arcgis.geometry module

The arcgis.geometry module defines useful geometry types for working with geographic information and GIS functionality. It provides functions which use geometric types as input and output as well as functions for easily converting geometries between different representations.

Several functions accept geometries represented as dictionaries and the geometry objects in this module behave like them as well as support the ‘.’ (dot) notation providing attribute access.

Example:

>>> pt = Point({"x" : -118.15, "y" : 33.80, "spatialReference" : {"wkid" : 4326}})
>>> print (pt.is_valid)
True
>>> print (pt.type) # POINT
'POINT'
>>> print (pt)
'{"x" : -118.15, "y" : 33.80, "spatialReference" : {"wkid" : 4326}}'
>>> print (pt.x, pt.y)
(-118.15,33.80)

Example Polyline:

>>> line = {
  "paths" : [[[-97.06138,32.837],[-97.06133,32.836],[-97.06124,32.834],[-97.06127,32.832]],
             [[-97.06326,32.759],[-97.06298,32.755]]],
  "spatialReference" : {"wkid" : 4326}
}
>>> polyline = Polyline(line)
>>> print(polyline)
'{"paths" : [[[-97.06138,32.837],[-97.06133,32.836],[-97.06124,32.834],[-97.06127,32.832]],[[-97.06326,32.759],[-97.06298,32.755]]],"spatialReference" : {"wkid" : 4326}}'
>>> print(polyline.is_valid)
True

Example of invalid geometry:

>>> line = {
  "paths" : [[[-97.06138],[-97.06133,32.836],[-97.06124,32.834],[-97.06127,32.832]],
             [[-97.06326,32.759],[-97.06298,32.755]]],
  "spatialReference" : {"wkid" : 4326}
}
>>> polyline = Polyline(line)
>>> print(polyline)
'''{"paths" : [[[-97.06138],[-97.06133,32.836],[-97.06124,32.834],[-97.06127,32.832]],
[[-97.06326,32.759],[-97.06298,32.755]]],"spatialReference" : {"wkid" : 4326}}'''
>>>print(polyline.is_valid)
False

The same pattern can be used repeated for Polygon, MultiPoint and SpatialReference.

You can create a Geometry even when you don’t know the exact type. The Geometry constructor is able to figure out the geometry type and returns the correct type as the example below demonstrates:

>>> geom = Geometry({
  "rings" : [[[-97.06138,32.837],[-97.06133,32.836],[-97.06124,32.834],[-97.06127,32.832],
              [-97.06138,32.837]],[[-97.06326,32.759],[-97.06298,32.755],[-97.06153,32.749],
              [-97.06326,32.759]]],
  "spatialReference" : {"wkid" : 4326}
})
>>> print (geom.type) # Polygon
'Polygon'
>>> print(isinstance(geom, Polygon)
True

Point

class arcgis.geometry.Point(iterable=None)

A point contains x and y fields along with a spatialReference field. A point can also contain m and z fields. A point is empty when its x field is present and has the value null or the string “NaN”. An empty point has no location in space.

coordinates()

returns the coordinates as a np.array

svg(scale_factor=1, fill_color=None)

Returns SVG circle element for the Point geometry.

scale_factorfloat

Multiplication factor for the SVG circle diameter. Default is 1.

fill_colorstr, optional

Hex string for fill color. Default is to use “#66cc99” if geometry is valid, and “#ff3333” if invalid.

property type

MultiPoint

class arcgis.geometry.MultiPoint(iterable=None, **kwargs)

A multipoint contains an array of points, along with a spatialReference field. A multipoint can also have boolean-valued hasZ and hasM fields. These fields control the interpretation of elements of the points array. Omitting an hasZ or hasM field is equivalent to setting it to false. Each element of the points array is itself an array of two, three, or four numbers. It will have two elements for 2D points, two or three elements for 2D points with Ms, three elements for 3D points, and three or four elements for 3D points with Ms. In all cases, the x coordinate is at index 0 of a point’s array, and the y coordinate is at index 1. For 2D points with Ms, the m coordinate, if present, is at index 2. For 3D points, the Z coordinate is required and is at index 2. For 3D points with Ms, the Z coordinate is at index 2, and the M coordinate, if present, is at index 3. An empty multipoint has a points field with no elements. Empty points are ignored.

coordinates()

returns the coordinates as a np.array

svg(scale_factor=1.0, fill_color=None)

Returns a group of SVG circle elements for the MultiPoint geometry.

scale_factorfloat

Multiplication factor for the SVG circle diameters. Default is 1.

fill_colorstr, optional

Hex string for fill color. Default is to use “#66cc99” if geometry is valid, and “#ff3333” if invalid.

property type

Polyline

class arcgis.geometry.Polyline(iterable=None, **kwargs)

A polyline contains an array of paths or curvePaths and a spatialReference. For polylines with curvePaths, see the sections on JSON curve object and Polyline with curve. Each path is represented as an array of points, and each point in the path is represented as an array of numbers. A polyline can also have boolean-valued hasM and hasZ fields. See the description of multipoints for details on how the point arrays are interpreted. An empty polyline is represented with an empty array for the paths field. Nulls and/or NaNs embedded in an otherwise defined coordinate stream for polylines/polygons is a syntax error.

coordinates()

returns the coordinates as a np.array

svg(scale_factor=1, stroke_color=None)

Returns SVG polyline element for the LineString geometry.

scale_factorfloat

Multiplication factor for the SVG stroke-width. Default is 1.

stroke_colorstr, optional

Hex string for stroke color. Default is to use “#66cc99” if geometry is valid, and “#ff3333” if invalid.

property type

Polygon

class arcgis.geometry.Polygon(iterable=None, **kwargs)

A polygon contains an array of rings or curveRings and a spatialReference. For polygons with curveRings, see the sections on JSON curve object and Polygon with curve. Each ring is represented as an array of points. The first point of each ring is always the same as the last point. Each point in the ring is represented as an array of numbers. A polygon can also have boolean-valued hasM and hasZ fields.

An empty polygon is represented with an empty array for the rings field. Nulls and/or NaNs embedded in an otherwise defined coordinate stream for polylines/polygons is a syntax error. Polygons should be topologically simple. Exterior rings are oriented clockwise, while holes are oriented counter-clockwise. Rings can touch at a vertex or self-touch at a vertex, but there should be no other intersections. Polygons returned by services are topologically simple. When drawing a polygon, use the even-odd fill rule. The even-odd fill rule will guarantee that the polygon will draw correctly even if the ring orientation is not as described above.

coordinates()

returns the coordinates as a np.array

svg(scale_factor=1, fill_color=None)
property type

Envelope

class arcgis.geometry.Envelope(iterable=None, **kwargs)

An envelope is a rectangle defined by a range of values for each coordinate and attribute. It also has a spatialReference field. The fields for the z and m ranges are optional. An empty envelope has no in space and is defined by the presence of an xmin field a null value or a “NaN” string.

coordinates()

returns the coordinates as a np.array

property geohash

A geohash string of the extent is returned.

property geohash_covers

Returns a list of up to the four longest geohash strings that fit within the extent.

property geohash_neighbors

A list of the geohash neighbor strings for the extent is returned.

property height

The extent height value.

property polygon

returns the envelope as a Polygon geometry

svg(scale_factor=1, fill_color=None)
property type
property width

The extent width value.

