

Urdu is spoken by more than 50 million people in India, but is difficult to see on this map, since no district has a dense concentration of this language. So it is unsurprising that the northeast, dominated by the Himalayas and the Brahmaputra, is India's most linguistically diverse region. Mountainous terrain and river density are high predictors of language diversity, much as they are for biodiversity. The language category with the largest share is Other, a category that includes any language with fewer than 10,000 speakers.

View final resultĭimapur records 44 mother tongue languages, the most of any district. If you're using a different version of ArcGIS Pro, you may encounter different functionality and results. This lesson was last tested on May 21, 2021, using ArcGIS Pro 2.8. In this lesson, you'll learn graphic design principles and practical techniques for designing effective map layouts. You'll also add text to help illuminate the interesting stories in your data that can't be conveyed by symbology alone. Instead of trying to tell it all in one map-which could be overwhelming-you'll design a layout with multiple maps and a chart. Only 22 of them are included in your map, but even this simplified version is a complicated geographic story.

Hundreds of languages are spoken in India. You've designed a map of languages in India to celebrate International Mother Language Day, and now you're ready to create a poster of this map that you can print and share online. The layout field contains a list of values which will correspond to the layouts which we’ve created within the ArcGIS Pro Project file (.APRX) and want the user to select.Īttachments have been enabled on the service to give us an area to later store the generated PDF.While a topographic or reference map is accompanied by north arrows, scale bars, graticules, and detailed legends, a thematic map-which focuses on a specific theme-is more likely to be surrounded by text, pictures, and charts. Our service is a simple feature service with a number of attributes which will be used at various stages of the solution to either capture information or control if the Notebook needs to pick up this feature and generate a report for it. Underpinning that is the service and map. So, we’ve created an application from Web AppBuilder which has 1 widget – the Smart Editor. We would like to allow the user to populate certain attributes, and auto-populate others. Our application needs to perform 1 function – capture a point a on a map. There is no secret sauce or smoke and mirrors.

We’ve consciously tried to use out of the box applications and services that are available to everyone within ArcGIS Online.
