folder in your personal directory called GIF_Maps. You should save your files exported from ArcGIS (and eventually your animated GIF files) in this folder.


2) Take a moment to think about where you are going with your maps: the graduated color, graduated symbol, and dot density maps will be animated. The proportional symbol maps will not be animated, but will be included in your pages as a series of ten maps (they are not comparable). All of the following should be decided before you export your maps:


The Layout View in ArcGIS is the means by which you will export your maps, and provides functions for creating titles, legends, etc. Access it by clicking on the small 'page' icon next to the 'globe' (the 'globe' is your data view which you have been working in):





3) Once in the Layout View go to the Insert menu and add the following; some have options you can set (don't worry about these too much - you can change them later):


4) Layout View items such as titles, legends, etc. only exist in the Layout View (eg., not in the Data View) and they are saved when you save your ArcGIS project. Most can be edited, deleted, and/or resized by selecting them. They can also be changed by double-clicking on the item to call up an options dialog box.


5) Another important feature of the Layout View is that it is connected to the Data View. The layer or layers visible in the Data View will show up in the Layout View. Thus you can set up a nice layout for one of your maps (% Pop. Change 1900-10), then turn that off and turn on the next map (% Pop. Change 1910-20) and it will show up in the Layout View with the same size, legend, etc. as the previous map. This is important, as we need to have our maps all at exactly the same size and with any map elements in the same location to successfully animate them.


TIP: Seems as if the new version of the software does not make it easy to swap legends when changing layers, as indicated above. In that case, create your legend (using the layer with the lowest low value) and export it as a seperate file. You can just place this next to the animated gif file of your maps using HTML code.

To get rid of junk from the legend, double click on the legend in the Layout. You can change the title of from Legend to "Population Change 1900-2007" or whatever under the Legend tab. Go to the Legend Properties tag, then the Style button (to the right of the legend items), then the Properties button, then uncheck "show heading" and/or anything else you want to modifiy.




6) Please make decisions on the issues noted above in step 2. Consult with your kindly instructor if you have questions.


7) Once you have a decent layout at the correct size please add a neatline around your map and its elements.

This neatline is very important: it will be used to trim your maps, so they are all exactly the same size. If your maps are not the same size, the animation will be all wobbly. The neatline should leave some white space around your map, but not too much. Please dont use a fill, and make the neatline a thin, black line.


8) Once you have a layout with properly sized map, legend, and neatline, you are ready to export your map to a graphics file. Our goal is to end up with a .gif file.



TIP: If you find a file extension (.eep, .pip, etc.) you are confused and/or amused by, you can try and find what kind of file it is at one of the following sites: FIL EXT or a list at Saugus.net or just google the extension.


9) Once in Photoshop carefully inspect your file. Check that the colors and resolution and all the elements look good.


10) Add the image to one of your HTML pages and critically examine it.


11) If you are having color problems, then consider one of the myriad of other ways to get your maps out of ArcGIS. Try a different file format when you export from ArcGIS, such as TIFF, and then use Photoshop to convert and export as a GIF file.

Of course the good old it almost always works fine option is to use the Print Screen feature of your computer. Get your map on the screen, in ArcGIS, at 100%. Hit the Print Screen button on the keyboard. Open Photoshop and create a new empty file. Paste will drop the entire screen in the file. Crop back, carefully, to the neatline. Under the Image menu change the mode to Indexed Color and hit OK to any windows that pop up. Save as a GIF file. Once again, it is good to be reminded that if something is not working, there is probably an alternative way to do it. You should already know how to do the Print Screen routine. Just modify the Mode and follow the same procedure as outlined in step 9 above.



TIP: Sometimes Print Screen ceases to work after the 2nd timep (the previous saved screen shows up when you Paste into Photoshop). This is a Windows bug. It is hard to believe that Windows has any bugs. To fix it, go to the Edit Menu in Photoshop and select Purge then Clipboard after you have pasted a Print Screen image. This should solve the problem. Do that every time after you paste.



12) Once you are happy with your map (color, size, type) return to ArcGIS and export the rest of your maps - however worked best for you. Also export a single legend for each of your map types: While viewing your map layer with the highest high value: from the Insert menu select Legend, which will plop a legend down near your map. Move the legend away from your map and any lines, make sure you are viewing the screen at 100%, and export it (.jpg or .gif is fine) or Print Screen & Photoshop it.


With regards to the maps, the Layout View should be all set up and all you should have to do is change the map you are exporting. Don't change anything in the layout - position or size - as the maps must all be exactly the same to animate properly. You will have to adjust the layout for your other map types before you export them.


Next: Animating your exported maps.



E-mail: jbkrygier@owu.edu

...to Geog 353 Main Page and Course Description
...to krygier teaching page.
...to krygier top page.

OWU Home
OWU Geology and Geography Home