SpatialReference

class arcgis.geometry.SpatialReference(iterable=None, **kwargs)

A spatial reference can be defined using a well-known ID (wkid) or well-known text (wkt). The default tolerance and resolution values for the associated coordinate system are used. The xy and z tolerance values are 1 mm or the equivalent in the unit of the coordinate system. If the coordinate system uses feet, the tolerance is 0.00328083333 ft. The resolution values are 10x smaller or 1/10 the tolerance values. Thus, 0.0001 m or 0.0003280833333 ft. For geographic coordinate systems using degrees, the equivalent of a mm at the equator is used. The well-known ID (WKID) for a given spatial reference can occasionally change. For example, the WGS 1984 Web Mercator (Auxiliary Sphere) projection was originally assigned WKID 102100, but was later changed to 3857. To ensure backward compatibility with older spatial data servers, the JSON wkid property will always be the value that was originally assigned to an SR when it was created. An additional property, latestWkid, identifies the current WKID value (as of a given software release) associated with the same spatial reference. A spatial reference can optionally include a definition for a vertical coordinate system (VCS), which is used to interpret the z-values of a geometry. A VCS defines units of measure, the location of z = 0, and whether the positive vertical direction is up or down. When a vertical coordinate system is specified with a WKID, the same caveat as mentioned above applies. There are two VCS WKID properties: vcsWkid and latestVcsWkid. A VCS WKT can also be embedded in the string value of the wkt property. In other words, the WKT syntax can be used to define an SR with both horizontal and vertical components in one string. If either part of an SR is custom, the entire SR will be serialized with only the wkt property. Starting at 10.3, Image Service supports image coordinate systems.

property as_arcpy

returns the class as an arcpy SpatialReference object

svg(scale_factor=1, fill_color=None)

represents the SVG of the object

property type

Geometry

class arcgis.geometry.Geometry(iterable=None, **kwargs)

The base class for all geometries.

You can create a Geometry even when you don’t know the exact type. The Geometry constructor is able to figure out the geometry type and returns the correct type as the example below demonstrates:

geom = Geometry({
  "rings" : [[[-97.06138,32.837],[-97.06133,32.836],[-97.06124,32.834],[-97.06127,32.832],
              [-97.06138,32.837]],[[-97.06326,32.759],[-97.06298,32.755],[-97.06153,32.749],
              [-97.06326,32.759]]],
  "spatialReference" : {"wkid" : 4326}
})
print (geom.type) # POLYGON
print (isinstance(geom, Polygon) # True
property JSON

Returns an Esri JSON representation of the geometry as a string.

Returns

string

property WKB

Returns the well-known binary (WKB) representation for OGC geometry. It provides a portable representation of a geometry value as a contiguous stream of bytes.

Returns

bytes

property WKT

Returns the well-known text (WKT) representation for OGC geometry. It provides a portable representation of a geometry value as a text string. Any true curves in the geometry will be densified into approximate curves in the WKT string.

Returns

string

angle_distance_to(second_geometry, method='GEODESIC')

Returns a tuple of angle and distance to another point using a measurement type. If ArcPy is not installed, none is returned.

Requires ArcPy

Argument

Description

second_geometry

Required Geometry. A arcgis.Geometry object.

method

Optional String. PLANAR measurements reflect the projection of geographic data onto the 2D surface (in other words, they will not take into account the curvature of the earth). GEODESIC, GREAT_ELLIPTIC, LOXODROME, and PRESERVE_SHAPE measurement types may be chosen as an alternative, if desired.

Returns

a tuple of angle and distance to another point using a measurement type.

property area

The area of a polygon feature. None for all other feature types. The area is in the units of the spatial reference.

>>> geom = Geometry({
  "rings" : [[[-97.06138,32.837],[-97.06133,32.836],[-97.06124,32.834],[-97.06127,32.832],
              [-97.06138,32.837]],[[-97.06326,32.759],[-97.06298,32.755],[-97.06153,32.749],
              [-97.06326,32.759]]],
  "spatialReference" : {"wkid" : 4326}
})
>>> geom.area
-1.869999999973911e-06
Returns

float

property as_arcpy

Returns the Geometry as an ArcPy Geometry.

If ArcPy is not installed, none is returned.

Requires ArcPy

Returns

arcpy.Geometry

property as_shapely

returns a shapely geometry object

boundary()

Constructs the boundary of the geometry.

Returns

arcgis.geometry.Polyline

buffer(distance)

Constructs a polygon at a specified distance from the geometry.

Requires ArcPy

Argument

Description

distance

Required float. The buffer distance. The buffer distance is in the same units as the geometry that is being buffered. A negative distance can only be specified against a polygon geometry.

Returns

arcgis.geometry.Polygon

property centroid

Returns the center of the geometry

Requires ArcPy or Shapely

>>> geom = Geometry({
  "rings" : [[[-97.06138,32.837],[-97.06133,32.836],[-97.06124,32.834],[-97.06127,32.832],
              [-97.06138,32.837]],[[-97.06326,32.759],[-97.06298,32.755],[-97.06153,32.749],
              [-97.06326,32.759]]],
  "spatialReference" : {"wkid" : 4326}
})
>>> geom.centroid
(-97.06258999999994, 32.754333333000034)
Returns

tuple(x,y)

clip(envelope)

Constructs the intersection of the geometry and the specified extent. If ArcPy is not installed, none is returned.

Requires ArcPy

Argument

Description

envelope

required tuple. The tuple must have (XMin, YMin, XMax, YMax) each value represents the lower left bound and upper right bound of the extent.

Returns

output geometry clipped to extent

contains(second_geometry, relation=None)

Indicates if the base geometry contains the comparison geometry.

Requires ArcPy/Shapely

Argument

Description

second_geometry

Required arcgis.geometry.Geometry. A second geometry

relation

Optional string. The spatial relationship type.

  • BOUNDARY - Relationship has no restrictions for interiors or boundaries.

  • CLEMENTINI - Interiors of geometries must intersect. Specifying CLEMENTINI is equivalent to specifying None. This is the default.

  • PROPER - Boundaries of geometries must not intersect.

Returns

boolean

convex_hull()

Constructs the geometry that is the minimal bounding polygon such that all outer angles are convex.

crosses(second_geometry)

Indicates if the two geometries intersect in a geometry of a lesser shape type.

Requires ArcPy/Shapely

Argument

Description

second_geometry

Required arcgis.geometry.Geometry. A second geometry

Returns

boolean

cut(cutter)

Splits this geometry into a part left of the cutting polyline, and a part right of it.

Requires ArcPy

Argument

Description

cutter

Required Polyline. The cuttin polyline geometry

Returns

a list of two geometries

densify(method, distance, deviation)

Creates a new geometry with added vertices

Requires ArcPy

Argument

Description

method

Required String. The type of densification, DISTANCE, ANGLE, or GEODESIC

distance

Required float. The maximum distance between vertices. The actual distance between vertices will usually be less than the maximum distance as new vertices will be evenly distributed along the original segment. If using a type of DISTANCE or ANGLE, the distance is measured in the units of the geometry’s spatial reference. If using a type of GEODESIC, the distance is measured in meters.

deviation

Required float. Densify uses straight lines to approximate curves. You use deviation to control the accuracy of this approximation. The deviation is the maximum distance between the new segment and the original curve. The smaller its value, the more segments will be required to approximate the curve.

