ESM: import ImageryTileLayer from "@arcgis/core/layers/ImageryTileLayer.js";
CDN: const ImageryTileLayer = await $arcgis.import("@arcgis/core/layers/ImageryTileLayer.js");
Class: @arcgis/core/layers/ImageryTileLayer
Since: ArcGIS Maps SDK for JavaScript 4.16
ImageryTileLayer presents raster data from a tiled image service. Binary imagery tiles are projected, processed, and rendered on the client-side. Tiled access is fast and scalable.
Creating an ImageryTileLayerImageryTileLayers may be created from one of the following sources:
You can create an ImageryTileLayer from ArcGIS Enterprise or ArcGIS Online tiled image services in one of two ways:
// reference an tiled image service via the ImageryTileLayer.url
const ImageryTileLayer = await $arcgis.import("@arcgis/core/layers/ImageryTileLayer.js");
const layer = new ImageryTileLayer({
url: "https://sampleserver6.arcgisonline.com/arcgis/rest/services/Toronto/ImageServer"
});
map.add(layer);
const layer = new ImageryTileLayer({
portalItem: {
id: "1fb9eae319e54c74a13e2a8135015c41"
}
});
map.add(layer);
From Cloud Optimized GeoTIFF (COG) (beta)
At version 4.25, an ImageryTileLayer can be created by setting the url property to point to a Cloud Optimized GeoTIFF (COG) file. COG is a regular GeoTIFF file, hosted on a HTTP file server, with internal settings that enable efficient workflows on the cloud. This may be a useful option when your imagery workflow generates a temporary image, and you need to view the image without having to publish it as an image service. In addition to the geo/tiff specifications, the JS API also supports auxiliary metadata (aux.xml) containing statistics and histograms, and attribute tables (vat.dbf) if the COG has categorical information such as land use type. Review the ImageryTileLayer with COG sample to see COG in action.
Notes
At this release, only COGS with the following settings are supported:
NONE
, JPEG
, DEFLATE
, LZW
, LERC
compressions.const layer = new ImageryTileLayer({
url: "https://ss6imagery.arcgisonline.com/imagery_sample/landsat8/Bolivia_LC08_L1TP_001069_20190719_MS.tiff",
bandIds: [3, 2, 1]
});
From CoverageJSON (beta)
At version 4.29, an ImageryTileLayer can be created from CoverageJSON. CoverageJSON is an OGC format for storing data such as grids, time and elevation profiles. CoverageJSON with grid domain and NdArrays are supported. Once the layer is loaded, the data source is stored in memory.
An ImageryTileLayer can be created from CoverageJSON in one of two ways:
const layer = new ImageryTileLayer({
url: "link-to-coveragejson.covjson"
});
map.add(layer);
const layer = new ImageryTileLayer({
source:{
type: "Coverage",
domain: {
type: "Domain",
domainType: "Grid",
axes: {
x: { values: [-10, -5, 0] },
y: { values: [40, 50] },
t: { values: ["2010-01-01T00:12:20Z"] }
},
referencing: [
{
coordinates: ["x", "y"],
system: {
type: "GeographicCRS",
id: "http://www.opengis.net/def/crs/OGC/1.3/CRS84"
}
},
{
coordinates: ["t"],
system: {
type: "TemporalRS",
calendar: "Gregorian"
}
}
]
},
parameters: {
...
},
ranges: {
LC: {
type: "NdArray",
dataType: "integer",
axisNames: ["t", "y", "x"],
shape: [1, 2, 3],
values: [1, 1, null, 2, 1, 2]
}
}
}
});
map.add(layer);
Image tiles
There are four types of image service tiles that can be leveraged by ImageryTileLayer:
Multidimensional data is commonly used in the scientific community to store atmospheric, oceanographic, and earth science data. Temperature, humidity, wind speed, and direction are all examples of the data that can be stored as variables in a multidimensional array. As illustrated in the graphic below, multidimensional data can show sea temperature (variable) for a specific area at multiple time and depth dimensions. This information is stored as slices, where the service has a slice for each unique combination of dimension values and variable names.
ImageryTileLayer's multidimensional data information can be accessed through the layer's serviceRasterInfo.multidimensionalInfo property. This information can then be used for analysis and visualization. For example, in the following snippet, the time dimension values associated with the wind_magdir
variable are read from the layer's serviceRasterInfo.multidimensionalInfo
property once the layer is loaded. Then, time values are used to configure the TimeSlider widget to animate the wind speed and direction data over time.
view.whenLayerView(layer).then(() => {
// get all time dimension values from the service, create an array of dates
const windEpochDates = layer.serviceRasterInfo.multidimensionalInfo.variables[0].dimensions[0].values;
const windDates = windEpochDates.map((item) => new Date(item));
// time slider widget initialization
// users can visualize daily wind information for all the time dimension available
const timeSlider = new TimeSlider({
mode: "instant",
view: view,
fullTimeExtent: {
start: new Date(windDates[0]), // Jan 1, 2011,
end: new Date(windDates[windDates.length - 1]) // Dec 31, 2011
},
// set the stops to match the dates coming from time dimension
stops: {
dates: windDates
}
});
});
To display data based on a specific slice of a variable and dimensions, set the layer's multidimensionalDefinition property to an array of desired dimensional definitions. For example, the following snippet shows how to update the layer's multidimensionalDefinition
to display data based on a given StdZ
(depth) value in response to a slider thumb change event.
depthSlider.on(["thumb-change", "thumb-drag"], (delta) => updateRenderer("StdZ", value));
const updateRenderer = promiseUtils.debounce(function (dimensionName, sliderData) {
// set the depth or StdZ dimension of the layer corresponding to the slider's thumb location
const multidimensionalDefinition = layer.multidimensionalDefinition;
const depthDef = multidimensionalDefinition.find((def) => def.dimensionName === "StdZ");
if (dimensionName === "StdZ") {
if (depthDef.values[0] === sliderData.value) {
return;
}
depthDef.values[0] = sliderData.value;
}
layer.multidimensionalDefinition = multidimensionalDefinition;
});
The multidimensionalSubset can be set on a layer to expose only a subset of multidimensional data that satisfies the requirements. For example, if you have one year of wind speed and direction data collected daily, but only want to expose a subset of the data for every day of October, then you can set the multidimensionalSubset
property on the layer as shown in the code snippet below.
// Wind speed and direction info for every day of Oct will be available on the layer.
