Natural neighbor and linear.
Arcgis rubber sheet features.
Additionally a rubbersheet can be confined to a polygonal area.
This exercise will show you how to rubber sheet data by using displacement links multiple displacement links and identity links.
Rubbersheeting makes spatial adjustments to align the input feature locations with more accurate target feature locations based on the specified rubbersheet links.
The key difference between rubbersheeting and transformations however is that the distance features move depends on their proximity to a link and the length of that link.
Setting up the data and rubbersheeting options prerequisite.
The input link features represent the regular links.
Two point displacement links define the origin and target location of the features you are transforming.
Rubbersheeting makes spatial adjustments to align the input feature locations with more accurate target feature locations based on the specified rubbersheet links.
You will rubber sheet a newly imported set of street features to match an existing feature class of street features.
Two rubbersheeting options are supported.
The input point features represent identity links that hold source positions unmoved during the rubbersheeting process.
The input point features represent identity links that hold source positions unmoved during the rubbersheeting process.
You can transform features that are visible and editable by selecting them or transform all features on specified layers.
The closer features are to displacement links the farther they will move.
Identity links can be used to help hold features in certain locations.