Returns

arcgis.geometry.Geometry

difference(second_geometry)

Constructs the geometry that is composed only of the region unique to the base geometry but not part of the other geometry. The following illustration shows the results when the red polygon is the source geometry.

Requires ArcPy/Shapely

Argument

Description

second_geometry

Required arcgis.geometry.Geometry. A second geometry

Returns

arcgis.geometry.Geometry

disjoint(second_geometry)

Indicates if the base and comparison geometries share no points in common.

Requires ArcPy/Shapely

Argument

Description

second_geometry

Required arcgis.geometry.Geometry. A second geometry

Returns

boolean

distance_to(second_geometry)

Returns the minimum distance between two geometries. If the geometries intersect, the minimum distance is 0. Both geometries must have the same projection.

Requires ArcPy/Shapely

Argument

Description

second_geometry

Required arcgis.geometry.Geometry. A second geometry

Returns

float

property envelope

Returns the geoextent as an Envelope object

equals(second_geometry)

Indicates if the base and comparison geometries are of the same shape type and define the same set of points in the plane. This is a 2D comparison only; M and Z values are ignored.

Requires ArcPy or Shapely

Argument

Description

second_geometry

Required arcgis.geometry.Geometry. A second geometry

Returns

boolean

property extent

The extent of the geometry as a tuple containing xmin, ymin, xmax, ymax

Requires ArcPy or Shapely

>>> geom = Geometry({
  "rings" : [[[-97.06138,32.837],[-97.06133,32.836],[-97.06124,32.834],[-97.06127,32.832],
              [-97.06138,32.837]],[[-97.06326,32.759],[-97.06298,32.755],[-97.06153,32.749],
              [-97.06326,32.759]]],
  "spatialReference" : {"wkid" : 4326}
})
>>> geom.extent
(-97.06326, 32.749, -97.06124, 32.837)
Returns

tuple

property first_point

The first coordinate point of the geometry.

>>> geom = Geometry({
  "rings" : [[[-97.06138,32.837],[-97.06133,32.836],[-97.06124,32.834],[-97.06127,32.832],
              [-97.06138,32.837]],[[-97.06326,32.759],[-97.06298,32.755],[-97.06153,32.749],
              [-97.06326,32.759]]],
  "spatialReference" : {"wkid" : 4326}
})
>>> geom.first_point
{'x': -97.06138, 'y': 32.837, 'spatialReference': {'wkid': 4326, 'latestWkid': 4326}}
Returns

arcgis.gis.Geometry

classmethod from_shapely(shapely_geometry, spatial_reference=None)

Creates a Python API Geometry object from a Shapely geometry object.

Returns

arcgis.geometry.Geometry

# Usage Example: importing shapely geometry object and setting spatial reference to WGS84

Geometry.from_shapely(
    shapely_geometry=shapely_geometry_object,
    spatial_reference={'wkid': 4326}
)
generalize(max_offset)

Creates a new simplified geometry using a specified maximum offset tolerance.

Requires ArcPy or Shapely

Argument

Description

max_offset

Required float. The maximum offset tolerance.

Returns

arcgis.geometry.Geometry

property geoextent

Returns the current feature’s extent

>>> g = Geometry({...})
>>> g.geoextent
(1,2,3,4)
Returns

tuple

property geometry_type

The geometry type: polygon, polyline, point, multipoint

>>> geom = Geometry({
  "rings" : [[[-97.06138,32.837],[-97.06133,32.836],[-97.06124,32.834],[-97.06127,32.832],
              [-97.06138,32.837]],[[-97.06326,32.759],[-97.06298,32.755],[-97.06153,32.749],
              [-97.06326,32.759]]],
  "spatialReference" : {"wkid" : 4326}
})
>>> geom.geometry_type
'polygon'
Returns

string

get_area(method, units=None)

Returns the area of the feature using a measurement type.

Requires ArcPy or Shapely

Argument

Description

method

Required String. LANAR measurements reflect the projection of geographic data onto the 2D surface (in other words, they will not take into account the curvature of the earth). GEODESIC, GREAT_ELLIPTIC, LOXODROME, and PRESERVE_SHAPE measurement types may be chosen as an alternative, if desired.

units

Optional String. Areal unit of measure keywords: ACRES | ARES | HECTARES | SQUARECENTIMETERS | SQUAREDECIMETERS | SQUAREINCHES | SQUAREFEET | SQUAREKILOMETERS | SQUAREMETERS | SQUAREMILES | SQUAREMILLIMETERS | SQUAREYARDS

Returns

float

get_length(method, units)

Returns the length of the feature using a measurement type.

Requires ArcPy or Shapely

Argument

Description

method

Required String. PLANAR measurements reflect the projection of geographic data onto the 2D surface (in other words, they will not take into account the curvature of the earth). GEODESIC, GREAT_ELLIPTIC, LOXODROME, and PRESERVE_SHAPE measurement types may be chosen as an alternative, if desired.

units

Required String. Linear unit of measure keywords: CENTIMETERS | DECIMETERS | FEET | INCHES | KILOMETERS | METERS | MILES | MILLIMETERS | NAUTICALMILES | YARDS

Returns

float

get_part(index=None)

Returns an array of point objects for a particular part of geometry or an array containing a number of arrays, one for each part.

Requires ArcPy

Argument

Description

index

Required Integer. The index position of the geometry.

Returns

arcgis.geometry.Geometry

property has_m

Determines if the geometry has a M value.

Returns

Boolean

property has_z

Determines if the geometry has a Z value.

Returns

Boolean

property hull_rectangle

A space-delimited string of the coordinate pairs of the convex hull rectangle.

Requires ArcPy or Shapely

>>> geom = Geometry({
  "rings" : [[[-97.06138,32.837],[-97.06133,32.836],[-97.06124,32.834],[-97.06127,32.832],
              [-97.06138,32.837]],[[-97.06326,32.759],[-97.06298,32.755],[-97.06153,32.749],
              [-97.06326,32.759]]],
  "spatialReference" : {"wkid" : 4326}
})
>>> geom.hull_rectangle
'-97.06153 32.749 -97.0632940971127 32.7490060186843 -97.0629938635673 32.8370055061228 -97.0612297664546 32.8369994874385'
Returns

string

intersect(second_geometry, dimension=1)

Constructs a geometry that is the geometric intersection of the two input geometries. Different dimension values can be used to create different shape types. The intersection of two geometries of the same shape type is a geometry containing only the regions of overlap between the original geometries.

Requires ArcPy or Shapely

Argument

Description

second_geometry

Required arcgis.geometry.Geometry. A second geometry

dimension

Required Integer. The topological dimension (shape type) of the resulting geometry.

  • 1 -A zero-dimensional geometry (point or multipoint).

