Dissolve (Data Management)

Summary

Aggregates features based on specified attributes.

An alternate tool is available for dissolve operations. See the Pairwise Dissolve tool documentation for details.

Learn more about how Dissolve works

Illustration

Dissolve illustration
Dissolve illustration

Usage

  • The attributes of the features that become aggregated by dissolve can be summarized or described using a variety of statistics. The statistic used to summarize attributes is added to the output feature class as a single field with the naming standard of statistic type + underscore + input field name. For example, if the SUM statistics type is used on a field named POP, the output will include a field named SUM_POP.

  • Dissolve can create very large features in the output feature class. This is especially true when there is a small number of unique values in the Dissolve Field(s) parameter or when dissolving all features into a single feature. Very large features may cause processing or display problems or poor performance when drawn on a map or when edited. Problems may also occur if the dissolve output created a feature at the maximum size on one machine, and this output was moved to a machine with less available memory. To avoid these potential problems, use the Create multipart features parameter to create single part features to split potentially larger multipart features into many smaller features. For extremely large features created by the Dissolve tool, the Dice tool can be used to split the large features to solve processing, display, or performance problems.

  • Null values are excluded from all statistical calculations. For example, the average of 10, 5, and a null is 7.5 ((10 + 5) / 2). The count returns the number of values included in the statistical calculation, which in this case is 2.

  • This tool will use a tiling process to handle very large datasets for better performance and scalability. For more details, see Geoprocessing with large datasets.

  • The availability of physical memory may limit the amount (and complexity) of input features that can be processed and dissolved into a single output feature. This limitation could cause an error to occur, as the dissolve process may require more memory than is available. To prevent this, Dissolve may divide and process the input features using an adaptive tiling algorithm. To determine the features that have been tiled, run the Frequency tool on the result of this tool, specifying the same fields used in the dissolve process for the Frequency Field(s) parameter. Any record with a frequency value of 2 has been tiled. Tile boundaries are preserved in the output features to prevent the creation of features that are too large to be used by ArcGIS.

    Caution:

    Running Dissolve on the output of a previous dissolve run will rarely reduce the number of features in the output when the original processing divided and processed the inputs using adaptive tiling. The maximum size of any output feature is determined by the amount of available memory at run time; therefore, output containing tiles is an indicator that dissolving any further with the available resources will cause an out-of-memory situation or result in a feature that is unusable. Additionally, running the Dissolve tool a second time on output that was created this way may result in very slow performance for little to no gain and may cause an unexpected failure.

  • The Unsplit lines parameter only applies to line input. When the default is specified, lines are dissolved into a single feature; otherwise, only two lines that have a common endpoint (known as a pseudonode) are merged into one continuous line.

  • If the Input Features geometry type is either point or multipoint and Create multipart features is checked (MULTI_PART in Python), the output will be a multipoint feature class. Otherwise, if Create multipart features is unchecked (SINGLE_PART in Python), the output will be a point feature class.

Syntax

arcpy.management.Dissolve(in_features, out_feature_class, {dissolve_field}, {statistics_fields}, {multi_part}, {unsplit_lines})
ParameterExplanationData Type
in_features

The features to be aggregated.

Feature Layer
out_feature_class

The feature class to be created that will contain the aggregated features.

Feature Class
dissolve_field
[dissolve_field,...]
(Optional)

The field or fields on which to aggregate features.

Field
statistics_fields
[[field, {statistic_type}],...]
(Optional)

Specifies the numeric field containing attribute values used to calculate the specified statistic. Multiple statistic and field combinations may be specified. Null values are excluded from all statistical calculations.

Text attribute fields can be summarized using first and last statistics. Numeric attribute fields can be summarized using any statistic.

Available statistics types are as follows:

  • SUM—Adds the total value for the specified field.
  • MEAN—Calculates the average for the specified field.
  • MIN—Finds the smallest value for all records of the specified field.
  • MAX—Finds the largest value for all records of the specified field.
  • RANGE—Finds the range of values (maximum minus minimum) for the specified field.
  • STD—Finds the standard deviation on values in the specified field.
  • COUNT—Finds the number of values included in statistical calculations. This counts each value except null values. To determine the number of null values in a field, create a count on the field in question, create a count on a different field that does not contain null values (for example, the OID if present), and subtract the two values.
  • FIRST—Finds the first record in the input and uses its specified field value.
  • LAST—Finds the last record in the input and uses its specified field value.
  • MEDIAN—Calculates the median for all records of the specified field.
  • VARIANCE—Calculates the variance for all records of the specified field.
  • UNIQUE—Counts the number of unique values of the specified field.
Value Table
multi_part
(Optional)

Specifies whether multipart features are allowed in the output feature class.

  • MULTI_PARTMultipart features are allowed in the output feature class. This is the default.
  • SINGLE_PARTMultipart features are not allowed in the output feature class. Instead of creating multipart features, individual features are created for each part.
Boolean
unsplit_lines
(Optional)

Specifies how line features are dissolved.

  • DISSOLVE_LINESLines are dissolved into a single feature. This is the default.
  • UNSPLIT_LINESLines are only dissolved when two lines have an end vertex in common.
Boolean

Code sample

Dissolve example 1 (Python window)

The following Python window script demonstrates how to use the Dissolve tool in immediate mode.

import arcpy
arcpy.env.workspace = "C:/data/Portland.gdb/Taxlots"
arcpy.Dissolve_management("taxlots", "C:/output/output.gdb/taxlots_dissolved",
                          ["LANDUSE", "TAXCODE"], "", "SINGLE_PART", 
                          "DISSOLVE_LINES")
Dissolve example 2 (stand-alone script)

The following stand-alone script demonstrates how to use the Dissolve tool.

# Name: Dissolve_Example2.py
# Description: Dissolve features based on common attributes

# Import system modules
import arcpy

arcpy.env.workspace = "C:/data/Portland.gdb/Taxlots"

# Set local variables
inFeatures = "taxlots"
tempLayer = "taxlotsLyr"
expression = arcpy.AddFieldDelimiters(inFeatures, "LANDUSE") + " <> ''"
outFeatureClass = "C:/output/output.gdb/taxlots_dissolved"
dissolveFields = ["LANDUSE", "TAXCODE"]

# Execute MakeFeatureLayer and SelectLayerByAttribute.  This is only to exclude 
# features that are not desired in the output.
arcpy.MakeFeatureLayer_management(inFeatures, tempLayer)
arcpy.SelectLayerByAttribute_management(tempLayer, "NEW_SELECTION", expression)

# Execute Dissolve using LANDUSE and TAXCODE as Dissolve Fields
arcpy.Dissolve_management(tempLayer, outFeatureClass, dissolveFields, "", 
                          "SINGLE_PART", "DISSOLVE_LINES")

Licensing information

  • Basic: Yes
  • Standard: Yes
  • Advanced: Yes

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