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MapViewer
TM
Version 7
New
Revolutions in Map Making
Complete MapViewer package includes:
- MapViewer CDs
- MapViewer Getting
Started Guide
-
FREE Technical
Support!
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Overview
MapViewer is an affordable
mapping and spatial analysis tool that allows you to
produce publication-quality thematic maps easily. Small
businesses, large corporations, independent consultants,
scientists, GIS analysts, and numerous government agencies
are discovering important trends in their data with
MapViewer. Display your data distribution easily and
precisely with more easy-to-use features than ever. Your
data is unique and you need the best mapping software for
the job!
A thematic map visually
represents the geographic distribution of your data.
MapViewer will help you to:
- understand demographics
- define sales or
insurance territories
- outline marketing
strategies
- track population trends
- show ecological
distribution
- display any
geographically distributed data
With MapViewer, you are not
limited to the
boundaries and dataincluded in the program. You can
import boundary files and data files in a number of
formats to create truly customized maps!
Map Types
MapViewer provides you with
several map types to present your data in the most
informative way possible. You can combine most map types
in a single window to present several types of data in a
single map. The MapViewer map types include:
Base
Maps
Base maps contain
boundaries without any data representation. Base maps
can be used with other maps to show features such as
roads, streams, city locations, boundaries that have no
data associated with them, and so on.
Contour Maps
Contour Maps take
discrete data measurements, interpolate between them to
create a uniform grid, and then display lines of
constant values.
Vector
Maps
Vector maps interpolate
discrete data measurements to create a uniform grid and
display arrows that indicate the direction and magnitude
of the steepest slopes across the grid.
Non-Contiguous Cartograms
Non-Contiguous cartograms
represent data values by changing the size of the
associated area objects while retaining their original
shapes.
Pin
Maps
Pin maps are point
location maps that draw a point at a particular location
on a map.
Hatch Maps
Hatch maps use colors and
fill patterns to represent data ranges or classes of
data for each area on the map.
Density Maps
Density maps also called
dot density maps, use symbols to represent data values
for areas on a map. On a density map, each symbol
represents some data value, so the number of symbols
drawn in an area is in relation to the data values
associated with that area.
Gradient Maps
Gradient maps display a
continuous range of colors by interpolating between
discrete data points.
Dorling Cartograms
Cartograms represent data
values by changing the size of the associated area
object. The Dorling cartogram replaces the original
shape with a circle.
Symbol
Maps
Symbol maps place a
scaled symbol on an area, curve, or point location on
the map. The symbols are scaled in proportion to the
data values represented for each area or point.
Territory Maps
Territory maps group
objects into territories and provide statistical
information about the data associated with each set of
objects.
Pie
Maps
Pie maps are a way to
represent several data values by drawing a
proportionally sized pie chart for each location.
Bar Maps
Bar maps are a way to
represent several data values by drawing a bar chart for
each location.
Line Graph Maps
Line graph maps show line
graphs of the data at each centroid location. By looking
at a single line graph, you can see how the individual
data value relates to the whole data set.
Prism
Maps
Prism maps draw each
area, curve, or point as a raised prism, where the
height of the prism is relative to the associated data
value. Classed colors can also be assigned to prism map
boundary objects, allowing you to display two variables
on a single map!
Flow
Maps
Flow maps show data based
on line thickness. Flow map lines can be drawn from one
base map object to another, or you can associate a data
file with a base map of curves to create a flow map.
MapViewer
Boundary and Data Files
The following is a list of
boundary and data files included with MapViewer. These
files are suitable for creating a wide variety of maps.
You can
download MapViewer's boundary and data files from
Golden Software's web site. You can also create custom
boundaries by combining existing boundaries or by using
the drawing tools. MapViewer can import boundary files in
several different formats so you can also use files
created in other applications.
The MapViewer CD-ROM
contains Golden Softwares entire library of data files
and boundary files.
City
- AKcity.bna - WYcity.bna:
point locations of cities in latitude/longitude
coordinates
- State_Capitols_48.bna,
State_Capitols_50.bna - Locations of the state capitols
of the 48 contiguous United States and of all states.
- UScity.gsb - Locations
of over 500 major US cities.
- WorldCap.gsb - Locations
of over 170 world capital cities.
- WorldCity.gsb -
Locations of over 280 cities of the world.
- WorldCity.dat: contains
latitude/longitude point locations of miscellaneous
world cities in Golden Software Data [.DAT] format.
DLG
- The DLG directory
contains USGS 1:2,000,000 scale DLG files converted to
the Golden Software Boundary [.GSB] file format.