  • 2 -A one-dimensional geometry (polyline).

  • 4 -A two-dimensional geometry (polygon).

Returns

boolean

property is_empty

boolean value that determines if the geometry is empty or not

property is_multipart

True, if the number of parts for this geometry is more than one.

Requires ArcPy or Shapely

>>> geom = Geometry({
  "rings" : [[[-97.06138,32.837],[-97.06133,32.836],[-97.06124,32.834],[-97.06127,32.832],
              [-97.06138,32.837]],[[-97.06326,32.759],[-97.06298,32.755],[-97.06153,32.749],
              [-97.06326,32.759]]],
  "spatialReference" : {"wkid" : 4326}
})
>>> geom.is_multipart
True
Returns

boolean

property label_point

The point at which the label is located. The label_point is always located within or on a feature.

Requires ArcPy or Shapely

>>> geom = Geometry({
  "rings" : [[[-97.06138,32.837],[-97.06133,32.836],[-97.06124,32.834],[-97.06127,32.832],
              [-97.06138,32.837]],[[-97.06326,32.759],[-97.06298,32.755],[-97.06153,32.749],
              [-97.06326,32.759]]],
  "spatialReference" : {"wkid" : 4326}
})
>>> geom.label_point
{'x': -97.06258999999994, 'y': 32.754333333000034, 'spatialReference': {'wkid': 4326, 'latestWkid': 4326}}
Returns

arcgis.geometry.Point

property last_point

The last coordinate of the feature.

>>> geom = Geometry({
  "rings" : [[[-97.06138,32.837],[-97.06133,32.836],[-97.06124,32.834],[-97.06127,32.832],
              [-97.06138,32.837]],[[-97.06326,32.759],[-97.06298,32.755],[-97.06153,32.749],
              [-97.06326,32.759]]],
  "spatialReference" : {"wkid" : 4326}
})
>>> geom.last_point
{'x': -97.06326, 'y': 32.759, 'spatialReference': {'wkid': 4326, 'latestWkid': 4326}}
Returns

arcgis.geometry.Point

property length

The length of the linear feature. Zero for point and multipoint feature types. The length units is the same as the spatial reference.

Requires ArcPy or Shapely

>>> geom = Geometry({
  "rings" : [[[-97.06138,32.837],[-97.06133,32.836],[-97.06124,32.834],[-97.06127,32.832],
              [-97.06138,32.837]],[[-97.06326,32.759],[-97.06298,32.755],[-97.06153,32.749],
              [-97.06326,32.759]]],
  "spatialReference" : {"wkid" : 4326}
})
>>> geom.length
0.03033576008004027
Returns

float

property length3D

The 3D length of the linear feature. Zero for point and multipoint feature types. The length units is the same as the spatial reference.

Requires ArcPy or Shapely

>>> geom = Geometry({
  "rings" : [[[-97.06138,32.837],[-97.06133,32.836],[-97.06124,32.834],[-97.06127,32.832],
              [-97.06138,32.837]],[[-97.06326,32.759],[-97.06298,32.755],[-97.06153,32.749],
              [-97.06326,32.759]]],
  "spatialReference" : {"wkid" : 4326}
})
>>> geom.length3D
0.03033576008004027
Returns

float

measure_on_line(second_geometry, as_percentage=False)

Returns a measure from the start point of this line to the in_point.

Requires ArcPy

Argument

Description

second_geometry

Required arcgis.geometry.Geometry. A second geometry

as_percentage

Optional Boolean. If False, the measure will be returned as a distance; if True, the measure will be returned as a percentage.

Returns

float

overlaps(second_geometry)

Indicates if the intersection of the two geometries has the same shape type as one of the input geometries and is not equivalent to either of the input geometries.

Requires ArcPy or Shapely

Argument

Description

second_geometry

Required arcgis.geometry.Geometry. A second geometry

Returns

boolean

property part_count

The number of geometry parts for the feature.

>>> geom = Geometry({
  "rings" : [[[-97.06138,32.837],[-97.06133,32.836],[-97.06124,32.834],[-97.06127,32.832],
              [-97.06138,32.837]],[[-97.06326,32.759],[-97.06298,32.755],[-97.06153,32.749],
              [-97.06326,32.759]]],
  "spatialReference" : {"wkid" : 4326}
})
>>> geom.part_count
1
Returns

integer

property point_count

The total number of points for the feature.

>>> geom = Geometry({
  "rings" : [[[-97.06138,32.837],[-97.06133,32.836],[-97.06124,32.834],[-97.06127,32.832],
              [-97.06138,32.837]],[[-97.06326,32.759],[-97.06298,32.755],[-97.06153,32.749],
              [-97.06326,32.759]]],
  "spatialReference" : {"wkid" : 4326}
})
>>> geom.point_count
9
Returns

Integer

point_from_angle_and_distance(angle, distance, method='GEODESCIC')

Returns a point at a given angle and distance in degrees and meters using the specified measurement type.

Requires ArcPy

Argument

Description

angle

Required Float. The angle in degrees to the returned point.

distance

Required Float. The distance in meters to the returned point.

method

Optional String. PLANAR measurements reflect the projection of geographic data onto the 2D surface (in other words, they will not take into account the curvature of the earth). GEODESIC, GREAT_ELLIPTIC, LOXODROME, and PRESERVE_SHAPE measurement types may be chosen as an alternative, if desired.

Returns

arcgis.geometry.Geometry

position_along_line(value, use_percentage=False)

Returns a point on a line at a specified distance from the beginning of the line.

Requires ArcPy or Shapely

Argument

Description

value

Required Float. The distance along the line.

use_percentage

Optional Boolean. The distance may be specified as a fixed unit of measure or a ratio of the length of the line. If True, value is used as a percentage; if False, value is used as a distance. For percentages, the value should be expressed as a double from 0.0 (0%) to 1.0 (100%).

Returns

arcgis.gis.Geometry

project_as(spatial_reference, transformation_name=None)

Projects a geometry and optionally applies a geotransformation.

Requires ArcPy or pyproj>=1.9 and PROJ.4

Argument

Description

spatial_reference

Required SpatialReference. The new spatial reference. This can be a SpatialReference object or the coordinate system name.

transformation_name

Required String. The geotransformation name.

Parameter:
spatial_reference
  • The new spatial reference. This can be a

SpatialReference object or the coordinate system name.

transformation_name
  • The geotransformation name.

query_point_and_distance(second_geometry, use_percentage=False)

Finds the point on the polyline nearest to the in_point and the distance between those points. Also returns information about the side of the line the in_point is on as well as the distance along the line where the nearest point occurs.

Requires ArcPy

Argument

Description

second_geometry

Required arcgis.geometry.Geometry. A second geometry

as_percentage

Optional boolean - if False, the measure will be returned as distance, True, measure will be a percentage

Returns

tuple

rotate(theta, inplace=False)

Rotates a geometry counter-clockwise by a given angle.