// Users will not be able to access data that falls outside of Oct.
const multidimensionalSubset = new MultidimensionalSubset({
subsetDefinitions: [
{
variableName: "wind_magdir",
dimensionName: "StdTime",
values: [1317427200000, 1320019200000], // 10/1/14 - 10/31/14
isSlice: true
}
]
});
layer.multidimensionalSubset = multidimensionalSubset;
The following image illustrates when the multidimensionalDefinition
and multidimensionalSubset
properties are both set on the layer. Slices with the purple borders are slices included in the layer's multidimensionalSubset
. The slice with the red border is the multidimensionalDefinition
of the layer and what is visible on the map. The layer's multidimensionalDefinition
must fall within the multidimensionalSubset
, otherwise nothing will be displayed in the map.
new ImageryTileLayer(properties)
Parameter
optionalSee the properties for a list of all the properties that may be passed into the constructor.
Example
// Typical usage
let layer = new ImageryTileLayer({
url: "https://sampleserver6.arcgisonline.com/arcgis/rest/services/Toronto/ImageServer"
});
Show inherited properties Hide inherited properties
Property DetailsSince: ArcGIS Maps SDK for JavaScript 4.31 ImageryTileLayer since 4.25, activePresetRendererName added at 4.31.
The active preset renderer name. Setting this value will set the layer's renderer to a renderer defined in the presetRenderers. If null
, the layer's renderer will revert to the default or previously set renderer. If the layer's renderer is set then the activePresetRendererName will be null
.
Example
// to use a preset renderer
layer.activePresetRenderer = "temperatureRenderer";
Defines a band combination using 0-based band indexes.
blendMode String
Blend modes are used to blend layers together to create an interesting effect in a layer, or even to produce what seems like a new layer. Unlike the method of using transparency which can result in a washed-out top layer, blend modes can create a variety of very vibrant and intriguing results by blending a layer with the layer(s) below it.
When blending layers, a top layer
is a layer that has a blend mode applied. All layers underneath the top layer are background layers
. The default blending mode is normal
where the top layer is simply displayed over the background layer. While this default behavior is perfectly acceptable, the use of blend modes on layers open up a world of endless possibilities to generate creative maps.
The layers in a GroupLayer are blended together in isolation from the rest of the map.
In the following screenshots, the vintage shaded relief layer is displayed over a firefly world imagery layer. The color
blend mode is applied to the vintage shaded relief and the result looks like a new layer.
The following factors will affect the blend result:
average
blend mode is often similar to the effect of setting the layer's opacity to 50%.
Lighten blend modes:
The following blend modes create lighter results than all layers. In lighten blend modes, pure black colors in the top layer become transparent allowing the background layer to show through. White in the top layer will stay unchanged. Any color that is lighter than pure black is going to lighten colors in the top layer to varying degrees all way to pure white.
Lighten blend modes can be useful when lightening dark colors of the top layer or removing black colors from the result. The plus
, lighten
and screen
modes can be used to brighten layers that have faded or dark colors on a dark background.
darken
blend mode. lighter Colors in top and background layers are multiplied by their alphas (layer opacity and layer's data opacity. Then the resulting colors are added together. All overlapping midrange colors are lightened in the top layer. The opacity of layer and layer's data will affect the blend result. plus Colors in top and background layers are added together. All overlapping midrange colors are lightened in the top layer. This mode is also known as add
or linear-dodge
. screen Multiplies inverted colors in top and background layers then inverts the colors again. The resulting colors will be lighter than the original color with less contrast. Screen can produce many different levels of brightening depending on the luminosity values of the top layer. Can be thought of as the opposite of the multiply
mode. color-dodge Divides colors in background layer by the inverted top layer. This lightens the background layer depending on the value of the top layer. The brighter the top layer, the more its color affects the background layer. Decreases the contrast between top and background layers resulting in saturated mid-tones and blown highlights.
Darken blend modes:
The following blend modes create darker results than all layers. In darken blend modes, pure white in the top layer will become transparent allowing the background layer to show through. Black in the top layer will stay unchanged. Any color that is darker than pure white is going to darken a top layer to varying degrees all the way to pure black.
The multiply
blend mode is often used to highlight shadows, show contrast, or accentuate an aspect of a map. For example, you can use multiply
blend mode on a topographic map displayed over hillshade when you want to have your elevation show through the topographic layer. See the intro to layer blending sample.
The multiply
and darken
modes can be used to have dark labels of the basemap to show through top layers. See the darken blending sample.
The color-burn
mode works well with colorful top and background layers since it increases saturation in mid-tones. It increases the contrast by tinting pixels in overlapping areas in top and bottom layers more towards the top layer color. Use this blend mode, when you want an effect with more contrast than multiply
or darken
.
The following screenshots show how the multiply
blend mode used for creating a physical map of the world that shows both boundaries and elevation.
Contrast blend modes:
The following blend modes create contrast by both lightening the lighter areas and darkening the darker areas in the top layer by using lightening or darkening blend modes to create the blend. The contrast blend modes will lighten the colors lighter than 50% gray ([128,128,128]), and darken the colors darker than 50% gray. 50% gray will be transparent in the top layer. Each mode can create a variety of results depending on the colors of top and background layers being blended together. The overlay
blend mode makes its calculations based on the brightness of the colors in the background layer while all of the other contrast blend modes make their calculations based on the brightness of the top layer. Some of these modes are designed to simulate the effect of shining a light through the top layer, effectively projecting upon the layers beneath it.
Contrast blend modes can be used to increase the contrast and saturation to have more vibrant colors and give a punch to your layers. For example, you can duplicate a layer and set overlay
blend mode on the top layer to increase the contrast and tones of your layer. You can also add a polygon layer with a white fill symbol over a dark imagery layer and apply soft-light
blend mode to increase the brightness in the imagery layer.
The following screenshots show an effect of the overlay
blend mode on a GraphicsLayer. The left image shows when the buffer graphics layer has the normal
blend mode. As you can see, the gray color for the buffer polygon is blocking the intersecting census tracts. The right image shows when the overlay
blend mode is applied to the buffer graphics layer. The overlay
blend mode darkens or lightens the gray buffer polygon depending on the colors of the background layer while the census tracts layer is shining through. See this in action.
multiply
and screen
modes to darken and lighten colors in the top layer with the background layer always shining through. The result is darker color values in the background layer intensify the top layer, while lighter colors in the background layer wash out overlapping areas in the top layer. soft-light Applies a half strength screen
mode to lighter areas and half strength multiply
mode to darken areas of the top layer. You can think of the soft-light
as a softer version of the overlay
mode. hard-light Multiplies or screens the colors, depending on colors of the top layer. The effect is similar to shining a harsh spotlight on the top layer. vivid-light Uses a combination of color-burn
or color-dodge
by increasing or decreasing the contrast, depending on colors in the top layer.
