Book Image

Programming ArcGIS 10.1 with Python Cookbook

By : Donald Eric Pimpler, Eric Pimpler
Book Image

Programming ArcGIS 10.1 with Python Cookbook

By: Donald Eric Pimpler, Eric Pimpler

Overview of this book

ArcGIS is an industry standard geographic information system from ESRI.This book will show you how to use the Python programming language to create geoprocessing scripts, tools, and shortcuts for the ArcGIS Desktop environment.This book will make you a more effective and efficient GIS professional by showing you how to use the Python programming language with ArcGIS Desktop to automate geoprocessing tasks, manage map documents and layers, find and fix broken data links, edit data in feature classes and tables, and much more."Programming ArcGIS 10.1 with Python Cookbook" starts by covering fundamental Python programming concepts in an ArcGIS Desktop context. Using a how-to instruction style you'll then learn how to use Python to automate common important ArcGIS geoprocessing tasks.In this book you will also cover specific ArcGIS scripting topics which will help save you time and effort when working with ArcGIS. Topics include managing map document files, automating map production and printing, finding and fixing broken data sources, creating custom geoprocessing tools, and working with feature classes and tables, among others.In "Python ArcGIS 10.1 Programming Cookbook" you'll learn how to write geoprocessing scripts using a pragmatic approach designed around an approach of accomplishing specific tasks in a Cookbook style format.
Table of Contents (21 chapters)
Programming ArcGIS 10.1 with Python Cookbook
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Reading geometry from a feature class


There may be times when you need to retrieve the geometric definition of features in a feature class. ArcPy provides the ability to read this information through various objects.

Getting ready

In ArcPy, feature classes have associated geometry objects including Polygon, Polyline, PointGeometry, and MultiPoint that you can access from your cursors. These objects refer to the shape field in the attribute table for a feature class. You can read the geometries of each feature in a feature class through these objects.

Polyline and polygon feature classes are composed of features containing multiple parts. You can use the partCount property to return the number of parts per feature and then use getPart() for each part in the feature to loop through each of the points and pull out the coordinate information. Point feature classes are composed of one PointGeometry object per feature that contains the coordinate information for each point.

In this recipe, you will...