Argument

Description

theta

Required Float. The rotation angle.

inplace

Optional Boolean. If True, the value is updated in the object, False creates a new object

Returns

Geometry

scale(x_scale=1, y_scale=1, inplace=False)

Scales in either the x,y or both directions

Argument

Description

x_scale

Optional Float. The x-scale factor.

y_scale

Optional Float. The y-scale factor.

inplace

Optional Boolean. If True, the value is updated in the object, False creates a new object

Returns

Geometry

segment_along_line(start_measure, end_measure, use_percentage=False)

Returns a Polyline between start and end measures. Similar to Polyline.positionAlongLine but will return a polyline segment between two points on the polyline instead of a single point.

Requires ArcPy

Argument

Description

start_measure

Required Float. The starting distance from the beginning of the line.

end_measure

Required Float. The ending distance from the beginning of the line.

use_percentage

Optional Boolean. The start and end measures may be specified as fixed units or as a ratio. If True, start_measure and end_measure are used as a percentage; if False, start_measure and end_measure are used as a distance. For percentages, the measures should be expressed as a double from 0.0 (0 percent) to 1.0 (100 percent).

skew(x_angle=0, y_angle=0, inplace=False)

Create a skew transform along one or both axes.

Argument

Description

x_angle

optional Float. Angle to skew in the x coordinate

y_angle

Optional Float. Angle to skew in the y coordinate

inplace

Optional Boolean. If True, the value is updated in the object, False creates a new object

Returns

Geometry

snap_to_line(second_geometry)

Returns a new point based on in_point snapped to this geometry.

Requires ArcPy

Argument

Description

second_geometry

Required arcgis.geometry.Geometry. A second geometry

Returns

arcgis.gis.Geometry

property spatial_reference

The spatial reference of the geometry.

>>> geom = Geometry({
  "rings" : [[[-97.06138,32.837],[-97.06133,32.836],[-97.06124,32.834],[-97.06127,32.832],
              [-97.06138,32.837]],[[-97.06326,32.759],[-97.06298,32.755],[-97.06153,32.749],
              [-97.06326,32.759]]],
  "spatialReference" : {"wkid" : 4326}
})
>>> geom.spatial_reference
<SpatialReference Class>
Returns

arcgis.geometery.SpatialReference

symmetric_difference(second_geometry)

Constructs the geometry that is the union of two geometries minus the instersection of those geometries.

The two input geometries must be the same shape type.

Requires ArcPy or Shapely

Argument

Description

second_geometry

Required arcgis.geometry.Geometry. A second geometry

Returns

arcgis.gis.Geometry

touches(second_geometry)

Indicates if the boundaries of the geometries intersect.

Requires ArcPy or Shapely

Argument

Description

second_geometry

Required arcgis.geometry.Geometry. A second geometry

Returns

boolean

translate(x_offset=0, y_offset=0, inplace=False)

moves a geometry in a given x and y distance

Argument

Description

x_offset

Optional Float. Translation x offset

y_offset

Optional Float. Translation y offset

inplace

Optional Boolean. If False, updates the existing Geometry,else it creates a new Geometry object

Returns

Geometry

property true_centroid

The center of gravity for a feature.

Requires ArcPy or Shapely

>>> geom = Geometry({
  "rings" : [[[-97.06138,32.837],[-97.06133,32.836],[-97.06124,32.834],[-97.06127,32.832],
              [-97.06138,32.837]],[[-97.06326,32.759],[-97.06298,32.755],[-97.06153,32.749],
              [-97.06326,32.759]]],
  "spatialReference" : {"wkid" : 4326}
})
>>> geom.true_centroid
{'x': -97.06272135472369, 'y': 32.746201426025, 'spatialReference': {'wkid': 4326, 'latestWkid': 4326}}
Returns

arcgis.geometry.Point

union(second_geometry)

Constructs the geometry that is the set-theoretic union of the input geometries.

Requires ArcPy or Shapely

Argument

Description

second_geometry

Required arcgis.geometry.Geometry. A second geometry

Returns

arcgis.gis.Geometry

within(second_geometry, relation=None)

Indicates if the base geometry is within the comparison geometry.

Requires ArcPy or Shapely

Argument

Description

second_geometry

Required arcgis.geometry.Geometry. A second geometry

relation

Optional String. The spatial relationship type.

  • BOUNDARY - Relationship has no restrictions for interiors or boundaries.

  • CLEMENTINI - Interiors of geometries must intersect. Specifying CLEMENTINI is equivalent to specifying None. This is the default.

  • PROPER - Boundaries of geometries must not intersect.

Returns

boolean

areas_and_lengths

arcgis.geometry.areas_and_lengths(polygons, length_unit, area_unit, calculation_type, spatial_ref=4326, gis=None)

The areas_and_lengths function calculates areas and perimeter lengths for each polygon specified in the input array.

Inputs:
polygons - The array of polygons whose areas and lengths are

to be computed.

length_unit - The length unit in which the perimeters of

polygons will be calculated. If calculation_type is planar, then length_unit can be any esriUnits constant. If lengthUnit is not specified, the units are derived from spatial_ref. If calculationType is not planar, then lengthUnit must be a linear esriUnits constant, such as esriSRUnit_Meter or esriSRUnit_SurveyMile. If length_unit is not specified, the units are meters. For a list of valid units, see esriSRUnitType Constants and esriSRUnit2Type Constant.

area_unit - The area unit in which areas of polygons will be

calculated. If calculation_type is planar, then area_unit can be any esriUnits constant. If area_unit is not specified, the units are derived from spatial_ref. If calculation_type is not planar, then area_unit must be a linear esriUnits constant such as esriSRUnit_Meter or esriSRUnit_SurveyMile. If area_unit is not specified, then the units are meters. For a list of valid units, see esriSRUnitType Constants and esriSRUnit2Type constant. The list of valid esriAreaUnits constants include, esriSquareInches | esriSquareFeet | esriSquareYards | esriAcres | esriSquareMiles | esriSquareMillimeters | esriSquareCentimeters | esriSquareDecimeters | esriSquareMeters | esriAres | esriHectares | esriSquareKilometers.

calculation_type - The type defined for the area and length

calculation of the input geometries. The type can be one of the following values: planar - Planar measurements use 2D

Euclidean distance to calculate area and length. Th- should only be used if the area or length needs to be calculated in the given spatial reference. Otherwise, use preserveShape.

geodesic - Use this type if you want to

calculate an area or length using only the vertices of the polygon and define the lines between the points as geodesic segments independent of the actual shape of the polygon. A geodesic segment is the shortest path between two points on an ellipsoid.

preserveShape - This type calculates the

area or length of the geometry on the surface of the Earth ellipsoid. The shape of the geometry in its coordinate system is preserved.

Output:

JSON as dictionary

auto_complete

arcgis.geometry.auto_complete(polygons=None, polylines=None, spatial_ref=None, gis=None)

The auto_complete function simplifies the process of constructing new polygons that are adjacent to other polygons. It constructs polygons that fill in the gaps between existing polygons and a set of polylines.

Inputs:
polygons -

array of Polygon objects

polylines -

list of Polyline objects

spatial_ref -

spatial reference of the input geometries WKID

buffer

arcgis.geometry.buffer(geometries, in_sr, distances, unit, out_sr=None, buffer_sr=None, union_results=None, geodesic=None, gis=None)

The buffer function is performed on a geometry service resource The result of this function is buffered polygons at the specified distances for the input geometry array. Options are available to union buffers and to use geodesic distance.

