An annotation block used to indicate adjacent tiles.
The location on a drawing object that determines the position of any annotation attached to that object.
A way to display related values on a drawing object. To annotate geospatial features, use a label .
Specially created blocks containing attributes with Map expressions assigned to the attribute properties. Used with drawing data.
The information to display in an annotation and the layout of that information. Annotation templates are stored as specially named blocks within your drawing. They can include text and graphics.
In an industry model, a description of spatial relationship between geographic area features. Area topologies contain line strings and centroids. In an enterprise industry model, the polygons are generated automatically from the surrounding line strings. Examples of area topologies are parcels, land use, land cover and political boundaries.
Data that depicts the final installed configuration (physical or functional). As-built data incorporates any field markups on the original construction drawings.
Data that depicts the original plan for construction or installation, for example, the design for a new electric service or a new pipe installation.
Direction of ground slope.
Tabular data that describes the characteristics of feature(s) or drawing objects , for example, the number of lanes and pavement-type belonging to a road. For features, attributes can be stored with the geometry, or stored in a database and joined to feature data. For drawing objects, attributes are stored in a database and linked to selected drawing objects.
A layer in AutoCAD. An AutoCAD layer differs from a map layer you create in Display Manager.
The free viewer and editor for the DWF file format (formerly DWF Viewer).
The component that exposes the services offered by the Autodesk Infrastructure Map Server to client applications over the Internet or on an intranet using HTTP protocol.
A type of field in the Metadata feature, the value of which is derived from the data source, and populated automatically by AutoCAD Map 3D. Metadata auto-generation is triggered by selecting the resource in the Metadata Viewer.
A clockwise angle measured from a reference meridian. Also known as north azimuth. It can range from 0 to 360 degrees. A negative azimuth is converted to a clockwise value.
An angle measured from North or South, whichever is nearest, with the added designation of East or West. The angle is always less than 90 degrees (PI/2 radians or 100 grads) and is usually referenced by a quadrant number.
Calculates the shortest path or optimal route from a start point in a drawing, one or more intermediate points, and back to the start point. For example, the best route to follow on a street map when visiting multiple customer sites.
In AutoCAD or AutoCAD Map 3D, compound objects that have been saved for reuse in the drawing or in multiple drawings, for example, a North arrow. In Autodesk Infrastructure Studio, blocks are converted into symbols when they are loaded.
A zone of a specific radius created around a selected feature. Used to select features within a specific distance of another feature. In AutoCAD Map 3D, you can define buffers for drawing topologies and for features, but you define them differently.
A fence, or line, at a specified distance from a center line. Used to define a selection boundary.
For contours that contain curves, the bulge value is a maximum mid-ordinate distance along a polyline curve. If the mid-ordinate distance is longer than specified, then points are added to better define the shape of the curve.
The bulge factor can add more vertices to a polyline curve, making it appear more curve-like. The smaller the value, the more vertices are added.
A global coordinate system defined using three perpendicular axes (X, Y, and Z) to specify locations in three-dimensional space. Compare with spherical coordinate system .
A global coordinate system that is referenced directly to an ellipsoid. Compare with geodetic coordinate system .
Points or blocks that are part of a polygon in a drawing topology. The centroid holds information about the area and perimeter of the polygon.
An advanced type of join, where two or more secondary tables are joined to a primary table in a chain-like fashion, that is primary linked to secondary linked to another secondary, and so on.
The action of locking features in a data store before editing them.
See feature class and object class.
An AutoCAD Map 3D DWG (drawing) file that contains object classes, and uses them to represent real-world objects in the drawing. A DWG file that contains object class definitions, but does not have any objects to which these definitions are applied, is not considered a classified DWG.
Nodes within a specified tolerance of one another.
A specific category of information in a table, such as Address or Diameter, also called a field.
A group of data elements in the FGDC CSDGM Standard. A compound element can consist of individual data elements, other compound elements, or both.
Conformal projections maintain local angles. A map projection is conformal when the scale is the same in every direction at any point. Meridians and parallels intersect at right angles; the shape of small areas and angles with very short sides are preserved. Most larger area sizes are distorted.
A map projection in which the surface of the Earth is drawn as it would appear if projected on a cone wrapped around the earth. The Lambert Conformal Conic is often used for maps of the continental United States, France, and other countries.
In a database, a restriction specified for a certain feature class , which is validated when a new feature is added to that class. For example, a "minor road" feature class may have a constraint that specifies that the speed attribute must always be 25, 30, or 50 miles per hour.
Data that can fall anywhere in a broad range. When creating a theme, continuous data is usually organized into smaller ranges that show data trends. For example, property value is continuous data that can be placed into the ranges 0 to $50,000, $50,000 to $100,000, and over $100,000, with each range displayed in a different color. Compare with discrete data .
Locations with established latitude and longitude, and often elevation, used for accuracy and precise location of maps. A system of geodetic control points covers the entire United States. Similar systems exist for all countries, such as Bench Marks and Trigonometry Points in the United Kingdom.