Component blend modes:
The following blend modes use primary color components, which are hue, saturation and luminosity to blend top and background layers. You can add a feature layer with a simple renderer over any layer and set hue
, saturation
, color
or luminosity
blend mode on this layer. With this technique, you create a brand new looking map.
The following screenshots show where the topo layer is blended with world hillshade layer with luminosity
blend mode. The result is a drastically different looking map which preserves the brightness of the topo layer while adapting the hue and saturation of the hillshade layer.
color
blend mode. color Creates an effect with the hue and saturation of the top layer and the luminosity of the background layer. Can be thought of as the opposite of luminosity
blend mode.
Composite blend modes:
The following blend modes can be used to mask the contents of top, background or both layers.
Destination
modes are used to mask the data of the top layer with the data of the background layer.Source
modes are used to mask the data of the background layer with the data of the top layer.The destination-in
blend mode can be used to show areas of focus such as earthquakes, animal migration, or point-source pollution by revealing the underlying map, providing a bird's eye view of the phenomenon. Check out multiple blending and groupLayer blending samples to see composite blend modes in action.
The following screenshots show feature and imagery layers on the left side on their own in the order they are drawn in the view. The imagery layer that contains land cover classification rasters. The feature layer contains 2007 county crops data. The right image shows the result of layer blending where destination-in
blendMode is set on the imagery layer. As you can see, the effect is very different from the original layers. The blended result shows areas of cultivated crops only (where both imagery and feature layers overlap).
Invert blend modes:
The following blend modes either invert or cancel out colors depending on colors of the background layer. These blend modes look for variations between top and background layers. For example, you can use difference
or exclusion
blend modes on two imagery layers of forest covers to visualize how forest covers changed from one year to another.
The invert
blend mode can be used to turn any light basemap into a dark basemap to accommodate those who work in low-light conditions. The following screenshots show how setting the invert
blend mode set on a feature layer with a simple renderer turns the world terrain basemap into a dark themed basemap in no time.
difference
blend mode, except that the resulting image is lighter overall. Overlapping areas with lighter color values are lightened, while darker overlapping color values become transparent. minus Subtracts colors of the top layer from colors of the background layer making the blend result darker. In the case of negative values, black is displayed. invert Inverts the background colors wherever the top and background layers overlap. The invert blend mode inverts the layer similar to a photographic negative. reflect This blend mode creates effects as if you added shiny objects or areas of light in the layer. Black pixels in the background layer are ignored as if they were transparent.
Possible Values:"average" |"color-burn" |"color-dodge" |"color" |"darken" |"destination-atop" |"destination-in" |"destination-out" |"destination-over" |"difference" |"exclusion" |"hard-light" |"hue" |"invert" |"lighten" |"lighter" |"luminosity" |"minus" |"multiply" |"normal" |"overlay" |"plus" |"reflect" |"saturation" |"screen" |"soft-light" |"source-atop" |"source-in" |"source-out" |"vivid-light" |"xor"
The copyright text as defined by the service.
customParameters Object
Since: ArcGIS Maps SDK for JavaScript 4.20 ImageryTileLayer since 4.25, customParameters added at 4.20.
A list of custom parameters appended to the URL of all resources fetched by the layer. It's an object with key-value pairs where value is a string. The layer's refresh()
method needs to be called if the customParameters are updated at runtime.
Example
// send a custom parameter to your special service
let layer = new ImageryTileLayer({
url: serviceUrl,
customParameters: {
"key": "my-special-key"
}
});
Inherited
Property declaredClass Stringreadonly
The name of the class. The declared class name is formatted as esri.folder.className
.
Since: ArcGIS Maps SDK for JavaScript 4.18 ImageryTileLayer since 4.25, effect added at 4.18.
Effect provides various filter functions that can be performed on the layer to achieve different visual effects similar to how image filters work. This powerful capability allows you to apply css filter-like functions to layers to create custom visual effects to enhance the cartographic quality of your maps. This is done by applying the desired effect to the layer's effect
property as a string or an array of objects to set scale dependent effects.
Notes
featureEffect
, effect, opacity and blendMode.Known Limitations
cluster
enabled.Examples
// the following effect will be applied to the layer at all scales
// brightness will be applied first, then hue-rotate followed by contrast
// changing order of the effects will change the final result
layer.effect = "brightness(5) hue-rotate(270deg) contrast(200%)";
// set a scale dependent bloom effect on the layer
layer.effect = [
{
scale: 36978595,
value: "drop-shadow(3px, 3px, 4px)"
},
{
scale: 18489297,
value: "drop-shadow(2px, 2px, 3px)"
},
{
scale: 4622324,
value: "drop-shadow(1px, 1px, 2px)"
}
];
The full extent of the layer. By default, this is worldwide. This property may be used to set the extent of the view to match a layer's extent so that its features appear to fill the view. See the sample snippet below.
Example
// Once the layer loads, set the view's extent to the layer's fullextent
layer.when(function(){
view.extent = layer.fullExtent;
});
Inherited
Property id String
The unique ID assigned to the layer. If not set by the developer, it is automatically generated when the layer is loaded.
interpolation String
Defines how to interpolate pixel values. By default, this will be set to the service's resampling method, if it has one. If the service does not have a default resampling method, the bilinear
resampling will be used in most cases, and nearest
interpolation type will be used for thematic data source.
Possible Values:"nearest" |"bilinear" |"cubic" |"majority"
legendEnabled Boolean
Indicates whether the layer will be included in the legend.
Inherited
Property listMode String
Indicates how the layer should display in the LayerList widget. The possible values are listed below.
Possible Values:"show" |"hide" |"hide-children"
The Error object returned if an error occurred while loading.
Inherited
Property loadStatus Stringreadonly
Represents the status of a load operation.
Value Description not-loaded The object's resources have not loaded. loading The object's resources are currently loading. loaded The object's resources have loaded without errors. failed The object's resources failed to load. See loadError for more details.Possible Values:"not-loaded" |"loading" |"failed" |"loaded"
Default Value:"not-loaded"
Inherited
Property loadWarnings Object[]readonly
A list of warnings which occurred while loading.
Inherited
Property loaded Booleanreadonly
Indicates whether the layer's resources have loaded. When true
, all the properties of the object can be accessed.
maxScale Number
The maximum scale (most zoomed in) at which the layer is visible in the view. If the map is zoomed in beyond this scale, the layer will not be visible. A value of 0
means the layer does not have a maximum scale. The maxScale value should always be smaller than the minScale value, and greater than or equal to the service specification.