US County 1990
- AK.gsb-WY.gsb: 1990
county boundary files, primary IDs are FIPS codes
- AK.dat-WY.dat: 1990 US
Census data for each county
- US48.gsb:
map of the counties of the 48 contiguous United States
based on 1990 county boundaries
- US48.dat:
1990 US Census data for the 48 contiguous United States
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AK-HiRes.gsb-WY-HiRes.gsb: high-resolution year 1990
county boundaries
US County 2000
- AK2000.gsb-WY2000.gsb:
2000 county boundary files, primary IDs are FIPS codes
- AK2000.dat-WY2000.dat:
2000 US Census data for each county
- US48.gsb:
map of the 48 contiguous United States based on 2000
county boundaries
- US48.dat:
2000 US Census data for the 48 contiguous United States
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AK2000_HiRes.gsb-WY2000_HiRes.gsb: high-resolution year
2000 county boundaries
- US48_HiRes.gsb:
high-resolution map of the 48 contiguous United States
based on 2000 county boundaries
US Miscellany
- Climate_divisions.gsb:
US climatic divisions
- CMSA.gsb: Consolidated
Metropolitan Statistical Areas for the United States
- CMSA&MSA.gsb:
Consolidated Metropolitan Statistical Areas and
Metropolitan Statistical Areas for the United States
- CD106.gsb: US
Congressional districts for the 106th Congress
- CD108.gsb: US
Congressional districts for the 108th Congress
- HI_islands.gsb: Hawaiian
islands with the island names for primary IDs
- PMSA&MSA.gsb: Primary
Metropolitan Statistical Areas and Metropolitan
Statistical Areas for the United States
- US48.gsb: Contiguous 48
United States
- US50.gsb: United States
map in Unprojected Lat/Long, Alaska and Hawaii in the
correct locations
- US50.dat: 1990 Census
data for each state
- US502000.dat: 2000
Census data for each state
- US50alb.gsb: United
States map in Albers projection, Alaska and Hawaii by
Southwest US
- US50ll.gsb: United
States map in Unprojected Lat/Long, Alaska and Hawaii by
Southwest US
- UScity.gsb: point
location of select US cities
- USintll.gsb: major US
interstates, highways, and tollways
- USStatePlane.gsb: US
zones for the state plane projection
- USTimeZones.gsb: time
zone boundaries for the US
US
PLSS
This folder contains the
townships of the Public Land Survey System (PLSS). There
is one file for each of the thirty states covered by the
PLSS.
US
Roads
This folder contains the
major roads and highways of the United States. There is
one file per state, plus one file of the whole United
States.
World
Administrative
This folder contains 1st
level administrative boundaries for over 110 countries
around the world. The administrative boundaries may define
states, provinces, regions, or other administrative areas
within a country's borders.
-
Afghanistan.gsb-Zimbabwe.gsb: administrative boundaries
for various countries
World
Miscellany
- Africa.gsb: African
countries
- Antarcal.gsb:
Antarctica Albers projection
- Antarcll.gsb:
Antarctica Unprojected Lat/Long
- Asia.gsb: Asian
countries
- Camerica.gsb: Central
American countries
- Europe.gsb: European
countries
- Namerica.gsb: North
American countries
- Oceania.gsb: Australia,
New Zealand, and neighboring island nations
- Pacificn.gsb: Pacific
view of the world, negative coordinates from -360 to 0
- Pacificp.gsb: Pacific
view of the world, positive coordinates from 0 to 360
- Russia.gsb: Russia
boundary
- Russia-proj.gsb: Russia
boundary split at 180 degrees
- Samerica.gsb: South
American countries
- World.gsb: all
countries in the world
- World-proj.gsb: all
countries in the world, Russia and Alaska split at 180
degrees
- World.dat: 1990 data
for countries
- Worldcap.gsb: point
locations of country capitals
ZIP3
- AKzip3.gsb-WYzip3.gsb:
three-digit ZIP code sectional centers for the United
States
ZIP5
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AKzip5-a.gsb-WYzip5-a.gsb: five-digit ZIP code area
boundaries for the United States
-
AKzip5-p.gsb-WYzip5-p.gsb: US Post Office point
locations for five-digit ZIP codes
Importing
Boundaries from Other Applications
MapViewer can import
boundary information in several different vector and
bitmap formats. These include:
- Golden Software GSM,
GSB, BLN, PLT, GSI
- Atlas BNA
- USGS DDF (SDTS), DLG,
LGO, LGS
- AutoCAD DXF
- Windows Metafile EMF,
WMF, CLP
- Bitmap formats include
TIF, BMP, TGA, PCX, GIF, DCX, JPG, PCT, WPG, PNG
- Georeferenced bitmaps
- ESRI SHP, E00
- MapInfo MIF
Also, you can read
coordinates from worksheet data files to place point
locations on the map. Data files containing any type of
coordinates can be used to indicate points.
Worksheet
MapViewer creates thematic
maps by linking worksheet data to areas or points on the
map. If you need to display your own data on a map,
MapViewer includes a full-featured worksheet that allows
you to display, enter, edit, and save your data. You can
read data files in many formats, including XLS, SLK, WKx,
CSV, TXT, DAT, MDB, DBF, DB, BNA, and BLN. In the
worksheet you can transform, sort, and calculate
statistics on your data.
Additional
Features
There are many additional
features that MapViewer provides, including:
- Create insets to show a
portion of a map at a different scale.
- Export your map to HTML
with working hyperlinks.
- Use the geocoding
function to convert US street addresses to
latitude/longitude coordinates suitable for making a pin
map.
- Create Thiessen Polygons
from a point data set to define regions of influence.
- Add graticules, legends,
and scale bars to your map
- Limit the map to
selected coordinates or a selected area
- Query the map and show
the results in several ways
- Use one of the several
map managers to easily keep track of your map
- Several reports such as
centroid report, data for the selected object, and a
general map report are available
- Measure the distance
between selected Primary IDs or click on the map to find
distances
- Annotate your maps with
text using any typeface, size, or color
- Hyperlink locations on
your map to a web site or any type of file
- Display information
associated with areas, curves, and points on your map.
- Display place names,
data information, or any type of text on your maps
- Create circles, squares,
rectangles, polylines, polygons, or symbols at any
location on the map
- Create multi-layered
maps to present more information
- Zoom in on areas to show
different levels of detail
- Create custom colors,
line styles, and fill patterns
- Create maps using any
coordinate system and recalibrate maps to use any
coordinate system
- Use one of the 25+ map
projections
- Convert areas to curves,
curves to areas, and drawing objects to areas
- Edit polylines with
break curve, reshape, and thin boundary
- View the data and the
map simultaneously
- Move or copy map
features between map layers
- Turn on or off the
display of any map or page features
- Many more!
System
Requirements
- Operating System:
Windows 2000, XP, Vista, and higher
- 80 MB of free hard disk
space
- 800 X 600 x 256 color
minimum monitor resolution
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