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@BenjaminDorsey, @AndrewPadilla Finally, I have a positive response to this! We've recently developed and announced a new R metapackage {arcgis} with several subpackages that can read AND write feature services, amongst many other capabilities. The goal of the project is to provide an R interface to ArcGIS location services. It's free, open-source, and available on CRAN It does not require an ArcGIS Pro installation/license (unlike {arcgisbinding}) {arcgisbinding} can still be used for working with local data or developing R-driven geoprocessing tools We'll continue to develop {arcgis} and {arcgisbinding}, so stay tuned! Blog article announcing the new R metapackage Link to documentation + getting started and tutorials
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a month ago
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The notebook runtime determines the Python libraries you have access to when you open an ArcGIS Notebook. With each release, we add new libraries, deprecate old ones, or update the versions of the existing libraries. You can review the existing runtime v9.0 and previous runtimes, along with the release of ArcGIS Enterprise or ArcGIS Online that they are included with here. As with some of the Python libraries included in the runtime, the runtimes themselves do get deprecated over time. For ArcGIS Online notebooks, each runtime is supported for 2 years after its release. For ArcGIS Enterprise notebooks, each runtime follows the ArcGIS Enterprise Life Cycle of the version it was released with. Now: what should you do to make sure your notebook runtimes are up to date? Go to your notebooks home page From the list of available notebooks under “My notebooks” or “Shared notebooks”, check to see which runtime version has been assigned to the notebook. The triangular caution sign indicates that the runtime version has been deprecated. You should update the runtime version as soon as possible. The circular information sign indicates that there is a new runtime version available. We recommend that you update the runtime version at your convenience. Steps for changing/updating the notebook runtime can be found here.
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01-19-2024
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Hi @xingchenc - thanks for reaching out about this. I've reshared the link publicly, please let me know if you have any issues accessing it. DevSummit2023_AutoML_PlenaryDemo_April2023.ppkx thanks, Nick Giner
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01-16-2024
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The Survey123 module of the ArcGIS API for Python will get a big boost in 2024. We will host a live hands-on session on January 17, 2024 so you can learn what's coming and provide feedback. Publishing surveys using Python is one of the most popular requests with regards to Python automation. We have been working hard on that one and this session will focus on that. After a brief introduction to get you started, you will have a chance to test new operations to publish surveys from Python and provide feedback to the development team. To prepare for this session, check this Early Adopter documentation and sharpen your ArcGIS Python API skills. Register for this event completing this form. @IsmaelChivite
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01-08-2024
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Hello, thanks for sharing your question. You can report bugs and make enhancement requests to the Python API public GitHub repo here: https://github.com/Esri/arcgis-python-api/issues thanks, Nick Giner - Product Manager
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12-29-2023
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Hi @DavidPike - thanks for the question. These symbols indicate: Key: thumbnail for "GIS administration" Esri sample notebooks Nothing: default thumbnail for notebooks Folder: thumbnail for "content management" Esri sample notebooks Bottom line - any notebook you create will have nothing, the default thumbnail. You'll only see the key or folder on Esri-created notebooks. thanks, Nick Giner, Product Manager - ArcGIS Notebooks
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12-28-2023
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Hi - just to clarify, are you attempting this process? GeoPandas GeoDataFrame > Spatially Enabled DataFrame > Hosted feature layer in AGOL?
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12-28-2023
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Hi @SFM_TravisBott - thanks for the great question and thank you @EarlMedina for the workarounds. For questions about the Python API and for help writing/using the code, this Esri Community is probably the best place to go. As you might observe, the Community is very active in helping answer questions and has contributions both Esri internal staff and our customers. With that said, if you identify a bug or have an enhancement request, we do encourage you to submit it to our public facing github repo. This is actively monitored by the team and we appreciate your ideas and feedback! https://github.com/Esri/arcgis-python-api/issues thank you, Nick Giner, Product Manager - ArcGIS API for Python
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12-28-2023
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Hi @DavinShokes1 - yes you can add packages to the Online Notebook via conda or pip. However, this package is only available for the duration of the notebook session--once you close the notebook or the container, this package is no longer available. In other words, the package won't persist in the runtime manifest, you have to run the install command in each notebook. I just tried to install the Office365-REST-Python-Client in an Online notebook. It took 7 seconds to install.
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11-08-2023
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Update: here is a link to the PDF. https://www.esri.com/content/dam/esrisites/en-us/media/manuals/arcgis-notebook-runtime/python-library-9.0.pdf
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11-06-2023
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In the October 2023 update of ArcGIS Online, we released the 9.0 version of the notebook runtimes, including the latest ArcGIS API for Python 2.2.0 and other Python packages. A manifest of the Python packages and versions included in the 9.0 runtime will be available on https://www.esri.com/en-us/arcgis/products/arcgis-notebooks/runtime-manifests in November 2023. In the meantime, you can check all installed packages in a notebook environment using one of the following methods: 1. Check installed packages from the "Info" tab of a notebook. Open a notebook and save it as an item if it is not already saved as an item. On the top ribbon, click to open the "Info" tab. On the "Info" tab > "General" section, find and click on the notebook runtime hyperlink. A table of all installed packages will appear on the screen. 2. Check installed packages with `conda list`. In the notebook editor, run !conda list and the cell will output a list of installed packages in the current environment. See graphic below for more details.
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10-27-2023
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Hi Daniel, the big difference between the "Standard" and "Advanced" Notebook runtimes is that Advanced contains the ArcPy library. If you read the Geometry Engines section of the Python API doc on the spatially enabled DataFrame (SeDF), you'll see that the Python API automatically chooses a geometry engine based on if ArcPy is present or not. So it's possible that this is why you experienced different behavior when switching from Standard to Advanced runtime. thanks, Nick Giner Product Manager, ArcGIS Notebooks
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10-04-2023
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Hi there - could this be what you are looking for? These items were added in the 2.2.0 release on 9/25. https://developers.arcgis.com/python/guide/release-notes-220/
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10-04-2023
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1 | 03-11-2024 07:57 AM | |
2 | 01-19-2024 05:00 AM | |
1 | 01-16-2024 05:37 AM | |
1 | 01-08-2024 10:54 AM |
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