Examples
// The layer will not be visible when the view is zoomed in beyond a scale of 1:1,000
layer.maxScale = 1000;
// The layer's visibility is not restricted to a maximum scale.
layer.maxScale = 0;
minScale Number
The minimum scale (most zoomed out) at which the layer is visible in the view. If the map is zoomed out beyond this scale, the layer will not be visible. A value of 0
means the layer does not have a minimum scale. The minScale value should always be larger than the maxScale value, and lesser than or equal to the service specification.
Examples
// The layer will not be visible when the view is zoomed out beyond a scale of 1:3,000,000
layer.minScale = 3000000;
// The layer's visibility is not restricted to a minimum scale.
layer.minScale = 0;
Since: ArcGIS Maps SDK for JavaScript 4.20 ImageryTileLayer since 4.25, multidimensionalDefinition added at 4.20.
The multidimensional definitions associated with the layer. Filters the layer by slicing data along defined variables and dimensions such as time, depth, altitude, etc. For example, you can display a particular variable such as temperature or salinity measured at a fixed dimension (e.g. time, depth).
Examples
// set the `multidimensionalDefinition` to visualize a sea water
// temperature at -5000m on April 7th 2014.
const dimension = [
{
variableName: "temperature",
dimensionName: "Std_Time",
values: [1396828800000]
},
{
variableName: "temperature",
dimensionName:"Std_Z",
values:[-5000]
}
];
layer.multidimensionalDefinition = dimension;
// get the layer's multidimensionalDefinition and locate the
// Salinity dimension and filter the data by salinity.
const multidimensionalDefinition = layer.multidimensionalDefinition;
const variableName = "Salinity";
// filter the data by salinity dimension
multidimensionalDefinition.forEach((def) => def.variableName = variableName);
layer.multidimensionalDefinition = multidimensionalDefinition;
// update the statistics of the layer's stretch renderer.
const renderer = layer.renderer.clone();
const dimensions = layer.serviceRasterInfo.multidimensionalInfo;
// get the salinity variable's statistics
const salinity = dimensions.variables.find((variable) => variable.name === variableName);
renderer.statistics = salinity.statistics;
layer.renderer = renderer;
Since: ArcGIS Maps SDK for JavaScript 4.25 ImageryTileLayer since 4.25, multidimensionalSubset added at 4.25.
Represents a multidimensional subset of raster data. This includes subsets of both variables and dimensions. When the multidimensionalSubset is defined on a layer, the multidimensionalDefinition must be within the defined multidimensionalSubset, otherwise nothing will be displayed.
Example
// set a multidimensionalSubset on the imagery tile layer
// so that users can only access wind magnitude and direction data
// between Jan 1 - 19, 2011.
const multidimensionalSubset = new MultidimensionalSubset({
subsetDefinitions: [
{
variableName: "wind_magdir",
dimensionName: "StdTime",
values: [1293876000000, 1295395200000], // 1/1/11 - 11/19/11
isSlice: false
}
]
});
layer.multidimensionalSubset = multidimensionalSubset;
Inherited
Property opacity Number
The opacity of the layer. This value can range between 1
and 0
, where 0
is 100 percent transparent and 1
is completely opaque.
Example
// Makes the layer 50% transparent
layer.opacity = 0.5;
Since: ArcGIS Maps SDK for JavaScript 4.27 Layer since 4.0, parent added at 4.27.
The parent to which the layer belongs.
persistenceEnabled Boolean
Since: ArcGIS Maps SDK for JavaScript 4.28 ImageryTileLayer since 4.25, persistenceEnabled added at 4.28.
popupEnabled Boolean
Indicates whether to display popups when features in the layer are clicked.
The popup template for the layer. When set on the layer, the popupTemplate allows users to access attributes and display their values using text and/or charts in the view's popup when a pixel is clicked. See this sample for an example of how PopupTemplate interacts with an ImageryTileLayer.
A default popup template is automatically used if no popupTemplate
has been defined when Popup.defaultPopupTemplateEnabled is set to true
.
The portal item from which the layer is loaded. If the portal item references a feature or scene service, then you can specify a single layer to load with the layerId property.
Examples
// While this example uses FeatureLayer, this same pattern can be
// used for other layers that may be loaded from portalItem ids.
const layer = new FeatureLayer({
portalItem: { // autocasts as new PortalItem()
id: "caa9bd9da1f4487cb4989824053bb847"
} // the first layer in the service is returned
});
// Set hostname when using an on-premise portal (default is ArcGIS Online)
// esriConfig.portalUrl = "http://myHostName.esri.com/arcgis";
// While this example uses FeatureLayer, this same pattern can be
// used for SceneLayers.
const layer = new FeatureLayer({
portalItem: { // autocasts as new PortalItem()
id: "8d26f04f31f642b6828b7023b84c2188"
},
// loads the third item in the given feature service
layerId: 2
});
// Initialize GeoJSONLayer by referencing a portalItem id pointing to geojson file.
const layer = new GeoJSONLayer({
portalItem: new PortalItem({
id: "81e769cd7031482797e1b0768f23c7e1",
// optionally define the portal, of the item.
// if not specified, the default portal defined is used.
// see https://developers.arcgis.com/javascript/latest/api-reference/esri-config.html#portalUrl
portal: new Portal({
url: "https://jsapi.maps.arcgis.com/"
})
}
});
// This snippet loads a table hosted in ArcGIS Online.
const table = new FeatureLayer({
portalItem: { // autocasts as esri/portal/PortalItem
id: "123f4410054b43d7a0bacc1533ceb8dc"
}
});
// Before adding the table to the map, it must first be loaded and confirm it is the right type.
table.load().then(() => {
if (table.isTable) {
map.tables.add(table);
}
});
// While this example uses FeatureLayer, this same pattern can be
// used for other layers that may be loaded from portalItem ids.
const layer = new FeatureLayer({
portalItem: { // autocasts as esri/portal/PortalItem
id: "caa9bd9da1f4487cb4989824053bb847",
// Set an API key to access a secure portal item configured with API key authentication.
apiKey: "APIKEY"
}
});
Since: ArcGIS Maps SDK for JavaScript 4.31 ImageryTileLayer since 4.25, presetRenderers added at 4.31.
A list of preset renderers that defines a preferred renderer for a given multidimensional variable, a given raster function template, or an additional generic predefined renderer.
rasterFields Field[]readonly
Since: ArcGIS Maps SDK for JavaScript 4.20 ImageryTileLayer since 4.25, rasterFields added at 4.20.
A complete list of fields that consists of service pixel value and vector fields. This list is used for layer's popupTemplate.