Inputs:

geometries -

The array of geometries to be buffered.

in_sr -

The well-known ID of the spatial reference or a spatial reference JSON object for the input geometries.

distances -

The distances that each of the input geometries is buffered.

unit - The units for calculating each buffer distance. If unit

is not specified, the units are derived from bufferSR. If bufferSR is not specified, the units are derived from in_sr.

out_sr - The well-known ID of the spatial reference or a

spatial reference JSON object for the input geometries.

buffer_sr - The well-known ID of the spatial reference or a

spatial reference JSON object for the input geometries.

union_results - If true, all geometries buffered at a given

distance are unioned into a single (gis,possibly multipart) polygon, and the unioned geometry is placed in the output array. The default is false

geodesic - Set geodesic to true to buffer the input geometries

using geodesic distance. Geodesic distance is the shortest path between two points along the ellipsoid of the earth. If geodesic is set to false, the 2D Euclidean distance is used to buffer the input geometries. The default value depends on the geometry type, unit and bufferSR.

convex_hull

arcgis.geometry.convex_hull(geometries, spatial_ref=None, gis=None)

The convex_hull function is performed on a geometry service resource. It returns the convex hull of the input geometry. The input geometry can be a point, multipoint, polyline, or polygon. The convex hull is typically a polygon but can also be a polyline or point in degenerate cases.

Inputs:

geometries - The geometries whose convex hull is to be created. spatial_ref - The well-known ID or a spatial reference JSON object for

the output geometry.

cut

arcgis.geometry.cut(cutter, target, spatial_ref=None, gis=None)

The cut function is performed on a geometry service resource. This function splits the target polyline or polygon where it’s crossed by the cutter polyline. At 10.1 and later, this function calls simplify on the input cutter and target geometries.

Inputs:
cutter - The polyline that will be used to divide the target

into pieces where it crosses the target.The spatial reference of the polylines is specified by spatial_ref. The structure of the polyline is the same as the structure of the JSON polyline objects returned by the ArcGIS REST API.

target - The array of polylines/polygons to be cut. The

structure of the geometry is the same as the structure of the JSON geometry objects returned by the ArcGIS REST API. The spatial reference of the target geometry array is specified by spatial_ref.

spatial_ref - The well-known ID or a spatial reference JSON object for

the output geometry.

densify

arcgis.geometry.densify(geometries, spatial_ref, max_segment_length, length_unit, geodesic=False, gis=None)

The densify function is performed using the GIS’s geometry engine. This function densifies geometries by plotting points between existing vertices.

Inputs:
geometries - The array of geometries to be densified. The

structure of each geometry in the array is the same as the structure of the JSON geometry objects returned by the ArcGIS REST API.

spatial_ref - The well-known ID or a spatial reference JSON object for

the input polylines. For a list of valid WKID values, see Projected coordinate systems and Geographic coordinate systems.

max_segment_length - All segments longer than maxSegmentLength are

replaced with sequences of lines no longer than max_segment_length.

length_unit - The length unit of max_segment_length. If geodesic is

set to false, then the units are derived from spatial_ref, and length_unit is ignored. If geodesic is set to true, then length_unit must be a linear unit. In a case where length_unit is not specified and spatial_ref is a PCS, the units are derived from spatial_ref. In a case where length_unit is not specified and spatial_ref is a GCS, then the units are meters.

geodesic - If geodesic is set to true, then geodesic distance is

used to calculate max_segment_length. Geodesic distance is the shortest path between two points along the ellipsoid of the earth. If geodesic is set to false, then 2D Euclidean distance is used to calculate max_segment_length. The default is false.

difference

arcgis.geometry.difference(geometries, spatial_ref, geometry, gis=None)

The difference function is performed on a geometry service resource. This function constructs the set-theoretic difference between each element of an array of geometries and another geometry the so-called difference geometry. In other words, let B be the difference geometry. For each geometry, A, in the input geometry array, it constructs A-B.

Inputs:
geometries - An array of points, multipoints, polylines or

polygons. The structure of each geometry in the array is the same as the structure of the JSON geometry objects returned by the ArcGIS REST API.

geometry - A single geometry of any type and of a dimension equal

to or greater than the elements of geometries. The structure of geometry is the same as the structure of the JSON geometry objects returned by the ArcGIS REST API. The use of simple syntax is not supported.

spatial_ref - The well-known ID of the spatial reference or a spatial

reference JSON object for the input geometries.

distance

arcgis.geometry.distance(spatial_ref, geometry1, geometry2, distance_unit='', geodesic=False, gis=None)

The distance function is performed on a geometry service resource. It reports the 2D Euclidean or geodesic distance between the two geometries.

Inputs:
spatial_ref - The well-known ID or a spatial reference JSON object for

input geometries.

geometry1 - The geometry from which the distance is to be

measured. The structure of the geometry is same as the structure of the JSON geometry objects returned by the ArcGIS REST API.

geometry2 - The geometry from which the distance is to be

measured. The structure of the geometry is same as the structure of the JSON geometry objects returned by the ArcGIS REST API.

distanceUnit - specifies the units for measuring distance between

the geometry1 and geometry2 geometries.

geodesic - If geodesic is set to true, then the geodesic distance

between the geometry1 and geometry2 geometries is returned. Geodesic distance is the shortest path between two points along the ellipsoid of the earth. If geodesic is set to false or not specified, the planar distance is returned. The default value is false.

find_transformation

arcgis.geometry.find_transformation(in_sr, out_sr, extent_of_interest=None, num_of_results=1, gis=None)

The find_transformations function is performed on a geometry service resource. This function returns a list of applicable geographic transformations you should use when projecting geometries from the input spatial reference to the output spatial reference. The transformations are in JSON format and are returned in order of most applicable to least applicable. Recall that a geographic transformation is not needed when the input and output spatial references have the same underlying geographic coordinate systems. In this case, findTransformations returns an empty list. Every returned geographic transformation is a forward transformation meaning that it can be used as-is to project from the input spatial reference to the output spatial reference. In the case where a predefined transformation needs to be applied in the reverse direction, it is returned as a forward composite transformation containing one transformation and a transformForward element with a value of false.

Inputs:
in_sr - The well-known ID (gis,WKID) of the spatial reference or a

spatial reference JSON object for the input geometries

out_sr - The well-known ID (gis,WKID) of the spatial reference or a

spatial reference JSON object for the input geometries

extent_of_interest - The bounding box of the area of interest

specified as a JSON envelope. If provided, the extent of interest is used to return the most applicable geographic transformations for the area. If a spatial reference is not included in the JSON envelope, the in_sr is used for the envelope.

num_of_results - The number of geographic transformations to

return. The default value is 1. If num_of_results has a value of -1, all applicable transformations are returned.

from_geo_coordinate_string

arcgis.geometry.from_geo_coordinate_string(spatial_ref, strings, conversion_type, conversion_mode=None, gis=None)

The from_geo_coordinate_string function is performed on a geometry service resource. The function converts an array of well-known strings into xy-coordinates based on the conversion type and spatial reference supplied by the user. An optional conversion mode parameter is available for some conversion types.

