Arcgis 10.3 label point
Note: The georeferencing process in ArcGIS will solve the issue of missing spatial references. You should receive the following warning message after adding the scanned image to ArcMap:.Building pyramids improves the speed in which raster datasets load, and is optional. If asked if you would like to build pyramids, click yes. Use the Add Data button to add the scanned map image (V2-1910-172.tif) to the map document.The image used in this tutorial (seen at left, below) is ready to be georeferenced.
For best results, the image should be rotated and cropped to so it is oriented in the right direction and areas outside the edge of the map sheet have been removed. IrfanView or Adobe Photoshop) to ensure there is no excess areas which can often occur with scanned images. Before adding the raster file to be georeferenced make sure to open it in an image viewer or editor (e.g.Right-click on the name of the layer (centreline_UTM17N.shp) in the Table of Contents window, and select Label Features so street names appear on the map. Click the Add Data button to bring up the Add Data window which allows you to browse to the folder location you have unzipped the ARCGIS_tutorialfiles.zip to, select the centreline_UTM17N.shp file and click ADD to add this dataset to the Table of Contents.Please download and unzip to location where the files can be used:
ARCGIS 10.3 LABEL POINT ZIP FILE
zip file that will be used during this tutorial, which contains both the centreline_UTM17N.shp data file (showing city streets) as well as the V2-1910-172.tif image file (a scanned map of the block). In this example, we will match intersections represented on the scanned map with a shapefile of city streets.