It is essential in many imagery workflows to show pixel values and related categorical information (if applicable) in a popup. To meet this requirement, there're additional raster fields used in image service popups, representing pixel values and corresponding attributes if the service has additional rasterAttributeTable resource. These raster fields are prefixed with Raster.
to indicate that they are special fields and avoid any potential conflict with fields from service info.
Below is a list of raster fields that return different types of pixel values and their descriptions.
Service pixel valueThe Raster.ServicePixelValue
field returns a pixel value based on the layer's rasterFunction at the identifying location. The Raster.ServicePixelValue.Raw
field returns a pixel value from the source at the identifying location without a raster function. These fields exist for all image services.
The Raster.Magnitude
and Raster.Direction
fields return magnitude and direction values from a multidimensional dataset with a vector field.
Since 4.32. For multidimensional data, the Raster.Variable
field returns current variable used by the layer. Additional dimension fields are used to return corresponding dimension values, e.g. Raster.Dim.StdTime
, Raster.Dim.StdZ
. When a dimension is ranged, there will be a corresponding maximum dimension value field. For instance, a multidimensional data record representing average sea temperature during 02/12/2025 and 02/13/2025. In this example, Raster.Dim.StdTime
is 02/12/2025, Raster.Dim.StdTime.Max
is 02/13/2025.
Example
layer.when(() => {
// print out field names returned in layer.rasterFields
layer.rasterFields.forEach((field) => {
console.log(field.name);
});
});
Since: ArcGIS Maps SDK for JavaScript 4.26 ImageryTileLayer since 4.25, rasterFunction added at 4.26.
The client-side raster functions are operations that apply processing directly to the source image pixels. The calculations are only applied to the source pixels that are visible in the map as you pan and zoom within the map.
There are many of out-of-the-box raster functions that can be used for radiometric enhancement, data management, visualization, and analysis. These raster functions can be applied individually or combined to create function chains to be shared as raster function templates (RFTs). Refer to Client-side raster function app to see a list of client-side raster functions.
Use helper functions from the rasterFunctionUtils module when creating raster functions that apply to ImageryTileLayers.
The rasterFunctionConstants module provides constant values that can be used as parameters of different raster functions when setting the layer's rasterFunction
.
Examples
// apply NDVI and colormap raster function to an imagery tile layer
// use rasterFunctionUtils convenience methods to create raster functions
const ndvi = rasterFunctionUtils.bandArithmeticNDVI({
nirBandId: 4,
redBandId: 3,
scientificOutput: false
});
const colormap = rasterFunctionUtils.colormap({
colorRampName: "NDVI3",
raster: ndvi
});
layer.rasterFunction = colormap;
function createRasterFunction() {
// processed bands from the imagery tile layer
const rasters = [weightedRoadDistance, weightedProtectedStatus, weightedTerrainRuggedness, weightedLandCover, 0.25];
const sumFunction = new RasterFunction({
functionName: "Local",
functionArguments: {
operation: rasterFunctionTypes.cellStatisticalOperation.sum,
rasters
},
outputPixelType: "u8"
});
const colormapFunction = new RasterFunction({
functionName: "Colormap",
functionArguments: {
colormap: [[0, 0, 0, 255], [1, 56, 168, 0], [2, 141, 212, 0], [3, 255, 255, 0], [4, 255, 128, 0], [5, 255, 0, 0]],
raster: sumFunction
},
outputPixelType: "u8"
});
return colormapFunction;
}
// clear renderer to use the default renderer for the new function
layer.renderer = null;
layer.rasterFunction = createRasterFunction();
The client-side renderer assigned to the layer. The renderer defines how to visualize pixels in the tile imagery layer. Depending on the renderer type, the pixels may be stretched across the color ramp, classified, have different symbols based on values, or show shaded reliefs.
Since: ArcGIS Maps SDK for JavaScript 4.29 ImageryTileLayer since 4.25, serviceRasterInfo added at 4.29.
Raster information retrieved from tiled imagery data source.
Since: ArcGIS Maps SDK for JavaScript 4.29 ImageryTileLayer since 4.25, source added at 4.29.
The data source for client-side ImageryTileLayer can be a coverage JSON object or PixelData. Once the layer is loaded, the data source is stored in memory. See Creating ImageryTileLayer from CoverageJSON section for more information.
sourceJSON Object
The tiled image service's metadata JSON exposed by the ArcGIS REST API. While most commonly used properties are exposed on the ImageryTileLayer class directly, this property gives access to all information returned by the tiled image service. This property is useful if working in an application built using an older version of the API which requires access to image service properties from a more recent version.
Since: ArcGIS Maps SDK for JavaScript 4.33 ImageryTileLayer since 4.25, spatialReference added at 4.33.
The spatial reference of the layer.
The tiling scheme information for the layer.
Since: ArcGIS Maps SDK for JavaScript 4.22 ImageryTileLayer since 4.25, timeExtent added at 4.22.
The layer's time extent. When the layer's useViewTime is false
, the layer instructs the view to show data from the layer based on this time extent. If the useViewTime
is true
, and both layer and view time extents are set, then features that fall within the intersection of the view and layer time extents will be displayed. For example, if the layer's time extent is set to display features between 1970 and 1975 and the view has a time extent set to 1972-1980, the effective time on the feature layer will be 1972-1975.
Examples
if (!layer.useViewTime) {
if (layer.timeExtent) {
console.log("Current timeExtent:", layer.timeExtent.start, " - ", layer.timeExtent.end}
} else {
console.log("The layer will display data within the view's timeExtent.");
console.log("Current view.timeExtent:", view.timeExtent.start, " - ", view.timeExtent.end}
}
}
// set the timeExtent on the layer and useViewTime false
// In this case, the layer will honor its timeExtent and ignore
// the view's timeExtent
const layer = new ImageryTileLayer({
url: "https://tiledimageservices.arcgis.com/V6ZHFr6zdgNZuVG0/arcgis/rest/services/NLDAS2011_daily_wind_magdir/ImageServer",
timeExtent: {
start: new Date(2014, 4, 18),
end: new Date(2014, 4, 19)
},
useViewTime: false
});
// timeExtent is set on the layer and the view
// In this case, the layer will display features that fall
// within the intersection of view and layer time extents
// features within Jan 1, 1976 - Jan 1, 1981 will be displayed
const view = new MapView({
timeExtent: {
start: new Date(1976, 0, 1),
end: new Date(2002, 0, 1)
}
});
const layer = new FeatureLayer({
url: myUrl,
timeExtent: {
start: new Date(1974, 0, 1),
end: new Date(1981, 0, 1)
}
});
Since: ArcGIS Maps SDK for JavaScript 4.22 ImageryTileLayer since 4.25, timeInfo added at 4.22.
