So random, but i'm an arborist and last year I conducted a tree inventory for Watertown, SD! So I looked at that map constantly on treeplotter and arcmap for a few months, and when I randomly opened up this video looking for help, I thought wow that looks really familiar haha. Thanks for the arc tips!
the idea is comprehencible but the questin is how to pick up an exact scale number. For instance, I need to choose scales range between 1:3000 and 1:1000 but it doesn't allow me to choose 1:3000 scale. I can choose only either 1:2500 or 1:5000. But I need 1:3000! How to do that?
So random, but i'm an arborist and last year I conducted a tree inventory for Watertown, SD! So I looked at that map constantly on treeplotter and arcmap for a few months, and when I randomly opened up this video looking for help, I thought wow that looks really familiar haha. Thanks for the arc tips!
Wow this works so much better in QGIS
Thank you for the video, very useful.
😅
Very informative. Thanks man
Arc is so ridiculous in making you apply adjustments to each category individually.
Could you do the same with labels?
the idea is comprehencible but the questin is how to pick up an exact scale number. For instance, I need to choose scales range between 1:3000 and 1:1000 but it doesn't allow me to choose 1:3000 scale. I can choose only either 1:2500 or 1:5000. But I need 1:3000! How to do that?
Awesome! When you publish it to ArcGIS online, will the scaling apply ?
How to auto-scale objects so that they can decrease or increase when you are respectively zooming out or inn ?
I have the same problem!! With ArcGis that did not happen. Did you solve?