ArcGIS Web Editor is available for general use with ArcGIS Enterprise 11.4 on Windows, Linux, and Kubernetes. This release of Web Editor includes several editing tools, snapping configurations, keyboard shortcuts for common editing workflows, and many other features.
Highlights are listed below:
- The following editing tools are available for creating and modifying features: Create features, Copy and Paste, Attributes, Move, Vertices, Reshape, Split, and Merge.
- Snapping is a feature drawing aid that helps control the accuracy of the pointer when drawing geometries near a vertex or other geometry. You can configure snapping options for a web map, including enabling snapping, geometry guides, and feature to feature snapping.
- Rectangle, polygon, and lasso selection tools are available to select features on a map. You can also select features from a table or use the Selection pane to create an attribute query. For more information, visit Select features.
- Editing constraints are available when using drawing tools. Editing constraints are used to input exact values for the angle or distance of a line segment, or the coordinates of a point or vertex.
- Keyboard shortcuts are available for many common editing tasks, including enabling tools, opening panes, navigating the map, and applying editing constraints.
- Undo and Redo buttons are available when editing a branch version of a versioned dataset or when using the drawing tools.
- Save version edits and Discard buttons are now available when editing a branch version of a versioned dataset. For more information, visit Toolbars.
- You can now manage versioned data in the Versioning pane. For more information, visit Manage versioned data.
- The following tools are available for editing utility networks: Validate network, View associations, and Trace.
- Editing templates are available to create collections of features based on predefined rules. For example, you can create a template of a power pole with transformers already attached.
- The Network rules pane is used to view and understand the rules applied to the utility network, such as what a feature can connect to or be contained by.