1. Get started

  2.  Welcome
  3.  Get started
  4.  Run as a Windows service
  5.  Build your first app
  6.  Requirements
  7.  Accessibility support
  8.  Development overview
  9.  About release versions
  10.  What's new
  11.  Frequently asked questions
  12. Working with apps

  13.  Home page
  14.  Create or import an app
  15.  Edit and launch an app
  16.  Choose a theme
  17.  Select a map or scene
  18.  Add widgets
  19.  Widgets overview
  20.  Configure app attributes
  21.  Preview apps on smaller screens
  22.  Export as a template
  23.  Edit or preview template
  24.  Use URL parameters
  25.  Upgrade apps
  26. Configure 2D widgets

  27.  About widget
  28.  Add Data widget
  29.  Analysis widget
  30.  Attribute Table widget
  31.  Batch Attribute Editor widget
  32.  Basemap Gallery widget
  33.  Bookmark widget
  34.  Business Analyst widget
  35.  Chart widget
  36.  Controller widget
  37.  Coordinate widget
  38.  Coordinate Conversion widget
  39.  Cost Analysis widget
  40.  Data Aggregation widget
  41.  Directions widget
  42.  Distance and Direction widget
  43.  District Lookup widget
  44.  Draw widget
  45.  Edit widget
  46.  Emergency Response Guide widget
  47.  Extent Navigate widget
  48.  Filter widget
  49.  Full Screen widget
  50.  Geocoder widget
  51.  GeoLookup widget
  52.  Geoprocessing widget
  53.  Grid Overlay widget
  54.  Gridded Reference Graphic widget
  55.  Group Filter widget
  56.  Image Measurement widget
  57.  Home Button widget
  58.  Incident Analysis widget
  59.  Infographic widget
  60.  Info Summary widget
  61.  Layer List widget
  62.  Legend widget
  63.  Measurement widget
  64.  My Location widget
  65.  Near Me widget
  66.  Network Trace widget
  67.  Oblique Viewer widget
  68.  Overview Map widget
  69.  Parcel Drafter widget
  70.  Print widget
  71.  Public Notification widget
  72.  Query widget
  73.  Related Table Charts widget
  74.  Report Feature widget
  75.  Reviewer Dashboard widget
  76.  Scalebar widget
  77.  Screening widget
  78.  Search widget
  79.  Select widget
  80.  Share widget
  81.  Situation Awareness widget
  82.  Smart Editor widget
  83.  Splash widget
  84.  Stream widget
  85.  Suitability Modeler widget
  86.  Summary widget
  87.  Swipe widget
  88.  Threat Analysis widget
  89.  Time Slider widget
  90.  Visibility widget
  91.  Zoom Slider widget
  92. Configure 3D widgets

  93.  3DFx widget
  94.  About widget
  95.  Basemap Gallery widget
  96.  Compass widget
  97.  Coordinate widget
  98.  Daylight widget
  99.  Full Screen widget
  100.  Home Button widget
  101.  Layer List widget
  102.  Legend widget
  103.  Measurement widget
  104.  My Location widget
  105.  Navigate widget
  106.  Search widget
  107.  Share widget
  108.  Slides widget
  109.  Splash widget
  110.  Zoom Slider widget
  111. Widget development

  112.  Get started
  113.  Naming conventions
  114.  In-panel and off-panel widgets
  115.  Deploy your widget
  116.  Required files
  117.  Widget manifest
  118.  Extend BaseWidget
  119.  Required properties
  120.  Define the template
  121.  Configure the Demo widget
  122.  Add i18n support
  123.  Make widgets user-friendly
  124.  Build your first app
  125.  Communication to app container
  126.  Widget properties
  127.  Make widgets responsive
  128.  Communication between widgets
  129.  Dojo dijit
  130.  Make widgets configurable in builder
  131.  Make widgets backward compatible
  132.  Create a controller widget
  133.  Widget life cycle
  134.  Add help for your widget
  135.  Create a feature action in your widget
  136.  Provide and consume data sources in widgets
  137.  Best practices for unit testing
  138. Theme development

