After opening the file, you can also add more spatial data to your maps using the corresponding AIX-generated mapboard in Maps for Adobe Creative Cloud.
After the file opens and processing is complete, artwork appears from the exported map. The artwork is organized into an easy-to-understand layer structure that's ready to edit using Illustrator tools. If you plan to add more data using the extension, don't change the layer names that correspond to the map frames in your ArcGIS Pro project because they must match the names of the AIX-generated mapboards.
After opening an. This allows you to add more spatially aligned content to your map design in the new. A mapboard is created for each map frame in your file. For a mapboard to be generated correctly, the. Turn off Enable wrapping around the date line in the Map Properties window, on the Coordinate Systems tab. Confirm that the map frame fits entirely within the layout area. Mapboards are created using the properties of your. If the map or map frame in your. To preserve the file association and alignment with the map layers in the artboard, mapboards generated from.
There are a number of 'features' of the illustrator exporter that make this tricky:. The sign that you have violated any of these conditions will be that ArcMap will rasterize any of your layers that occurs underneath the first layer that violates any of the above rules.
Knowing this can be useful for troubleshooting the exchange. Setting up your ArcMap Document You may have designed a map in ArcMap with a nice graphical hierarchy that uses transparency and group layers. Don;t worry, whatever transparency effects you had applied to your ArcMap layers, van be re-applied in Illustrator.
Then we will alter our special map as follows:. It works both in Layout View and Map View. One advantage of doing this in Layout View is that you can set up a page size and add a scale bar in layout view, and this make it easier to predict things like how your line weights are going to look.
There are a few settings to look after when you are in the midst of this export process. After a few seconds, you should have an Illustrator Document that you can open in Illustrator. Here are some of the steps for checking out your new illustrator file and starting to use it.
If you want to use illustrator to select and edit geometry that has come from ArcMap, you will find that many of the individual layers that have come from ArcMap are actually group layers that employ Clipping Masks.
Furthermore, some of the geometry with a layer may be grouped. And of course, these can be ungrouped by right-clicking on the layer and choosing Ungroup. So you see that this workflow from ArcMap to Adobe Illustrator is not a simple easy-in, easy-out situation.
One of the messages from this, is that you want to plan carefully how much work in symbology and labeling that you want to do on the ArcMap side in order to avoid awkward situations in Illustrator. Another thing to look forward to is the likelihood that you will have to do more than one export to illustrator.
Once you have exported a bunch of stuff from ArcMap and begun to create new layers, etc in Illustrator, you will find some new GIS data that you want to incorporate.
For this is it very useful to have a fixed frame on your ArcMap side that you can include in each export to use as a guide for registering each new layer that you export.
A simple way to achieve this is to set up your map with a layout window, and create a Bookmark in ArcMap to save the extent and scale of the map data within your layout. All this clipping and grouping is fine, if we were ready to print…. In order to do any editing to the individual features we will need to first ungroup the layers. And in order to ungroup the layers we must first remove the Clipping Path layer.
You can also go back multiple steps. The Clipping Path layer has been both highlighted and selected. Next we want to Ungroup the layers so that we can edit individual features.
Grouping is a way to package similar types of artwork. However, like the Clipping Path, it is unnecessary at this point. Also, Arc has exported your. Having the features Grouped into a sub-layer is a redundant level of organization at this time. If you continue to work with Adobe Illustrator you will want to familiarize yourself with grouping, but at this point we want to simply ungroup each of the sub-layers so we can more easily work with them.
This will show up in your final printed product unless you remove or mask cover it. Rather than using a Clipping Layer which we could recreate later if we wanted to we will simply create a mask to hide the artwork that you do not want to show.
The newly created Mask layer with other layers locked. The Tools panel contains tools for selecting items, adding text, erasing features, changing colors, etc. Hover over the different tools to see the tool tips for an idea of what the different tools do.
Refer to the Help section if you want to try some of these out… The largest set of icons on the Tools panel is the Fill and Stroke tools. Note that clicking on either the Fill or Stroke icon will bring it to the foreground.
Double-clicking either the Fill or Stroke icon will open the Color Picker.
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