TimeInfo provides information such as date fields that store start and end time for each feature and the fullTimeExtent for the layer.
Since: ArcGIS Maps SDK for JavaScript 4.22 ImageryTileLayer since 4.25, timeOffset added at 4.22.
A temporary offset of the time data based on a certain TimeInterval. This allows users to overlay features from two or more time-aware layers with different time extents. For example, if a layer has data recorded for the year 1970, an offset value of 2 years would temporarily shift the data to 1972. You can then overlay this data with data recorded in 1972. A time offset can be used for display purposes only. The query and selection are not affected by the offset.
Example
// Offset a CSV Layer containing hurricanes from 2015 so that they appear in 2019 (+4 years).
let layer = new CSVLayer({
url: `hurricanes-and-storms-2015.csv`,
timeOffset: {
value: 4,
unit: "years"
},
timeInfo: {
startField: "ISO_time"
},
renderer: {
type: "simple",
symbol: {
type: "simple-marker",
size: 6,
color: "red",
outline: {
width: 0.5,
color: "black"
}
}
}
});
The title of the layer used to identify it in places such as the Legend and LayerList widgets.
When loading a layer by service url, the title is derived from the service name. If the service has several layers, then the title of each layer will be the concatenation of the service name and the layer name. When the layer is loaded from a portal item, the title of the portal item will be used instead. Finally, if a layer is loaded as part of a webmap or a webscene, then the title of the layer as stored in the webmap/webscene will be used.
Inherited
Property uid Stringreadonly
Since: ArcGIS Maps SDK for JavaScript 4.33 Layer since 4.0, uid added at 4.33.
An automatically generated unique identifier assigned to the instance. The unique id is generated each time the application is loaded.
The URL of the REST endpoint of the layer. The URL may either point to a resource on ArcGIS Enterprise or ArcGIS Online.
Release specific changes:
useViewTime Boolean
Since: ArcGIS Maps SDK for JavaScript 4.22 ImageryTileLayer since 4.25, useViewTime added at 4.22.
Determines if the layer will update its temporal data based on the view's timeExtent. When false
, the layer will display its temporal data based on the layer's timeExtent, regardless of changes to the view. If both view and layer time extents are set while this property is true
, then the features that fall within the intersection of the view and layer time extents will be displayed. For example, if a layer's time extent is set to display features between 1970 and 1975 and the view has a time extent set to 1972-1980, the effective time on the feature layer will be 1972-1975.
Example
if (featureLayer.useViewTime) {
console.log("Displaying data between:", view.timeExtent.start, " - ", view.timeExtent.end);
}
The version of ArcGIS Server in which the image service is published.
Since: ArcGIS Maps SDK for JavaScript 4.30 Layer since 4.0, visibilityTimeExtent added at 4.30.
Specifies a fixed time extent during which a layer should be visible. This property can be used to configure a layer that does not have time values stored in an attribute field to work with time. Once configured, the TimeSlider widget will display the layer within the set time extent. In the case that only one of the start or end date values are available, the layer remains visible indefinitely in the direction where there is no time value.
Aerial imagery can capture seasonal variations in vegetation, water bodies, and land use patterns. For example, in agricultural regions, aerial imageries taken during different growing seasons provide insights into crop health and productivity. Defining a fixed time extent on imageries from specific time periods provides temporal context and facilitates focused analysis based on specific time periods or events.
Inherited
Property visible Boolean
Indicates if the layer is visible in the View. When false
, the layer may still be added to a Map instance that is referenced in a view, but its features will not be visible in the view.
Example
// The layer is no longer visible in the view
layer.visible = false;
// Watch for changes in the layer's visibility
// and set the visibility of another layer when it changes
reactiveUtils.watch(
() => layer.visible,
(visible) => {
if (visible) {
anotherLayer.visible = true;
} else {
anotherLayer.visible = false;
}
}
);
Show inherited methods Hide inherited methods
Method DetailsInherited
Method addHandles(handleOrHandles, groupKey)
Since: ArcGIS Maps SDK for JavaScript 4.25 Accessor since 4.0, addHandles added at 4.25.
Adds one or more handles which are to be tied to the lifecycle of the object. The handles will be removed when the object is destroyed.
// Manually manage handles
const handle = reactiveUtils.when(
() => !view.updating,
() => {
wkidSelect.disabled = false;
},
{ once: true }
);
this.addHandles(handle);
// Destroy the object
this.destroy();
Parameters
Handles marked for removal once the object is destroyed.
groupKey *
optionalKey identifying the group to which the handles should be added. All the handles in the group can later be removed with Accessor.removeHandles(). If no key is provided the handles are added to a default group.
Inherited
Method cancelLoad()
Cancels a load() operation if it is already in progress.
clone(){this}
Creates a deep clone of this object. Any properties that store values by reference will be assigned copies of the referenced values on the cloned instance.
Returns
Type Description this A deep clone of the class instance that invoked this method. computeStatisticsHistograms(parameters, requestOptions){Promise<Object>}
Since: ArcGIS Maps SDK for JavaScript 4.27 ImageryTileLayer since 4.25, computeStatisticsHistograms added at 4.27.
Computes statistics and histograms for the provided ImageHistogramParameters. Only geometry and a pixelSize parameters are supported for ImageryTileLayer.
The result of this operation contains both statistics and histograms computed for the given extent or polygon. Note that the given extent or polygon is first projected to the spatial reference of the service, then the source pixels are requested at the specified resolution for the projected geometry's extent. The statistics and histogram are then computed based on the source pixel's values.
Returns
Type Description Promise<Object> Resolves to an object containing histogram and statistics results. See the object specification table below for details. Property Type Description histograms[] RasterHistogram Result containing raster histograms. statistics[] RasterBandStatistics Raster band statistics.Example
// set the pixel size parameter to match the current
// resolution of the view and spatial reference
let pixelSize = {
x:view.resolution,
y:view.resolution,
spatialReference: {
wkid: view.spatialReference.wkid
}
}
// set the histogram parameters to request
// data for the current view extent and resolution
let params = new ImageHistogramParameters({
geometry: view.extent,
pixelSize: pixelSize
});
// request for histograms and statistics for the specified parameters
layer.computeStatisticsHistograms(params).then(function(results){
// results are returned and process it as needed.
console.log("histograms and stats", results);
})
.catch(function(err){
console.log("err", err)
});
Inherited
Method createLayerView(view, options){Promise<LayerView>}
Called by the views, such as MapView and SceneView, when the layer is added to the Map.layers collection and a layer view must be created for it. This method is used internally and there is no use case for invoking it directly.
