This is an anchor-linked version of the excellent, amazing original opus magnum by Michael Tandy.
Counterexample: Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, London, WC2E 9DD, United Kingdom.
Counterexample: 1A Egmont Road, Middlesbrough, TS4 2HT
import arcpy | |
import pandas as pd | |
def arcgis_table_to_df(in_fc, input_fields=None, query=""): | |
"""Function will convert an arcgis table into a pandas dataframe with an object ID index, and the selected | |
input fields using an arcpy.da.SearchCursor. | |
:param - in_fc - input feature class or table to convert | |
:param - input_fields - fields to input to a da search cursor for retrieval | |
:param - query - sql query to grab appropriate values | |
:returns - pandas.DataFrame""" |
This is an anchor-linked version of the excellent, amazing original opus magnum by Michael Tandy.
Counterexample: Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, London, WC2E 9DD, United Kingdom.
Counterexample: 1A Egmont Road, Middlesbrough, TS4 2HT
robocopy /b /e /xa:s /xjd /sl /a-:hs /mt /v /fp /eta /log:"D:\To\Directory\transfer.log" /tee "C:\From\Directory" "D:\To\Directory" | |
(Note that the paths don't have a trailing backslash.) | |
/b -- backup mode (there's a /zb option for restart mode, but it's a whole lot slower) | |
/e -- copies subdirectories (including empty directories) in addition to files | |
/xa:s -- exclude system files | |
/xjd -- exclude junction points | |
/sl -- copy symbolic links as links | |
/a-:hs -- remove hidden/system attributes from files |