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ArcPy and ArcGIS: Geospatial Analysis with Python

You're reading from   ArcPy and ArcGIS: Geospatial Analysis with Python Use the ArcPy module to automate the analysis and mapping of geospatial data in ArcGIS

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Product type Paperback
Published in Feb 2015
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781783988662
Length 224 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Table of Contents (14) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Introduction to Python for ArcGIS FREE CHAPTER 2. Configuring the Python Environment 3. Creating the First Python Script 4. Complex ArcPy Scripts and Generalizing Functions 5. ArcPy Cursors – Search, Insert, and Update 6. Working with ArcPy Geometry Objects 7. Creating a Script Tool 8. Introduction to ArcPy.Mapping 9. More ArcPy.Mapping Techniques 10. Advanced Geometry Object Methods 11. Network Analyst and Spatial Analyst with ArcPy 12. The End of the Beginning Index

Adding dynamic parameters to a script


The scripts we have generated in previous chapters have all had hard-coded inputs. The input values were written in the script as strings or numbers and assigned to variables. While they can be updated manually to replace the input and output file paths and SQL statements, programmers should aim to create scripts that will not require editing each time they are used. Instead, scripts should be designed to be dynamic and accept file paths and other inputs as parameters or arguments, in much the same manner that the functions we have created accept parameters.

Python was designed with this in mind, and the sys module has a method called sys.argv that accepts inputs passed to the script when it is executed. While the designers of ArcPy and its predecessor arcgisscripting module initially took advantage of the sys.argv method, in time they designed an ArcPy method for accepting script parameters. As either method can be used when writing ArcPy scripts, and...

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