Parameters
view *
The parent view.
optionalAn object specifying additional options. See the object specification table below for the required properties of this object.
Returns
Creates a default popup template for the layer, populated with all the fields of the layer.
Starting with version 4.28, date
fields are formatted using the short-date-short-time
preset dateFormat rather than long-month-day-year
in popup templates created with the createPopupTemplate()
method. For example, previously a date that may have appeared as "December 30, 1997"
will now appear as "12/30/1997 6:00 PM"
.
Returns
Inherited
Method destroy()
Since: ArcGIS Maps SDK for JavaScript 4.17 Layer since 4.0, destroy added at 4.17.
Destroys the layer and any associated resources (including its portalItem, if it is a property on the layer). The layer can no longer be used once it has been destroyed.
The destroyed layer will be removed from its parent object like Map, WebMap, WebScene, Basemap, Ground, or GroupLayer.
Inherited
Method emit(type, event){Boolean}
Emits an event on the instance. This method should only be used when creating subclasses of this class.
Parameters
The name of the event.
optionalThe event payload.
Returns
Type Description Booleantrue
if a listener was notified
Inherited
Method fetchAttributionData(){Promise<Object>}
Fetches custom attribution data for the layer when it becomes available.
Returns
Type Description Promise<Object> Resolves to an object containing custom attribution data for the layer. fetchPixels(extent, width, height, options){Promise<Object>}
Since: ArcGIS Maps SDK for JavaScript 4.19 ImageryTileLayer since 4.25, fetchPixels added at 4.19.
Fetches pixels for a given extent.
Parameters
Specification
The extent of the image to export.
The width of the image in pixels.
The height of the image in pixels.
optionalThe parameter options is an object with the following properties.
Specification
optionalAdded at version 4.23. Defines how to interpolate pixel values.
Possible Values:"nearest"|"bilinear"|"cubic"|"majority"
optionalAn AbortSignal to abort the request. If canceled, the promise will be rejected with an error named AbortError
. See also AbortController.
Returns
Type Description Promise<Object> Resolves to an object containing the parameters of the exported pixels including PixelBlock. ThepixelBlock
contains the value of each pixel in the image.
fetchTile(level, row, col, options){Promise<Object>}
This method fetches a tile for the given level, row and column present in the view.
Parameters
Level of detail of the tile to fetch. This value is provided by LayerView.
The row (y) position of the tile fetch. This value is provided by LayerView.
The column (x) position of the tile to fetch. This value is provided by LayerView.
optionalOptional settings for the tile request.
Specification
optionalSignal object that can be used to abort the asynchronous task. The returned promise will be rejected with an Error named AbortError
when an abort is signaled. See also AbortController for more information on how to construct a controller that can be used to deliver abort signals.
Returns
Type Description Promise<Object> Returns a promise that resolves to an object containing pixel block and source extent. generateRasterInfo(rasterFunction, options){Promise<RasterInfo>}
Since: ArcGIS Maps SDK for JavaScript 4.31 ImageryTileLayer since 4.25, generateRasterInfo added at 4.31.
Generates a new raster info for the specified client side raster function.
Parameters
Raster function for the requested raster info.
optionalAn object with the following properties.
Specification
optionalSignal object that can be used to abort the asynchronous task. The returned promise will be rejected with an Error named AbortError
when an abort is signaled. See also AbortController for more information on how to construct a controller that can be used to deliver abort signals.
Returns
Type Description Promise<RasterInfo> When resolved, a RasterInfo containing info specific to the requested raster function is returned.Since: ArcGIS Maps SDK for JavaScript 4.33 ImageryTileLayer since 4.25, getSamples added at 4.33.
Returns sample point locations, pixel values and corresponding resolutions of the source data for a given geometry. When the input geometry is a polyline, extent, or polygon, the sampling is based on sampleCount or sampleDistance parameters. When the geometry is a point or multipoint, the point or points are used directly.
The number of sample locations in the response is based on the sampleDistance
or sampleCount
parameter and the maximum is 1000.
Returns
Example
// get all sample points along a polyline
// at the specified sample distance and pixel size
const param = {
geometry: polyline
returnFirstValueOnly: false,
interpolation: "nearest",
// unit of the geometry's spatial reference is used
sampleDistance: 30,
outFields: ["*"]
};
imageryLayer.getSamples(param).then((results) => {
// use the getSamples results as needed.
console.log(results);
})
.catch(function(error){
console.log(error)
})
Inherited
Method hasEventListener(type){Boolean}
Indicates whether there is an event listener on the instance that matches the provided event name.
Returns
Type Description Boolean Returns true if the class supports the input event.Inherited
Method hasHandles(groupKey){Boolean}
Since: ArcGIS Maps SDK for JavaScript 4.25 Accessor since 4.0, hasHandles added at 4.25.
Returns true if a named group of handles exist.
Parameter
groupKey *
optionalA group key.
Returns
Type Description Boolean Returnstrue
if a named group of handles exist.
Example
// Remove a named group of handles if they exist.
if (obj.hasHandles("watch-view-updates")) {
obj.removeHandles("watch-view-updates");
}
Identify pixel values at a given location. This method identifies the content of an image service for the input location and in a specified dimensional definition.
Starting at version 4.25, the identify
method returns pixel values from specific dimensional definitions for a transposed multidimensional service referenced in an ImageryTileLayer. Set the transposedVariableName
parameter along with the multidimensionalDefinition
to get pixel values from specific dimensional slices. To get pixel values from all dimensional slices, just set the transposedVariableName
. The ImageryTileLayer's rasterInfo.hasMultidimensionalTranspose property must be true
when setting the transposedVariableName
parameter.
Parameters
Input point that defines the location to be identified.
optionalOptional settings for the identify request. At version 4.25, the transposedVariableName
was added to get pixel values from specific dimensional definitions if the ImageryTileLayer references a transposed multidimensional image service. Set the transposedVariableName
and multidimensionalDefinition
get pixel values for the specified dimensional definitions from a transposed multidimensional service. If multidimensionalDefinition
is not specified, pixel values will be returned from all the dimensional slices.
Returns
Type Description Promise<RasterIdentifyResult> Returns a promise that resolves to a RasterIdentifyResult containing a location and pixel values. The identify returns a value for only one slice at a time for WCSLayer and for non-transposed multidimensional ImageryTileLayer. If thetransposedVariableName
parameter is set for the transposed multidimensional ImageryTileLayer, the result returns all pixel values from all multidimensional slices.