Inputs:
spatial_ref - The well-known ID of the spatial reference or a spatial

reference json object.

strings - An array of strings formatted as specified by

conversion_type. Syntax: [<string1>,…,<stringN>] Example: [“01N AA 66021 00000”,”11S NT 00000 62155”,

“31U BT 94071 65288”]

conversion_type - The conversion type of the input strings.
Valid conversion types are:

MGRS - Military Grid Reference System USNG - United States National Grid UTM - Universal Transverse Mercator GeoRef - World Geographic Reference System GARS - Global Area Reference System DMS - Degree Minute Second DDM - Degree Decimal Minute DD - Decimal Degree

conversion_mode - Conversion options for MGRS, UTM and GARS

conversion types. Conversion options for MGRS and UTM conversion types. Valid conversion modes for MGRS are:

mgrsDefault - Default. Uses the spheroid from the given spatial

reference.

mgrsNewStyle - Treats all spheroids as new, like WGS 1984. The

180 degree longitude falls into Zone 60.

mgrsOldStyle - Treats all spheroids as old, like Bessel 1841.

The 180 degree longitude falls into Zone 60.

mgrsNewWith180InZone01 - Same as mgrsNewStyle except the 180

degree longitude falls into Zone 01.

mgrsOldWith180InZone01 - Same as mgrsOldStyle except the 180

degree longitude falls into Zone 01.

Valid conversion modes for UTM are:

utmDefault - Default. No options. utmNorthSouth - Uses north/south latitude indicators instead of

zone numbers. Non-standard. Default is recommended

generalize

arcgis.geometry.generalize(spatial_ref, geometries, max_deviation, deviation_unit, gis=None)

The generalize function is performed on a geometry service resource. The generalize function simplifies the input geometries using the Douglas-Peucker algorithm with a specified maximum deviation distance. The output geometries will contain a subset of the original input vertices.

Inputs:
spatial_ref - The well-known ID or a spatial reference JSON object for the

input geometries.

geometries - The array of geometries to be generalized. max_deviation - max_deviation sets the maximum allowable offset,

which will determine the degree of simplification. This value limits the distance the output geometry can differ from the input geometry.

deviation_unit - A unit for maximum deviation. If a unit is not

specified, the units are derived from spatial_ref.

intersect

arcgis.geometry.intersect(spatial_ref, geometries, geometry, gis=None)

The intersect function is performed on a geometry service resource. This function constructs the set-theoretic intersection between an array of geometries and another geometry. The dimension of each resultant geometry is the minimum dimension of the input geometry in the geometries array and the other geometry specified by the geometry parameter.

Inputs:
spatial_ref - The well-known ID or a spatial reference JSON object for the

input geometries.

geometries - An array of points, multipoints, polylines, or

polygons. The structure of each geometry in the array is the same as the structure of the JSON geometry objects returned by the ArcGIS REST API.

geometry - A single geometry of any type with a dimension equal to

or greater than the elements of geometries.

label_points

arcgis.geometry.label_points(spatial_ref, polygons, gis=None)

The label_points function is performed on a geometry service resource. The labelPoints function calculates an interior point for each polygon specified in the input array. These interior points can be used by clients for labeling the polygons.

Inputs:
spatial_ref - The well-known ID of the spatial reference or a spatial

reference JSON object for the input polygons.

polygons - The array of polygons whose label points are to be

computed. The spatial reference of the polygons is specified by spatial_ref.

lengths

arcgis.geometry.lengths(spatial_ref, polylines, length_unit, calculation_type, gis=None)

The lengths function is performed on a geometry service resource. This function calculates the 2D Euclidean or geodesic lengths of each polyline specified in the input array.

Inputs:
spatial_ref - The well-known ID of the spatial reference or a spatial

reference JSON object for the input polylines.

polylines - The array of polylines whose lengths are to be

computed.

length_unit - The unit in which lengths of polylines will be

calculated. If calculation_type is planar, then length_unit can be any esriUnits constant. If calculation_type is planar and length_unit is not specified, then the units are derived from spatial_ref. If calculation_type is not planar, then length_unit must be a linear esriUnits constant such as esriSRUnit_Meter or esriSRUnit_SurveyMile. If calculation_type is not planar and length_unit is not specified, then the units are meters.

calculation_type - calculation_type defines the length calculation
for the geometry. The type can be one of the following values:
planar - Planar measurements use 2D Euclidean distance to

calculate length. This type should only be used if the length needs to be calculated in the given spatial reference. Otherwise, use preserveShape.

geodesic - Use this type if you want to calculate a length

using only the vertices of the polygon and define the lines between the vertices as geodesic segments independent of the actual shape of the polyline. A geodesic segment is the shortest path between two points on an earth ellipsoid.

preserveShape - This type calculates the length of the geometry

on the surface of the earth ellipsoid. The shape of the geometry in its coordinate system is preserved.

offset

arcgis.geometry.offset(geometries, offset_distance, offset_unit, offset_how='esriGeometryOffsetRounded', bevel_ratio=10, simplify_result=False, spatial_ref=None, gis=None)

The offset function is performed on a geometry service resource. This function constructs geometries that are offset from the given input geometries. If the offset parameter is positive, the constructed offset will be on the right side of the geometry. Left side offsets are constructed with negative parameters. Tracing the geometry from its first vertex to the last will give you a direction along the geometry. It is to the right and left perspective of this direction that the positive and negative parameters will dictate where the offset is constructed. In these terms, it is simple to infer where the offset of even horizontal geometries will be constructed.

Inputs:

geometries - The array of geometries to be offset. offset_distance - Specifies the distance for constructing an offset

based on the input geometries. If the offset_distance parameter is positive, the constructed offset will be on the right side of the curve. Left-side offsets are constructed with negative values.

offset_unit - A unit for offset distance. If a unit is not

specified, the units are derived from spatial_ref.

offset_how - The offset_how parameter determines how outer corners
between segments are handled. The three options are as follows:
esriGeometryOffsetRounded - Rounds the corner between extended

offsets.

esriGeometryOffsetBevelled - Squares off the corner after a

given ratio distance.

esriGeometryOffsetMitered - Attempts to allow extended offsets

to naturally intersect, but if that intersection occurs too far from the corner, the corner is eventually bevelled off at a fixed distance.

bevel_ratio - bevel_ratio is multiplied by the offset distance, and

the result determines how far a mitered offset intersection can be located before it is bevelled. When mitered is specified, bevel_ratio is ignored and 10 is used internally. When bevelled is specified, 1.1 will be used if bevel_ratio is not specified. bevel_ratio is ignored for rounded offset.

simplify_result - if simplify_result is set to true, then self

intersecting loops will be removed from the result offset geometries. The default is false.

spatial_ref - The well-known ID or a spatial reference JSON object for the

input geometries.

project

arcgis.geometry.project(geometries, in_sr, out_sr, transformation='', transform_forward=False, gis=None)

The project function is performed on a geometry service resource. This function projects an array of input geometries from the input spatial reference to the output spatial reference.

