Geog 280: Basic Geographic Techniques
Exercise 5: On-Screen Digitizing
Creating Your Own Data
If you can't find appropriate data for your GIS project, you
may need to create it yourself. The process of converting
data to digital, computer format is called digitizing.
Currently three major approaches are available for digitizing:
- Keyboard Entry: here you manually type in
data, either as raster cell values (using a spreadsheet
or similar software) or as vector lines. These days
mostly only used to enter property parcel lines in a
technique called coordinate geometry (COGO).
- Graphics Tablet: also called a digitizing
tablet. This is what many people in the GIS
industry think of if you say
"digitizing." Here a flat, rectangular
surface senses and records the position of a specialized
mouse-like cursor (or puck). You can
tape a paper map to the tablet and trace features so they
become vector features in the GIS. This used to be
the most common way of converting a paper map to digital
format.
- On-Screen Digitizing: also called
"heads-up digitizing," since your head is
looking up at the screen rather than down at a
tablet. Here the map is first scanned into a raster
format. Then a person traces features using a mouse
while looking at the screen display of the scanned map.
On-screen digitizing is becoming popular for at least three
reasons.
- the scanned map can be useful in and of itself --
as you saw in the previous page with DRG files.
- you can digitize the scanned image as you need to.
For instance, you may only need to have the streams in
vector format at first and only as you have time do you
digitize the rest of the map.
- software is available that automatically traces
features as vector lines. Typically you tell
the computer where to start and it traces along a line
until it finds a gap or intersection, at which point you
must tell it what to do -- stop or jump to another
line. These automatic vectorizing programs aren't
perfect yet, but they are useful for some types of
maps. We won't use them here, but we have two types
of them in the GIS Lab if you want to experiment at some
point (one is ArcScan, an Arc/Info utility; the other is
Corel Trace, a simple bitmap tracing utility).
You will use on-screen digitizing to create a new theme in
ArcView. You will trace a few features on the scanned photo
of the SSU campus.
Create a New Theme
To digitize some new information, you need to make a theme
available to be edited (changed). You could add data to an
existing theme, but let's create a brand new theme to add
features to. Follow this procedure:
- Close the Available Databases view, and use the Project
Window to open the Raster/Vector Data view.
- Choose View-New Theme from the menu. ArcView
opens a dialog box asking the type of data that the new
theme will be -- point, line or polygon.
- In the drop-down list of the dialog box, choose Polygon
and click OK.

- Another dialog box opens for the theme name and
directory. Change if necessary the drive to U:,
then change the directory to your personal folder.
Type Bldg2 as the file name and then click OK.
ArcView then adds your new theme to the legend of the
view. Click the check-box to draw the theme if it's not
already checked (of course, nothing will draw until you digitize,
as you'll do below).
Notice also that a dotted line is around the check-box
of Bldg2. This is an important signal -- it means that you
can currently edit (change) features in the theme. You can
add, change or delete features while the dotted line is
showing. You should only have editing turned on while you
are changing a theme, since you could inadvertently change
something you didn't want changed. You will next add some
features to the theme, then turn the editing off.
Add Building Features to the Theme
You will digitize (trace) a few more of the buildings in the
photo.
- If necessary, zoom out to see the whole photo with View-Full
Extent, then use the zoom tool to zoom in to see just
one of the buildings that isn't already digitized --
there are several on the west side of campus you can
digitize.
- To digitize a feature, you must use the appropriate
drawing tool. Several tools are available for
drawing points, lines or polygons. To see them,
click and hold down the left mouse button on the far
right icon in the tool bar -- it probably looks like a
single dot
at first. If you hold down the
mouse on it, you'll see icons of several types of
features. Slide down until the polygon tool
is highlighted, then release.
The toolbar icon should change to this polygon tool.
- Move the mouse cursor to one corner of a building and
click once. Move along the edge of the building to
the next corner and click again. Continue moving
around the building and clicking on each corner -- try to
keep the edges straight and accurate. The polygon
shape of the building will become apparent as you
work. When you get to the last corner before the
one you started on, double-click the mouse. This
will complete the polygon and shade it in.
- If you find the resolution of the image too coarse (that
is, the pixels are too big to be able to see the
buildings clearly), you can add a larger version of the
photo and use it instead -- if you're in the GIS Lab,
that is. The larger version is called SSU-big
and it's in the folder H:\GeoData\Sonoma\SSU.
You would use View-Add Theme, change the file type
to Image Data Source and add it from this
folder. Turn off the smaller photo theme to make
the view draw faster.
- Repeat the digitizing step above for at least a total of
four buildings. You can zoom out a little to see
another building, then zoom back in. You can also
right-click on the view and choose to "pan"
over to find another building. The buildings may
turn yellow after you finish them rather than the color
indicated in the legend. Don't worry -- this just
means they are selected. You can choose the Select
None button
to deselect any buildings.
- If you want to delete any of your buildings and redo it,
just select it using the Select Feature tool -- the
building should turn yellow after you click on it with
this tool. Then choose Edit-Delete Graphics to
delete it. Redo the feature using the procedure
above
- When you're satisfied with your work, choose Theme-Stop
Editing and choose to save your edits.
Export View
To show you've accomplished the tasks in this part, create a
graphics file of your view. Do this as you have done
before, i.e.:
- Zoom the view out enough to see at least the buildings
you digitized and at least one of each of the other
vector themes you added (trees, roads and buildings).
- Choose File-Export from the ArcView menu.
- Click the Options button and change the
Resolution (DPI) to 144. This will improve the appearance
of your exported graphic. Then close the Options box to
return to the main Export dialog.
- Make sure the Type box in the lower left is Windows
Metafile (.wmf).
- Change the drive/directory to your personal folder if
necessary (U:\username); if you're not in the GIS
Lab, save it to a folder of your choice.
- Type Exer5 as the file name and then click OK.
That's It! (Just submit your assignment)
Submit in an e-mail message the answers to the four questions
in the previous pages, and attach the graphics file you just
created. Please add Exercise 5 as the subject before
you send your assignment. Refer to tips on submitting assignments if you
need help.

Bryan Baker, Sonoma State
University, bryan.baker@sonoma.edu
Updated 17 February 1999