How To: Create a CSV, KML, ShapeFile, and FGDB from DeepWalk Data using ArcGIS Online

July 26, 2024

Learn how to generate various mapping files using DeepWalk's ArcGIS integration. This guide covers exporting maps in formats like GeoJSON, FileGeoDatabase, KML, and more.

Transcript

0:01 Hi everybody, I just want to walk through how to generate any mapping file using DeepWalk's ArcGIS integration. This includes CSV, FileGeo database, Shapefile, So if you like GeoJSON, like I do, you can go directly to the overview page and then download them from this button and they will download as

0:24 a GeoJSON file. If you prefer other file types, there's sort of two workflows. One, you can go through the ArcGIS integration and generate your ArcGIS maps and it will create a variety of deliverables here, directly from the ArcGIS integration.

0:46 And if you go to any of these the feature layers, including the hosted, or including the view feature layers, it doesn't matter, it'll work for either one, uh say we'll want to look at our scan files, click that one.

0:58 and then you can export the data from ArcGIS Online as a, you know, file geodatabase, KML, geopackage, whatever you like.

1:09 Uhm, so that's one way to do it using ArcGIS Online and then another way to do it is going back to that overview page.

1:20 Downloading, say, whatever, the scan file, which is like the, the line file. You can download that. And then, pop on over.

1:33 Over to ArcGIS Online. Go ahead and drag that in and that will create a hosted feature layer from the GeoJSON file that you downloaded.

1:54 Let's call it a, And now that you've created a hosted feature layer in ArcGIS. You can export that the same way Through File, GeoDebase, KML, CSV, whatever you'd like So uh In summary, the two ways you can do it is Use the ArcGIS integration to generate all the formatted ArcGIS deliverables Get ArcGIS

2:42 online And then Go to the feature layer And export data And the second way Is go over to the page Download the file, be able to Like, drag it to ArcGIS Online And then go to that feature service that made Feature layer And then export Alright, there we go.

3:14 I went through each process twice, but that should give you what you need. Have a good day