Short for Coordinate Geometry. COGO inquiry commands extract geometric information from drawing objects such as lines, curves, closed polylines, and polygons. This information is useful if you want to verify the accuracy of your data, or send the data to the field. Inquiry commands are specific to drawing objects. They do not work on features. However, there are specific COGO commands for enterprise industry model data.
A line that connects points of the same elevation or value relative to a specified reference datum. The lines can help you determine the elevation at a specific location on a surface, help clarify and analyze the 3D surface terrain, and help with things like navigation.
See COGO.
See global coordinate system.
The main user interface for creating grid surfaces from point cloud data.
The user ID and password required to connect to a database.
A map projection, in which the surface of the Earth is drawn as it would appear if projected on a cylinder wrapped around the earth in a north-south direction. Compare with transverse cylindrical projection .
A link or line, one end of which lacks a connection to another link or node.
The window you use to connect a geospatial data store to your map. You specify each feature class from that data store to add to your map.
A single piece of data that can be entered directly, as a value in a field. In the Metadata feature, single data elements are expressed as fields to be completed with values defined in the FGDC CSDGM Standard .
A recognized FDO feature source provider, used to connect to geospatial data.
A UDL (universal data link) file that points to a collection of data and provides information on how to access the data.
In FDO , a collection of feature classes contained in a single storage location. The data store consists of an integrated set of objects, which are modeled by classes or feature classes defined within one or more schemas. Data stores can be either file-based, such as SDF, or a database, such as Oracle Spatial.
In AutoCAD Map 3D, a grid based on FDO data, in which you can view and edit attributes of selected map features, perform searches, and work with selection sets.
In AutoCAD Map 3D, the grid in which you can view and edit external database tables that are linked to drawing objects.
A set of conditions for specifying the selection of records from a database. External database queries, also called views, are created using your database software and can be run from the Map Explorer tab of the Task Pane.
A mathematical model that provides a smooth approximation of the earths surface. Each datum includes both an ellipsoid, which specifies the size and shape of the earth, and a base point for latitude and longitude. If two maps use different datums, points on the map may not line up.
Digital Elevation Model. A file that contains a representation of surface terrain. The surface is stored as a grid in which each cell can have any one of several different meanings, such as elevation, color, density, and so on.
To convert existing data from paper maps, aerial photos, or raster images into digital form by tracing the maps on a digitizer. Object locations are recorded as X,Y coordinates.
Data that falls into explicit categories. For a feature layer that uses a theme , each value is displayed differently. For example, an agricultural thematic map might show each crop in a different color. Compare with continuous data.
A description of the appearance of a drawing object: includes items such as layer, color, hatch pattern, and line type.
A view of the Task Pane that shows each Display Manager layer in your current display map, and has commands for styling and managing those layers. To view Display Manager, select its tab in the Task Pane.
A set of objects in Display Manager . The set could be all the objects on a layer or in a feature class , or objects that share a certain property. Each layer can be styled or themed individually.
A set of map presentations, consisting of Display Manager layers, that can be stored in a DWG file.
In an enterprise industry model, a way to administer thematic views. A display model definition specifies which set of layer files (feature layers) is loaded into the Display Manager. Also, the display model defines multiple map windows and autoload layers.
Same as display information.
To remove the boundaries that exist between polygons sharing a specific attribute.
To use a pattern of solid dots to simulate more colors than are available when displaying images.
Sets of values. For example, a domain defines the values that are allowed for a feature attribute. Enterprise industry models store domains in domain tables, which are created using the Data Model Administrator.
In the Metadata feature, the domain refers to element values that are defined as valid within the FGDC CSDGM Standard . A domain can be a list of pre-defined values in a menu, a range of numbers, free-form text, or any other type of value that can be assigned to a given field.
Variable that refers to an object property. It consists of a period (.) followed by the variable name for that property. Dot variables can be entered in expressions used for building a template file for Report mode queries and for property alteration.
The process of overlaying feature(s) or a raster image on a surface so that the features or the image reflect the underlying terrain.
A layer in Display Manager that contains drawing objects from a DWG file.
Objects that exist in a drawing file (DWG) or come from an attached drawing. Compare to feature(s).
The set of source drawings attached to a drawing.
In AutoCAD Map 3D, a drawing source is a drawing (DWG) file and also its associated information, such as attached drawing files, drawing-based feature classes, linked template data, and topologies. Compare with feature source.
The mechanism that points to the folder where attached DWG files are stored.
Digital Terrain Elevation Data.
Objects that share the same start and end points. Object types that can be considered duplicate include linear objects, points, blocks, text, and mtext.
An Autodesk file format for sharing 2D, 3D, and spatially enabled design data. DWF files are easy to publish and view on the web.
Drawing file. The Autodesk file format for storing 2D, 3D, and spatially enabled design data.
The process of overlaying a set of feature(s) or a raster image on a surface so that the features or the image reflect the underlying terrain.
A layer in Display Manager that contains drawing objects from a DWG file.
An object in a DWG file, or that comes from an attached drawing. Compare to features.