  139.  Theme elements
  140.  Create a theme
  141. 3D development

  142.  3D development guide
  143. Sample code

  144.  Create a custom in-panel widget
  145.  Create a ListView widget
  146.  Create a custom widget using the Report dijit
  147.  Create a new theme
  148.  Create a new style for a theme
  149.  Create a new default layout
  150.  Create a nondefault layout
  151.  Create a new panel
  152.  Create a new layout widget
  153.  Create a controller widget
  154.  Create a feature action in your widget
  155.  Send a layer to the Attribute Table widget
  156.  Open multiple widgets simultaneously
  157.  Use other libraries
  158.  Change the URL of ArcGIS API for JavaScript
  159. Deployment

  160.  Deploy your app
  161.  Use proxy
  162.  Web-tier authentication
  163.  Custom widget and theme deployment
  164.  Upgrade custom widgets and themes
  165. Framework reference

  166.  CSS framework
  167.  FeatureActionManager class
  168.  FilterManager class
  169.  LayerInfo class
  170.  LayerInfos class
  171.  LayerNode class
  172.  LayerStructure class
  173.  PanelManager class
  174.  SelectionManager class
  175.  Utils class
  176.  WidgetManager class
  177. dijit

  178.  FeaturelayerChooserFromMap class
  179.  FeaturelayerServiceBrowser class
  180.  FeatureSetChooserForSingleLayer class
  181.  Filter class
  182.  ImageChooser class
  183.  ItemSelector class
  184.  LayerChooserFromMap class
  185.  RendererChooser class
  186.  Report class
  187.  SnapShot class
  188.  SymbolChooser class
  189. JSON reference

  190.  App configuration
  191.  Map configuration
  192.  Widget configuration
  193.  Widget pool configuration
  194.  Widget on-screen configuration
  195.  Panel configuration
  196.  Group configuration
  197.  DataSource configuration
  198.  About
  199.  Analysis
  200.  Attribute Table
  201.  Basemap Gallery
  202.  Bookmark
  203.  Chart
  204.  Coordinate
  205.  Directions
  206.  Draw
  207.  Edit
  208.  Full Screen
  209.  Geocoder
  210.  Geoprocessing
  211.  Controller
  212.  Home Button
  213.  Image Measurement
  214.  Infographic
  215.  Layer List
  216.  Legend
  217.  Loading Page
  218.  Measurement
  219.  My Location
  220.  Near Me
  221.  Oblique Viewer
  222.  Overview Map
  223.  Print
  224.  Query
  225.  Report Feature
  226.  Reviewer Dashboard
  227.  Scalebar
  228.  Search
  229.  Share
  230.  Splash
  231.  Stream
  232.  Swipe
  233.  Time Slider
  234.  Zoom Slider
  235. What's new archive

  236.  What's new in version 2.23
  237.  What's new in version 2.22
  238.  What's new in version 2.21
  239.  What's new in version 2.20
  240.  What's new in version 2.19
  241.  What's new in version 2.18
  242.  What's new in version 2.17
  243.  What's new in version 2.16
  244.  What's new in version 2.15
  245.  What's new in version 2.14
  246.  What's new in version 2.13
  247.  What's new in version 2.12
  248.  What's new in version 2.11
  249.  What's new in version 2.10
  250.  What's new in version 2.9
  251.  What's new in version 2.8
  252.  What's new in version 2.7
  253.  What's new in version 2.6
  254.  What's new in version 2.5
  255.  What's new in version 2.4
  256.  What's new in version 2.3
  257.  What's new in version 2.2
  258.  What's new in version 2.1
  259.  What's new in version 2.0
  260.  What's new in version 1.3
  261.  What's new in version 1.2
  262.  What's new in version 1.1

Oblique Viewer widget

The Oblique Viewer widget displays images in a native coordinate system, providing a natural view from the camera location, using the image coordinate system (ICS) in ArcGIS. Oblique images are displayed in a native ICS to avoid distortion caused by projecting them to a geographic coordinate system or projected coordinate system. The widget allows the user to view, zoom, and pan around the oblique image view, or switch angles to view an area of interest from another camera perspective.

Configure the Oblique Viewer widget

This widget can be set to open automatically when an app starts. Hover over the widget and click the Do not open this widget when the app starts button Do not open this widget when the app starts to change the setting to Open this widget automatically when the app starts. (For widgets that you need to add to the app first, you can turn on this option after configuring the widget.)

Steps:
  1. Hover over the widget and click the Configure this widget button Configure this widget to open the configuration window.
    NoteNote:

    If you need to add the widget to the app first, click a widget placeholder on the Widget tab. In the Choose Widget window that opens, select the widget and click OK.

