Book Image

Python for ArcGIS Pro

By : Silas Toms, Bill Parker
Book Image

Python for ArcGIS Pro

By: Silas Toms, Bill Parker

Overview of this book

Integrating Python into your day-to-day ArcGIS work is highly recommended when dealing with large amounts of geospatial data. Python for ArcGIS Pro aims to help you get your work done faster, with greater repeatability and higher confidence in your results. Starting from programming basics and building in complexity, two experienced ArcGIS professionals-turned-Python programmers teach you how to incorporate scripting at each step: automating the production of maps for print, managing data between ArcGIS Pro and ArcGIS Online, creating custom script tools for sharing, and then running data analysis and visualization on top of the ArcGIS geospatial library, all using Python. You’ll use ArcGIS Pro Notebooks to explore and analyze geospatial data, and write data engineering scripts to manage ongoing data processing and data transfers. This exercise-based book also includes three rich real-world case studies, giving you an opportunity to apply and extend the concepts you studied earlier. Irrespective of your expertise level with Esri software or the Python language, you’ll benefit from this book’s hands-on approach, which takes you through the major uses of Python for ArcGIS Pro to boost your ArcGIS productivity.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
1
Part I: Introduction to Python Modules for ArcGIS Pro
5
Part II: Applying Python Modules to Common GIS Tasks
10
Part III: Geospatial Data Analysis
14
Part IV: Case Studies
18
Other Books You May Enjoy
19
Index

Summary

In this chapter, you have created a map book that highlights block groups along a suspended bus route with a high-percentage minority population. This information can be used to identify potential disproportionate impacts on minority communities that can be an environmental justice issue. It can also be used to give guidance on reopening bus routes by identifying the most impactful routes to reopen.

First, the layout template was created, with special attention paid to the settings that cannot be changed with ArcPy. Then you created a Notebook, in which you defined a reference community, selected a bus route, created a study area, and added it to the map. You selected block groups within your study area with a minority percentage greater than the reference community, added the study area and selected bus route to an inset map, ensured a readable legend, selected a block group and set the extent to it, and created a table on the map of the percentages of races in the block...