In AutoCAD Map 3D, the mechanism that points to the folder where attached DWG files are stored.
A DWG cleanup function available in AutoCAD Map 3D that allows for distortion between adjacent maps, and produces a true match of drawing objects at the edges of maps.
When users decide to lock objects in Oracle Spatial, those objects are immediately locked. Edits of locked objects are put into an EditSet. You can then update the database, which updates the locked records with the contents of the EditSet.
The basic building block of an Oracle Spatial geometry (Oracle Spatial database) . The supported spatial element types are points, line strings, and polygons. For example, elements might model water wells (point clusters), roads (line strings), and county boundaries (polygons).
The vertical distance from a datum to a point or object on the surface of the Earth. The datum is generally considered to be at sea level. Equivalent to the Z coordinate in an XYZ coordinate system.
An approximation of the shape of the Earth that does not account for variations caused by the nonuniform density of the earth. Synonymous with spheroid .
A map projection in which every part, as well as the whole, has the same area as the corresponding part on the earth, at the same reduced scale. No flat map can be equal area and represent true shape.
Projections showing true distances only from the center of the projection or along a special set of lines. No flat map can be both equidistant and equal area.
See vertical exaggeration.
The action of checking out features using the Check Out Features command.
A file with a .epf extension that stores settings for an export operation.
An automatic calculation used to specify values for URL, tooltip, and feature labels. For example, you might create a text expression that specifies a state name and population for a label. To express the population in millions, you might apply a number expression that divides the population value by 1,000,000.
The mechanism that analyzes the statement you enter in the Expression box in the Output Report Options dialog box or the Property Alteration dialog box.
Attribute data linked to a drawing object but contained in a database apart from the drawing file.
Feature Data Objects (FDO) data access technology. An Autodesk software standard and general purpose API for accessing features and geospatial data regardless of the underlying data store.
An implementation of the FDO API that provides access to data in a particular data store, such as an Oracle or ArcSDE database, or to a file-based data store, such as SDF or SHP.
An abstraction of a natural or man-made real world object. A spatial feature has one or more geometric properties. For example, a road feature might be represented by a line, and a hydrant might be represented by a point. A non-spatial feature does not have geometry, but can be related to a spatial feature that does. For example, a road feature may contain a sidewalk feature that is defined as not containing any geometry. In AutoCAD Map 3D, features are accessed and added to maps using Data Connect ( FDO ) or by opening an industry model drawing or an enterprise industry model.
For feature data, a schema element that describes a type of real-world object. It includes a class name and property definitions. Commonly used to refer to a set of features of a particular class, for example, the feature class "roads" or the feature class "hydrants."
A way to view, edit, and generate reports on attribute data for an individual feature in an industry model drawing or an enterprise industry model.
See FDO.
A layer in Display Manager containing feature(s) from a feature source such as SDF, ESRI SHP, or ArcSDE. Feature layers are brought in using Data Connect.
In an enterprise industry model, finds the location of a certain object, such as a building, a parcel, or any other type of feature that has geometry. The geometry found will be the center of a graphic generation or a zoom GoTo. There are several types of search such as Sequential search and Flat search.
In AutoCAD Map 3D, any source of feature data that has been connected by means of FDO. In Autodesk Infrastructure Studio, one of the two types of resources created either by loading file-based data or by connecting to a spatial database. Feature sources are stored in the repository either in SDF 3 format or as database connections and contain raw geometry only. Compare with drawing source.
Content Standard for Digital Geospatial Metadata. A standard XML schema for publishing and sharing GIS metadata, released by the United States Federal Geographic Data Committee (FGDC) in 1998. The schema is comprised of seven major sections, each of which contains several individual data elements and compound elements. Depending upon the nature of the GIS data, each section, element, and compound element is mandatory, optional, or conditional (mandatory if applicable).
A specific category of information in a data file, such as Address or Diameter. Also called a column.
A record that matches the conditions of an SQL filter or spatial filter and is therefore available for selection.
For a network topology, a trace that begins at a specified point and traces out in all directions for a specified distance or resistance.
A type of auto-generated field (metadata) in the Metadata feature, the value of which is required to be derived from the data source within a GIS resource (metadata), according to the rules of the FGDC CSDGM Standard. Forced-update fields are updated each time metadata is updated.
A method of reducing the number of vertices in the source data by a specific percentage.
A coordinate system that is referenced directly to a datum. Compare with cartographic coordinate system.
Analytical techniques that identify existing conditions of a geographic location, a spatial area, or a linear network, and predict the effects of certain future events on these features.
Information about geographic features.
An ellipsoid with a highly irregular surface used to describe the shape of the earth.
The representation of a spatial feature(s), modeled as an ordered set of primitive elements.
The process of transforming the geometry elements of AutoCAD Map 3D objects to Oracle Spatial geometry, and transforming the geometry elements of the records back to AutoCAD Map 3D objects.
A DWF file published by AutoCAD Map 3D or AutoCAD Civil 3D 2008 or later that contains a global coordinate system and defined latitude and longitude coordinates based on the WGS84 datum.