  2. Optionally, click Change widget icon if you want to replace the default icon for this widget.
    A file explorer window appears, allowing you to choose a local image file to use as the widget icon.
  3. Click the Select the Layer drop-down list to choose the image service layer (from the input web map) to use with the widget.
    NoteNote:

    The oblique image service must be based on a mosaic dataset, configured using the Frame Camera raster type with orientation metadata about each input image.

    The Frame Camera raster type includes two specific fields that must be present: Elevation and Azimuth, referring to the view direction of the camera, expressed as angles measured in degrees. Camera elevation set to 0 means aimed at the horizon, and angles above the horizon are positive and below the horizon are negative, so an angle of -90 means aimed at nadir. Camera azimuth set to 0 means the top of the image is aimed at true north in the specified coordinate system, and angles are measured positive clockwise (for example, 90 = east).

  4. Click the Elevation Field drop-down list to choose the field that defines the Sensor Elevation from the list of available fields.
  5. Click the Azimuth Field drop-down list to choose the field that defines the Sensor Azimuth from the list of available fields.
  6. For Search Radius, set an absolute value to use as a radius around the dropped pin on the main map.

    This allows you to increase the area of interest associated with a dropped pin and view the oblique images that contain that area. The default value set is 0 meters.

  7. In Select the List Info Fields, choose the info fields to be displayed in your raster list.
  8. Check the Show Thumbnail in Raster List option to enable thumbnails in the raster list in the widget.
  9. Check the Synchronize Main Map option to automatically synchronize the nadir map with any change in the extent made to the oblique map.

    The nadir map may be the basemap, but typically it is a second image service in the input web map, showing a dynamic orthomosaic of the nadir images captured at the same time as the oblique images.

  10. Check Enable Distance and Area Tools to show distance, angle, area, and perimeter measurement tools in the oblique map window.
  11. Click OK to save and close the configuration window.

Use the Oblique Viewer widget

When initialized, the Oblique Viewer widget displays the images in Nadir view.

Steps:
  1. Click the widget button to open the widget that contains the Oblique map.
  2. The rotational gauge Rotational gauge at the lower right side of the widget panel allows the user to choose the direction of the oblique image to be displayed. The blue squares on the sides of the dial indicate the directions in which images are available. Click the blue squares to switch the view of the image to the corresponding direction.
  3. Click the circle in the middle of the rotational gauge to switch the images displayed in the widget panel to Nadir mode.
  4. The toolbar at the top of the widget panel includes the following actions. Choose one of them to explore the image.
    • Click Locate area Locate area to drop a pin on the main map. This allows you to locate an area and view the oblique images associated with it.
    • Click Clear all graphics Clear all graphics to clear all the graphics displayed on the main map.
    • Click Zoom to extent Zoom to extent to zoom to the extent of the raster selected in the Oblique map window.
    • Click Synchronize map Synchronize map to manually synchronize the extent of the Nadir map with any changes in location made to the Oblique map. This button is available in the widget panel only when the Synchronize Main Map option is disabled in the configuration window.
    • Click Show raster list Show raster list to list all the raster images available for the displayed map extent. The list can be filtered in the rotational gauge of the widget, depending on the angle selected.

    • Click the Measure button Measure to select a height measurement operation and unit of measurement from the drop-down list:
      • Height: Base to Top—Calculates the height of a structure by measuring from the base of the structure to the top of the structure. Measurements are assumed to be perpendicular to the base. The line being measured along the building must have its end point directly above the start point.
      • Height: Top to Top-Shadow—Calculates the height of a structure by measuring from the top of the structure to the top of structure's shadow on the ground. The points on the structure and its shadow must represent the same point.
      • Height: Base to Top-Shadow—Calculates the height of a structure by measuring from the base of the structure to the top of the structure’s shadow on the ground. The point in the shadow must represent a point on the structure that is perpendicular to the base.
      • Distance and Angle—Calculates the distance and azimuth angle of an interactively drawn line segment.
      • Area and Perimeter—Calculates the area and perimeter of an interactively drawn polygon.
      • Linear Units—Allows you to configure a preselected unit of measure for linear measurement. The options include the following:
        • Inches
        • Feet
        • Yards
        • Miles
        • Nautical Miles
        • Millimeters
        • Centimeters
        • Decimeters
        • Meters
        • Kilometers