Cartographic features

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Cartographic features are chart-specific copies of the master aviation data in the production database. They are the features that are symbolized on a chart and from which annotation is generated. Because of the cartographic variations between the different types of charts, you may need to remove, relocate, or alter the appearance of features in one chart without affecting other charts that may reference the same features. Cartographic features make this possible. They are stored in feature classes in the Aeronautical Information System (AIS) data model that are named with the _C suffix. They are related to master features via the Master_Id attribute. Master_Id is a foreign key field that stores the GFID attribute value of the related master feature.

The cartographic feature tools allow you control over how cartographic features are created. By default, cartographic features are created based on the spatial extent of an area of interest (AOI) feature. You can further refine them by defining SQL queries that filter based on attribute or by manually identifying features to include or exclude.

Generate Aviation Cartographic Features tool

This tool uses the selected master and AOI feature layers to generate cartographic features in the specified cartographic feature layer. You can use the CartoExceptions and ExtractionQuery tables to control which features get cartographic copies.

Cartographic exceptions tools

These tools are available on the Aviation Charting ribbon and allow you to include and exclude specific features, as well as clear previous exceptions. For example, you may need a feature to appear on a chart even though it falls outside the chart’s AOI. Similarly, you may need to ensure that certain features within the chart’s AOI are not displayed. Exceptions are stored in the CartoExceptions table and are associated with specific AOIs by the MapId attribute.

Extraction queries

SQL statements limit the creation of cartographic features based on attributes. You can edit these queries using the Extraction Queries tool Extraction Queries on the View tab. For example, features that are identified as high altitude features (Level_Code = “Upper”) may not be needed when creating a low altitude chart. You can use an extraction query to ensure that those high altitude features don't have cartographic copies created. The queries are stored in the ExtractionQuery table, which is included in the AIS Charting schema.

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