An image that references real-world coordinates in its correlation source. Example: Georeferenced images include GeoSPOT, GeoTIFF, and images that use world files as their correlation source.
A type of tagged image file format (TIFF) that supports georeferencing information.
A computerized decision support system that integrates geographic data, attribute data, and other spatially referenced data. A GIS is used to capture, store, retrieve, analyze, and display spatial data.
A method that converts the spherical coordinates of the Earth representing latitude and longitude into an AutoCAD Map 3D drawings Cartesian coordinate system, and accounts for the curvature of the surface of the Earth with a projection. A coordinate system is usually defined by a projection, an ellipsoid definition, a datum definition, one or more standard parallels, and a central meridian.
A network of geographic lines, such as latitude and longitude lines.
A grid-based Cartesian coordinate system. The Universal Transverse Mercator (UTM) coordinate system is a grid reference system.
The first part of a grid reference system coordinate. The grid zone designator specifies the 6 by 8 degree UTM zone number and latitude letter.
See surface.
A regular pattern used to fill an area with a series of cross-angled lines.
The addition of shading to a surface to suggest three-dimensionality, shadow, or degrees of light and dark. Hillshading adds shading by casting the light of the sun across a surface from the direction and angle you specify.
The action of checking out features by selecting them, without using the Check Out Features command.
A point cloud data store file created by the Point Cloud Manager. Index files allow AutoCAD Map 3D to access point cloud data more quickly and efficiently.
A type of join where records in the primary table are displayed only if there is a matching record in the joined secondary table. See also join, left outer join.
Two or more conditions joined with the logical operator And. An item is selected only if the item meets all specified conditions. Compare with union .
The location where one line, surface, or solid crosses another so as to have one or more points in common.
All changes in an enterprise industry model can be controlled and performed by exact reports on appropriate processing steps, if they are performed inside a job. Using jobs allows you to control the version. A job includes various processing states (live, pending, project). For each processing state, an application exactly defines which actions are allowed.
The spatial area in which a job can be processed. You can use job perimeters to control where the modifications of the current job is allowed. Features outside the job perimeter cannot be processed. Also, you can define feature rules to be applied on the objects within the perimeter.
A relationship that is established between attribute data and feature sources for the purposes of creating a new view of the data or for ad-hoc analysis.
An advanced raster image format from Joint Photographics Expert Group, featuring options for lossless compression, wavelet compression, incremental decompression, and support for up to 48-bit color.
One or more columns in a table whose values are used to uniquely identify a record. To provide useful links, a key column should contain a unique value for each record. Also called a key field.
A value stored on an object that specifies that value to match in the key field of a table.
In a map book, an overview of the entire map with the current tile boundaries displayed.
Text placed on or near map feature(s) to describe or identify them.
In an enterprise industry model, any attribute data of a feature can be displayed as text, using label features. Label features are generated by arbitrary select statements you can define. Label definitions (select statements and other settings) are stored in the system table TB_LABEL_DEF. Label definitions can be created or edited using the Infrastructure Administrator. Label features can be styled with the Display Manager by displaying the LABEL_TEXT property.
Select statements that create labels. The label definition queries data from the database and specifies positioning and text orientation. This information is used in the Display Manager for stylization.
LiDAR Aerial Survey. LAS is an industry standared file format defined by the American Society of Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing. The LAS standard includes LiDAR point classification.
The first part of a spherical coordinate system used to record positions on the earths surface. Latitude indicates the angular distance north or south of the equator.
A resource that references a feature source or a drawing source. The layer contains styling and theming information, and optionally a collection of scale ranges. You add a layer to your map using Display Manager. Specific types of layers are drawing layer, feature layer, and surface layer.
Layer definition file. In AutoCAD Map 3D, a file that saves all of the information required to recreate a layer, that is, the references to the source data and the styles that have been applied to it.
In a map book, a named composition of viewports and annotation in paperspace. It includes the intended paper size and output scale for plotting and publishing.
A type of join where all records in the primary table are displayed, whether they have a matching record in the joined secondary table or not.
Light Detection And Ranging. A remote-sensing method that can be used to generate an image of a surface.
An element of geometry that connects nodes. In a polygon topology, a link defines a polygon edge. Links can contain vertices and true arcs, and can be represented as a line, polyline, or arc.
The connection between a drawing object and its related database data. The link data is stored on the linked drawing object and contains the name of the link template and the key value used to identify the associated record in the linked table. An object may have more than one link.
A data structure that contains the path information to a database table and specifies one or more key fields in that table.
To make all or part of a disk file read-only so that it cannot be modified by other users on a network. Object locking applies to objects that are being edited by another user. File locking applies to entire files, for example when an AutoCAD user wants to open a file while the file is being edited in AutoCAD Map 3D.
A symbol such as And, Or, Not, =, >, >=, <, and <= used to define logical relationships.