Inputs:

geometries - The list of geometries to be projected. in_sr - The well-known ID (gis,WKID) of the spatial reference or a

spatial reference JSON object for the input geometries.

out_sr - The well-known ID (gis,WKID) of the spatial reference or a

spatial reference JSON object for the input geometries.

transformation - The WKID or a JSON object specifying the

geographic transformation (gis,also known as datum transformation) to be applied to the projected geometries. Note that a transformation is needed only if the output spatial reference contains a different geographic coordinate system than the input spatial reference.

transform_forward - A Boolean value indicating whether or not to

transform forward. The forward or reverse direction of transformation is implied in the name of the transformation. If transformation is specified, a value for the transformForward parameter must also be specified. The default value is false.

Example:

input_geom = [{“x”: -17568824.55, “y”: 2428377.35}, {“x”: -17568456.88, “y”: 2428431.352}] result = project(geometries = input_geom, in_sr = 3857, out_sr = 4326)

returns:

a list of geometries in the out_sr coordinate system, for instance: [{“x”: -157.82343617279275, “y”: 21.305781607280093}, {“x”: -157.8201333369876, “y”: 21.306233559873714}]

relation

arcgis.geometry.relation(geometries1, geometries2, spatial_ref, spatial_relation='esriGeometryRelationIntersection', relation_param='', gis=None)

The relation function is performed on a geometry service resource. This function determines the pairs of geometries from the input geometry arrays that participate in the specified spatial relation. Both arrays are assumed to be in the spatial reference specified by spatial_ref, which is a required parameter. Geometry types cannot be mixed within an array. The relations are evaluated in 2D. In other words, z coordinates are not used.

Inputs:
geometries1 - The first array of geometries used to compute the

relations.

geometries2 -The second array of geometries used to compute the relations. spatial_ref - The well-known ID of the spatial reference or a spatial

reference JSON object for the input geometries.

spatial_relation - The spatial relationship to be tested between the two

input geometry arrays. Values: esriGeometryRelationCross | esriGeometryRelationDisjoint | esriGeometryRelationIn | esriGeometryRelationInteriorIntersection | esriGeometryRelationIntersection | esriGeometryRelationLineCoincidence | esriGeometryRelationLineTouch | esriGeometryRelationOverlap | esriGeometryRelationPointTouch | esriGeometryRelationTouch | esriGeometryRelationWithin | esriGeometryRelationRelation

relation_param - The Shape Comparison Language string to be

evaluated.

reshape

arcgis.geometry.reshape(spatial_ref, target, reshaper, gis=None)

The reshape function is performed on a geometry service resource. It reshapes a polyline or polygon feature by constructing a polyline over the feature. The feature takes the shape of the reshaper polyline from the first place the reshaper intersects the feature to the last.

Input:
spatial_ref - The well-known ID of the spatial reference or a spatial

reference JSON object for the input geometries.

target - The polyline or polygon to be reshaped. reshaper - The single-part polyline that does the reshaping.

to_geo_coordinate_string

arcgis.geometry.to_geo_coordinate_string(spatial_ref, coordinates, conversion_type, conversion_mode='mgrsDefault', num_of_digits=None, rounding=True, add_spaces=True, gis=None)

The to_geo_coordinate_string function is performed on a geometry service resource. The function converts an array of xy-coordinates into well-known strings based on the conversion type and spatial reference supplied by the user. Optional parameters are available for some conversion types. Note that if an optional parameter is not applicable for a particular conversion type, but a value is supplied for that parameter, the value will be ignored.

Inputs:
spatial_ref - The well-known ID of the spatial reference or a spatial

reference json object.

coordinates - An array of xy-coordinates in JSON format to be

converted. Syntax: [[x1,y2],…[xN,yN]]

conversion_type - The conversion type of the input strings.
Allowed Values:

MGRS - Military Grid Reference System USNG - United States National Grid UTM - Universal Transverse Mercator GeoRef - World Geographic Reference System GARS - Global Area Reference System DMS - Degree Minute Second DDM - Degree Decimal Minute DD - Decimal Degree

conversion_mode - Conversion options for MGRS and UTM conversion

types. Valid conversion modes for MGRS are:

mgrsDefault - Default. Uses the spheroid from the given spatial

reference.

mgrsNewStyle - Treats all spheroids as new, like WGS 1984. The

180 degree longitude falls into Zone 60.

mgrsOldStyle - Treats all spheroids as old, like Bessel 1841.

The 180 degree longitude falls into Zone 60.

mgrsNewWith180InZone01 - Same as mgrsNewStyle except the 180

degree longitude falls into Zone 01.

mgrsOldWith180InZone01 - Same as mgrsOldStyle except the 180

degree longitude falls into Zone 01.

Valid conversion modes for UTM are:

utmDefault - Default. No options. utmNorthSouth - Uses north/south latitude indicators instead of

zone numbers. Non-standard. Default is recommended.

num_of_digits - The number of digits to output for each of the

numerical portions in the string. The default value for num_of_digits varies depending on conversion_type.

rounding - If true, then numeric portions of the string are

rounded to the nearest whole magnitude as specified by numOfDigits. Otherwise, numeric portions of the string are truncated. The rounding parameter applies only to conversion types MGRS, USNG and GeoRef. The default value is true.

addSpaces - If true, then spaces are added between components of

the string. The addSpaces parameter applies only to conversion types MGRS, USNG and UTM. The default value for MGRS is false, while the default value for both USNG and UTM is true.

trim_extend

arcgis.geometry.trim_extend(spatial_ref, polylines, trim_extend_to, extend_how=0, gis=None)

The trim_extend function is performed on a geometry service resource. This function trims or extends each polyline specified in the input array, using the user-specified guide polylines. When trimming features, the part to the left of the oriented cutting line is preserved in the output, and the other part is discarded. An empty polyline is added to the output array if the corresponding input polyline is neither cut nor extended.

Inputs:
spatial_ref - The well-known ID of the spatial reference or a spatial

reference json object.

polylines - An array of polylines to be trimmed or extended. trim_extend_to - A polyline that is used as a guide for trimming or

extending input polylines.

extend_how - A flag that is used along with the trimExtend

function. 0 - By default, an extension considers both ends of a path. The

old ends remain, and new points are added to the extended ends. The new points have attributes that are extrapolated from adjacent existing segments.

1 - If an extension is performed at an end, relocate the end

point to the new position instead of leaving the old point and adding a new point at the new position.

2 - If an extension is performed at an end, do not extrapolate

the end-segment’s attributes for the new point. Instead, make its attributes the same as the current end. Incompatible with esriNoAttributes.

4 - If an extension is performed at an end, do not extrapolate

the end-segment’s attributes for the new point. Instead, make its attributes empty. Incompatible with esriKeepAttributes.

8 - Do not extend the ‘from’ end of any path. 16 - Do not extend the ‘to’ end of any path.

union

arcgis.geometry.union(spatial_ref, geometries, gis=None)

The union function is performed on a geometry service resource. This function constructs the set-theoretic union of the geometries in the input array. All inputs must be of the same type.

Inputs: spatial_ref - The well-known ID of the spatial reference or a spatial

reference json object.

geometries - The array of geometries to be unioned.