If you are making a simple figure that is ONLY a map, you can skip this step. However, if your figure includes things like:
you’ll want to get all these graphic pieces organized so you can assemble them in your figure. The key things are:
*.xml
or world file).A table, for example, is vectorized when it consists of actual lines and editable text; and is rasterized when it is just an image. Some programs (e.g. Excel) will allow you to copy a vectorized graphic into a vector drawing program where you make the figure (just using the clipboard). Others will let you export either a vector graphic or raster graphic to a file. In general, vectorized formats provide the most flexibility in that they can be edited and modified, but can also quickly lead to huge file sizes and become cumbersome to work with. The encapsulated post script format (*.eps
) is one of the most common vector file formats. Other common vector file formats include *.svg, *.ai, *.emf, *.dxf, *.vml
and even *.pdf
can act as a vector format (e.g. when exported from ArcGIS). Most of the programs (e.g. Excel, R, SAS, Matlab) where you might make tables, graphs, plots, or images (even ArcGIS) allow you to export those figures as raster images (e.g. *.png, *.gif, *.jpg, *.tiff
) , and some copy these images to a clipboard as rasters. Also, just to confuse you, some vector formats (e.g. *.ai
and *.pdf
) allow the inclusion of both raster and vector objects in the vector document.
← Back to 3. Use ArcGIS ONLY for Making Figure Building Block