In an industry model, the description of the relationship of features of any feature classes, both attribute or geometry feature classes. The features need not be spatially connected. A logical topology connects points with points, lines with lines,lines to points, or attribute features to attriute features. Utility networks are based on logical topologies that connect points (nodes) and lines (edges). For example, a logical topology can represent a waste water network or electrical transmission lines. Also called a network topology.
Database transactions that extend over hours, days, or months, unlike the more typical database transactions that last for only seconds. Long transactions support atomicity, consistency, and durability, and can be committed or rolled back.
The second part of a spherical coordinate system used to record positions on the earths surface. Longitude measures angular distance east or west of the prime meridian, which runs through Greenwich, England.
The viewport that represents a map tile in a sheet.
A collection of layers displayed within a consistent coordinate system and extents.
A publishing option that divides a map into tiles and formats them into pages with a legend and an index/key. Create and edit map books from the Map Book tab in the Task Pane.
Manages your map book and contains commands for creating, editing, and publishing them. To view Map Book, click its tab in the Task Pane.
A special type of sheet set template used by a map book to generate sheets. The map tiles are generated based on the layout and viewport placeholder properties.
Manages your mapping resources. To view Map Explorer, click its tab in the Task Pane.
The default name for the enterprise industry model server component that stores application settings and server-side stored procedures. To use an enterprise industry model, you must connect to either MAPSYS or MAPMAIN.
A specific region of a map (model space view) for use on an individual sheet.
A systematic representation of a spherical body, such as the earth, in a flat (planar) surface. Each map projection has specific properties that make it suitable for specific mapping needs.
A set of conditions that specify the selection of drawing objects from source drawings. Conditions in a Map query can be based on the location or properties of an object or on data stored in the drawing or in a linked database table.
A feature class form in which related records are shown in an embedded sub-form on one or more tabs.
A map projection, designed by Gerhardus Mercator, in which the surface of the Earth is drawn as it would appear if projected on a cylinder wrapped around the earth.
A great circle passing through both poles, corresponding to a line of longitude.
A Universal Transverse Mercator (UTM) projection- and Universal Polar Stereographic (UPS)-based grid reference system used by the United States military and NATO.
Data about data. In the GIS context, metadata consists of information that describes the essential characteristics of geospatial data sets.
Features with known coordinates, used to establish accurate and precise location on a map.
A polygon object. A polygon differs from a closed polyline in that it stores information about its inner and outer boundaries.
The method of determining an individual map tile name. Examples include column/row, sequential, and data driven.
See flood trace.
A description of the spatial relationship between linear drawing objects (links and, sometimes, nodes). For example, a network topology can represent pipelines, streets, electrical transmission lines, and rivers.
A single point or a link end point or intersection in a topology. A node can be represented as a block or point object.
A description of the spatial relationship between geographic point objects in a drawing. Examples of node topologies include point sources of pollution and road signs.
In a theme, the scaling of data values relative to another data value. A common example is adjusting the thematic value based on the area, length, or perimeter of the entity.
All the drawing objects that have been created using a specific object class definition. Use object classification to organize objects in your drawing based on the real-world features they represent, such as roads. Object classes allow you to create new objects that automatically have the appropriate properties and values for objects in your drawing.
A definition of how to create a classified drawing object in a drawing. An object class definition can include information about the object type, default properties of the object, or default data that should be attached to the object.
Attribute data attached to an object and stored in the drawing file. Compare with external data.
Open Geospatial Consortium. A non-profit, international, voluntary consensus standards organization that leads the development of standards for geospatial and location based services. (www.opengeospatial.org)
A join in which one record in the primary table corresponds to one record in the secondary table.
A join in which one record in the primary table corresponds to more than one record in the secondary table.
The component of the Autodesk Infrastructure Application Extension that implements several OpenGIS Web-mapping protocols to expose the services offered by the Server to standards-based OpenGIS clients.
See schema.
An earlier version of the Feature Data Objects ( FDO ) feature, used to store maps in Oracle Spatial.
Open Source Geospatial Foundation. A foundation created to support and build the highest-quality open source geospatial software. The goal of the foundation is to encourage the use and collaborative development of community-led projects. (www.osgeo.org)
To create a new topology by combining elements of two distinct topologies. At least one of the original topologies must be a polygon topology.
In AutoCAD Map 3D, a tool that provides spatial and data analysis capabilities for two sets of geospatial features.
In Autodesk Infrastructure Map Server, a compressed file that can speed up the process of loading data onto the server. Large source-data files can be zipped up in this file format and saved to a network location or copied to a CD.
A degree of latitude that circles the earth parallel to the Equator.
For a network topology, a trace begins at a specified point, finds the shortest distance to another point and is based on resistance (the length by default).
The ability to edit checked-out objects while you are offline, and then save your changes back to the data source when you return online.
Specifies location and size of elements (viewports, scale bar, north arrow, legend) in a map sheet.
An AutoCAD block that contains plotting information such as title page text, plot layouts, legend, and other map annotation.
A collection of points represented as an AutoCAD object.
The main user interface for converting LiDAR data to a point cloud database file format.
