The lessons in this tutorial take you through the entire workflow of building and publishing a map. You use real data from the city of Redding, California to do the following:
- Start a map project by connecting to all the data stores needed by your map. Data stores can include geospatial databases, spatial data files, such as Shape (SHP) and SDF files, AutoCAD drawings (DWG files), and raster images. Connecting to a data store makes the information in that data store available to your map.
- Style the objects in your map so you can easily identify them. Styles can help you provide complex information quickly and intuitively. For example, themed styles can show population density, water depth, or the relative height of geographic features.
- Edit objects in your map. In AutoCAD Map 3D toolset, you can check out and edit any type of object using AutoCAD commands. For example, edit geometry in a drawing file, a schema in an ESRI SHP file, or geospatial data stored in an Oracle database. You can then save the changes back into their original format. You can also use the Data Table to change the properties of geospatial data.
- Publish the resulting map for display on a web site. In this tutorial, you publish to DWF format (for use with Autodesk Design Review). You can also publish or export to Autodesk Infrastructure Map Server, or save your map as a static web page.