Inherited
Method isFulfilled(){Boolean}
isFulfilled()
may be used to verify if creating an instance of the class is fulfilled (either resolved or rejected). If it is fulfilled, true
will be returned.
Returns
Type Description Boolean Indicates whether creating an instance of the class has been fulfilled (either resolved or rejected).Inherited
Method isRejected(){Boolean}
isRejected()
may be used to verify if creating an instance of the class is rejected. If it is rejected, true
will be returned.
Returns
Type Description Boolean Indicates whether creating an instance of the class has been rejected.Inherited
Method isResolved(){Boolean}
isResolved()
may be used to verify if creating an instance of the class is resolved. If it is resolved, true
will be returned.
Returns
Type Description Boolean Indicates whether creating an instance of the class has been resolved.Inherited
Method load(options){Promise}
Loads the resources referenced by this class. This method automatically executes for a View and all of the resources it references in Map if the view is constructed with a map instance.
This method must be called by the developer when accessing a resource that will not be loaded in a View.
The load()
method only triggers the loading of the resource the first time it is called. The subsequent calls return the same promise.
It's possible to provide a signal
to stop being interested into a Loadable
instance load status. When the signal is aborted, the instance does not stop its loading process, only cancelLoad can abort it.
Parameters
optionalAdditional options.
Specification
optionalSignal object that can be used to abort the asynchronous task. The returned promise will be rejected with an Error named AbortError
when an abort is signaled. See also AbortController for more information on how to construct a controller that can be used to deliver abort signals.
Returns
Type Description Promise Resolves when the resources have loaded.Inherited
Method on(type, listener){Object}
Registers an event handler on the instance. Call this method to hook an event with a listener.
Returns
Type Description Object Returns an event handler with aremove()
method that should be called to stop listening for the event(s). Property Type Description remove Function When called, removes the listener from the event.
Example
view.on("click", function(event){
// event is the event handle returned after the event fires.
console.log(event.mapPoint);
});
Inherited
Method removeHandles(groupKey)
Since: ArcGIS Maps SDK for JavaScript 4.25 Accessor since 4.0, removeHandles added at 4.25.
Removes a group of handles owned by the object.
Parameter
groupKey *
optionalA group key or an array or collection of group keys to remove.
Example
obj.removeHandles(); // removes handles from default group
obj.removeHandles("handle-group");
obj.removeHandles("other-handle-group");
Since: ArcGIS Maps SDK for JavaScript 4.28 ImageryTileLayer since 4.25, save added at 4.28.
Saves the layer to its existing portal item in the Portal authenticated within the user's current session. If the layer is not saved to a PortalItem, then you should use saveAs.
Parameters
optionalVarious options for saving the layer.
Specification
optionalIndicates whether to ignore saving unsupported layers or layers with unsupported content, such as unsupported symbology.
Returns
Type Description Promise<PortalItem> When resolved, returns the portal item to which the layer is saved.Example
const portalItem = await layer.save();
saveAs(portalItem, options){Promise<PortalItem>}
Since: ArcGIS Maps SDK for JavaScript 4.28 ImageryTileLayer since 4.25, saveAs added at 4.28.
Saves the layer to a new portal item in the Portal authenticated within the user's current session.
Parameters
Specification
The portal item to which the layer will be saved.
optionalVarious options for saving the layer.
Specification
optionalThe portal folder where the layer's portal item will be saved.
optionalIndicates whether to ignore saving unsupported layers or layers with unsupported content, such as unsupported symbology.
Returns
Type Description Promise<PortalItem> When resolved, returns the portal item to which the layer is saved.Example
const portalItem = new PortalItem();
await layer.saveAs(portalItem);
Inherited
Method when(callback, errback){Promise}
when()
may be leveraged once an instance of the class is created. This method takes two input parameters: a callback
function and an errback
function. The callback
executes when the instance of the class loads. The errback
executes if the instance of the class fails to load.
Parameters
optionalThe function to call when the promise resolves.
optionalThe function to execute when the promise fails.
Returns
Type Description Promise Returns a new promise for the result ofcallback
that may be used to chain additional functions.
Example
// Although this example uses MapView, any class instance that is a promise may use when() in the same way
let view = new MapView();
view.when(function(){
// This function will execute once the promise is resolved
}, function(error){
// This function will execute if the promise is rejected due to an error
});
RasterIdentifyOptions Object
Additional options to set for identify()
method on ImageryTileLayer and WCSLayer.
At version 4.25, the transposedVariableName
was added to get pixel values from specific dimensional definitions if the ImageryTileLayer references a transposed multidimensional image service. Set the transposedVariableName
and multidimensionalDefinition
get pixel values for the specified dimensional definitions from a transposed multidimensional service. If multidimensionalDefinition
is not specified, pixel values will be returned from all the dimensional slices.
RasterIdentifyResult Object
The result of identify
operation on ImageryTileLayer and WCSLayer. It includes the processed pixel values for a given location.
The identified location.
Image service pixel values.
optionalThe processed pixel values showing results of the rasterFunction applied to the layer. Added since version 4.26.
optionalTransposed multidimensional data for the requested location and variable returned from a transposed multidimensional ImageryTileLayer. Added since version 4.25.
RasterSliceValue Object
Since: ArcGIS Maps SDK for JavaScript 4.25 ImageryTileLayer since 4.25, RasterSliceValue added at 4.25.
Data series returned in RasterIdentifyResult when identify() is called on a transposed multidimensional ImageryTileLayer.
Image service pixel values for a given slice.
A dimensional definition associated with a given slice.
optionalThe magnitude and direction values for services containing vector data.
Show inherited events Hide inherited events
Event DetailsInherited
Event layerview-create
Fires after the layer's LayerView is created and rendered in a view.
The view in which the layerView
was created.
The LayerView rendered in the view representing the layer in layer
.
Example
// This function will fire each time a layer view is created for this
// particular view.
layer.on("layerview-create", function(event){
// The LayerView for the layer that emitted this event
event.layerView;
});
Inherited
Event layerview-create-error
Fires when an error emits during the creation of a LayerView after a layer has been added to the map.
The view that failed to create a layerview for the layer emitting this event.
An error object describing why the layer view failed to create.
Example
// This function fires when an error occurs during the creation of the layer's layerview
layer.on("layerview-create-error", function(event) {
console.error("LayerView failed to create for layer with the id: ", layer.id, " in this view: ", event.view);
});
Inherited
Event layerview-destroy
Fires after the layer's LayerView is destroyed and no longer renders in a view.
The view in which the layerView
was destroyed.
The destroyed LayerView representing the layer.
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