A polygon is a closed area that stores information about its inner and outer boundaries, and about other polygons nested within it or grouped with it. In a polygon topology, the polygon can be enclosed by any lines or arcs in the drawing. In addition, AutoCAD Map 3D supports a polygon object, sometimes called an mpolygon or mapping polygon.
A description of the spatial relationship between geographic area features. Polygon topologies contain geometric links, nodes, and centroids. Examples of polygon topologies are land use and land cover maps, political boundaries, parcels, and soil types.
The property whose value uniquely identifies each feature within a feature class. Many feature classes use a single property for this purpose, for example, FeatureId. However, a feature class could have a list of properties such as street number, street name, and street type to uniquely identify a house address. You cannot edit primary key values for joined data.
The line of longitude drawn through Greenwich, England, used as the origin for longitude measurements.
A longitudinal section of line features. A profile is created by projecting features on an axis.
User-defined settings specific to a given drawing.
A set of profile system tables and an arbitrary set of profile feature classes. Profile system tables store the basic configuration and settings. Profile feature classes store the components of each profile drawing.
A project includes one or more industry models. Selecting a project loads all necessary objects, including the appropriate menus and toolbars, for all industry models in that project. For enterprise industry models, a project is the central workflow unit, which you must open to work with the enterprise industry model. For file-based industry models, a project is the same as an industry model drawing or template.
For different user groups, such as EDITOR, VIEWER or ADMIN, you can define the appropriate projects with respective roles and rights in the Infrastructure Administrator.
For feature(s) data, a single attribute of a class. A class is described by one or more property definitions. For example, a Road feature class may have properties called Name, NumberLanes, or Location.
The definition of properties you want to change during a query.
Values associated with a geographic object, such as river depth, road width, or pipe diameter. In AutoCAD Map 3D, these items are represented as block attributes, values in object data tables, or values in a linked external database.
An unnecessary node in a geometric link. A pseudo node can be used to store information about geographic point location or to represent change from one link to another.
To generate output from a map book.
To remove all unused object definitions from an open drawing.
A set of executable statements that retrieve specific objects. For example, a layer-based query that displays only the objects on the layers that contain state and district boundaries.
The set of queries saved in a drawing. You can add, delete, and modify queries in the Query Library.
A sequence of display properties used to render a theme; for example, a sequence of colors, line styles, or hatch patterns.
In a theme, a segment of data along a continuum, such as property value, temperature, or population.
Images containing individual dots (called pixels or cells) with color values, arranged in a rectangular, evenly spaced array. Aerial photographs and satellite images are examples of raster images used in mapping. Compare with vector.
See surface layer.
For a symbol, the point that controls the position of a symbol over a feature in a map. The default reference point is the center of the symbol.
The preparation of a map for digitizing by calibrating a digitizing table to convert an analog source to a digital file.
Resistance is a measure of how hard it is to travel a link. The default measure of resistance is the length of the link. You can set the resistance to be related to what the link represents, such as pipe diameter or traffic speed.
In a raster image, the density of pixels-per-inch (PPI) or dots-per-inch.
In Autodesk Infrastructure Map Server, a feature source, drawing source, or application component that is stored in the resource repository and can be reused and shared.
In the Metadata feature, a resource is a generic term meaning any type of data set for which AutoCAD Map 3D can generate metadata. A resource could be a feature class, an object class, a schema, or a file.
An XML database that stores the resources created either by loading file-based data or by connecting to databases.
An editing method, used only when necessary, that attempts to correct errors by stretching a map to fit known control points or monuments.
A feature theme consists of a collection of rules. Each rule specifies a style and feature label for the features that meet the specified condition. You can add a legend label to provide a description of the condition of a rule. As a layer is drawn, each feature(s) is compared to the rules in the order that they are listed. The first rule for which the feature meets the condition is used to specify the style and feature label for that feature.
A method or trigger that processes data accordingly to predefined algorithms. For example, rules perform complex consistency and dependency checks at certain events, such as before inserting or after modifying a feature.
Objects that have been created or modified in the current drawing and are marked to be saved back to source drawings.
The ratio of the distance on a paper map to the distance on the ground. If a paper map has a scale of 1:100,000 (also represented as 1/100000), then a distance of 1 unit on the paper map corresponds to 100,000 units on the ground. On a digital map, scale represents the scale of the map from which the digital map was derived.
You can define different stylizations at different scale thresholds. For example, turn on the display of road names only when the drawing scale factor is below 1:5000.
The definition of multiple feature classes and the relationships between them. A schema is the logical description of the data types used to model real-world objects, and does not reference the actual data instances (a particular road or land parcel). Rather, it is metadata.
A schematic diagram that represents real world features by transforming the original feature geometry to an alternative location, for example by applying a coordinate offset. The schema plan represents real-world features in a clear structure, and preserves topology. A schema plan can be displayed as an overlay on the original features, or in a secondary window. Use Infrastructure Administrator to define schema plans.
Spatial Data File. An open source file-based geodatabase that can contain multiple feature classes or types of data stored in tables with attributes and geometry.
The previous version of the SDF file format. Each SDF 2 file generally contained one feature class or type of data, for example points, lines, polygons, or text.
The current version of the SDF format. It is the native format for Autodesk Infrastructure Map Server and Open Source. Each SDF 3 file can contain multiple feature classes or types of data stored in tables with attributes and geometry.
An Oracle database.
See hillshading.
An individual named object in a sheet set that can be published. References a layout. In a DWF file, a plot layout containing a specific view of the original data.
A named collection of sheets and subsets for publishing.
A named collection of sheets within a sheet set. An individual sheet can only be a member of a single subset.
A drawing file that defines a title block and a layout for use in sheets. Can be specified for sheet sets and sheet subsets.
See path trace.
The collection of servers that process Autodesk Infrastructure Map Server requests.
A web-based application, installed with Autodesk Infrastructure Map Server, for managing a site and its servers.
The tree view in Autodesk Infrastructure Studio that displays the resources stored in the resource repository.
In a site, the server that contains the resource repository.
A method of reporting surface inclination as a ratio that expresses the horizontal distance in which the elevation changes by one linear unit. For example, if the ground rises 3 units over a horizontal distance of 15 linear units (meters or feet), the slope is 5:1 (5 to 1).
A drawing file attached to another drawing. The set of all source drawings attached to a drawing is called the drawing set. Use a query to retrieve selected objects from multiple source drawings.
A generic term used to reference the mathematical concept of n-dimensional data.
The process of understanding, extracting, or creating information about a set of objects. Spatial analysis includes techniques used to determine the distribution of objects over a network or area, and the relationships between those objects. The location of, proximity to, and orientation of objects can be analyzed with spatial analysis. It is useful for evaluating suitability and capability, for estimating and predicting, and for interpreting.
The general metadata or parameters within which the geometry for a collection of features resides. In particular, the spatial context includes the definition of the coordinate system, spheroid parameters, units, spatial extents, and so on, for a collection of geometries owned by features.
Information about the location and shape of geographic features, and the relationships between those features.
See SDF.
A database containing information indexed by location.
A selection of objects that specify which records to display in the active table or query. When a spatial filter is active, the Data View displays only those records linked to selected objects. Compare with SQL filter.
An index created in an Oracle Spatial database by dividing the extents of the drawings in the database into rectangular tiles. AutoCAD Map 3D uses the index to locate the geometry to be imported.
A coordinate system measured on the surface of a sphere and expressed as angular distances. Compare with Cartesian coordinate system.
See ellipsoid.
A series of SQL expressions that specify which records to select in the active table or query. When an SQL filter is active, the Data View displays only those records that match the filter criteria. Compare with spatial filter.
Settings that specify how to display the feature(s) or drawing objects in a Display Manager layer. For example, a polygon style that makes parcel polygons 50% transparent and which appears at a scale of 1:50000. One or more styles can be applied to a single element.
Use the style library to store the styles you use frequently. You can drag and drop these styles onto any element in any other display map.
The process of assigning display characteristics (such as line color, line pattern, fill color, fill pattern, and so on) to feature(s) (points, polylines, polygons).
Visually or textually changing the display of drawing objects according to the assigned styles, rather than displaying them with their native object properties.
A user who controls user IDs, passwords, and access to sensitive procedures.
The maximum distance between 3D polyline vertices. If the distance between vertices is greater than specified, then points are added along the 3D polyline in equal increments that are less than or equal to the supplementing distance.
Add vertices along 3D polylines that are long and contain few vertices. The supplementing distance is the maximum distance between vertices. If the distance between vertices is greater than specified, then points are added along the 3D polyline in equal increments that are less than or equal to the supplementing distance. The smaller the distance, the greater the number of supplemented points.
A network of elevation data. AutoCAD Map 3D supports raster-based grid surfaces, such as DEM, DTED, and ESRI Grid. In these types of surfaces, the points of a surface are connected into a grid, which are then used to interpolate contours, and to generate profiles and cross-sections. A surface represents the ground condition at a particular time or event.
A layer in Display Manager containing a raster-based surface such as a Digital Elevation Model (DEM), an ESRI Grid file, or Digital Terrain Elevation Data (DTED). A surface layer is brought in using Data Connect.
A type of measurement taken by a surveyor using a known distance plus an angular offset. A tie is a direct measurement, made with a tape or chain. Swing refers to the angle offset of the tie.
A bitmap or vector image that is used to represent a point.
In Autodesk Infrastructure Studio, a collection of related symbols. Image files are converted into symbols when they are brought into the symbol library. The symbol library is stored in the resource repository.
A term referring to the storage of named objects, including linetypes, layers, text styles, and blocks.
A set of data arranged in records (rows) and fields (columns). When a table is displayed in a grid, records display in horizontal rows and fields display in vertical columns. Each field value in the table displays in a cell.
A AutoCAD Map 3D window that provides the tools you require to accomplish your main mapping tasks: creating, displaying, styling, analyzing, and publishing maps. The Task Pane contains tabbed views: Map Explorer, Display Manager, Survey, and Map Book. Map Explorer enables you to manage the resources you use to create your maps. Display Manager provides tools to create maps, and create styles and themes. With Map Book, you can print, publish and share maps. You can resize and move the Task Pane palette.
An overview of the steps to perform common GIS tasks.
A file that formats another file, such as a text file for saving information from queried objects.
Static text stored as a separate SDF data store, independent from the current map. You can precisely position text on the layer, and style and rotate the text.
See theme.
A theme is a special style used to vary the stylization based on some property of the objects. For example, instead of just coloring the lakes blue, you could vary the shade of blue based on the depth of the lake. Instead of just altering the line width of the roads, you could vary the line width based on traffic flow.
The process of styling feature(s) according to an attribute value.
The method of breaking a large map into multiple smaller tiles. Options include by area, by number, and custom.
A radius around a node or linear object used to search for drawing errors.
The minimum distance allowed between linear objects or nodes during drawing cleanup. If two linear objects or nodes are separated by a distance less than the tolerance, AutoCAD Map 3D corrects the error.
A collection of feature class tables, like containers, used to organize feature classes. Considering a data transfer, topics are fully independent of one another. Each topic may have sub-topics.
To build a clear and transparent data structure, you can group feature classes into topics, group several topics into main topics, and define feature classes with sub-feature classes. These relations between topics and feature classes serve only as an illustration of the data structure. There is not necessarily an actual relation between the tables.
A set of geometric relationships between drawing objects, including links, nodes, and centroids. Topology describes how lines, nodes, and polygons connect and relate to each other, and forms the basis for advanced GIS functions such as network tracing, spatial analysis, buffer analysis, overlay analysis, and dissolving a polygon topology.
An extension to a Map query that applies to a loaded topology.
A command started while another is in progress. Precede transparent commands with an apostrophe.
A map projection, in which the surface of the Earth is drawn as it would appear if projected on a cylinder wrapped around the earth in an east-west direction. Compare with cylindrical projection.
File with.udl extension that includes the name and location of the database table and the software used to create the file. Windows uses a UDL file to identify a data source. Using the information in this file, programs such as AutoCAD Map 3D can view and update data from external databases.
Two or more lines within a specified tolerance of each other that do not meet.
Two or more conditions joined with the logical operator Or. An item is selected only if the item meets at least one of the specified criteria. Compare with intersection (expression).
A Universal Transverse Mercator (UTM) projection-based grid reference system for the United States.
A specific implementation of the Mercator projection, designed for use around the world.
A mathematical calculation of an object with precise direction and length. Vector data is stored as X,Y coordinates that form points, lines, and areas. Compare with raster.
A database function that allows multiple copies of a spatial dataset to be stored and tracked by date of creation, data of change, and so on.
An increase of vertical scale relative to horizontal scale, used to make elevation changes easier to differentiate.
A view of modelspace from a layout.
A multiple resolution image file compressed using a lossy compression that enables large graphics to load much faster due to the reduction in file size. Wavelet compression is based on a mathematical algorithm in which graphic images can be reduced to a small fraction of their original size.
The removal of points along a selected 3D polyline, which may represent a contour. The weeding factors determine the number of points removed. You can use weeding to reduce the amount of point information taken from the contours that may not be necessary to generate an accurate surface.
You can use the weeding factor settings to reduce redundant points along 3D polylines by ignoring vertices that are close together or along a straight line. A larger distance and deflection angle will weed a greater number of points. Distance is an absolute measure and the angle is measured in degrees. The larger the distance value, the greater the number of weeded points. The weeding factors must be less than the supplementing factors.
A point is weeded by calculating its location in relation to the vertices before and after it. If the length between these three points is less than the weeding length value, and the deflection angle is less than the weeding angle value, then the middle point is not added to the contour data file.
Web Feature Service. A web service based on the specification defined by the OGC. Acts as a source of feature(s) data.
Web Map Service. A web service based on the specification defined by the OGC. Produces an image (for example, a PNG or JPG image) of geospatial data.
A guide for the user through tasks like acquisition, analysis, and reports.
An automated set of tasks that can be arranged to run in series or parallel. The output of one task can be used as the input of another task. The user can configure the sequence and parameters for execution graphically.
A single step in a workflow that executes a command or set of commands.
A relationship between activities such that the output of one activity is used as the input of another.
Contains the commands and tools for specific tasks. The 2D Drafting workspace is tailored to those familiar with the AutoCAD ribbon. The Planning And Analysis workspace is optimized for working with AutoCAD Map 3D. The Maintenance wprkspace is designed for working with enterprise industry models. The Map Classic workspace is a menu workspace for legacy users.
To change your workspace, click the name of the current workspace in the status bar and select a different workspace from the list.
See Viewer (AJAX viewer).
To change the display magnification so that it focuses on progressively smaller areas (when you zoom in) or larger areas (when you zoom out) of an image.
To magnify a drawing based on its extents so that the view shows the largest possible view of all spatial objects.