Broken Eye

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Mary Hargrove

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Aug 5, 2024, 2:29:16 PM8/5/24
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Fora normal raster it's simply a matter of clicking the exclamation point and directing it to the file it's looking for, however with a raster function, it's source is the same as the raster it was created from. But if you point it to that raster you won't get the slope or hillshade you created previously, you'll just get a uniform grey mask.

Experiencing the same problem upon closing and re-opening projects. Tried relating back to the source DEM and only seeing a gray layer. I have several raster function layers and it's time consuming to rebuild all the raster function layers and/or to export each raster function layer. Hoping for a solution.


Following up on this, my co-worker submitted a bug report and did a support call with Esri staff. They had to completely rebuild the map and project documents. For a while the problem was fixed, but they are now experiencing the same problem where their raster function layers are broken and not visible.


Same problem here- saving and reopening a map loses raster function layers (red exclamation pt). There's no apparent way to reset without removing and recreating the layer with raster function tools.


Same issue here...once you close an ArcGIS Pro project out and then reopen, all layers made through raster functions are broken. Only work around I've found is to write new layers instead of relying on raster function (AFR) layers.


I've experienced the same issue. While I haven't figured out the cause, I was able to recover some of the layers because I had inadvertently saved as a layout file a couple weeks prior & at the time opened that layout in another project and saved the project as a new file. I was able to use this second project to recover the raster function layers. It makes me wonder if the original files get timed out or deleted in a certain time period.


I am experiencing the same issue here and did not have the same issue when generating temporary rasters with the image processing window in ArcMap. I prefer using the temporary raster files for large UAV/lidar datasets to save space on my computer.


Same here. This problem has really taken the wind out of my sails with incorporating @JohnNelsonEsri 's hillshading techniques into my maps at work. I can't afford to take the extra time to repair these layers and it breaks my heart to forgo cartographic improvements for efficiency. Please help!


Formulas with more than one argument use list separators to separate their arguments. Which separator is used can vary based on your OS Locale and Excel settings. The most common list separators are comma "," and semicolon ";".


Excel displays the above dialog box to make sure that the formulas in the current spreadsheet always point to the most updated value in case the reference value has changed. You can choose to update the references, or skip if you don't want to update. Even if you choose to not update the references, you can always manually update the links in the spreadsheet whenever you want.


If you have a column with a large range of cells that are formatted as text, you can select the range, apply the number format of your choice, and go to Data > Text to Column > Finish. This will apply the format to all of the selected cells.


When a formula does not calculate, you'll need to check if automatic calculation is enabled in Excel. Formulas won't calculate if manual calculation is enabled. Follow these steps to check for Automatic calculation.


When you use a function in a formula, each opening parenthesis needs a closing parenthesis for the function to work correctly. Make sure that all parentheses are part of a matching pair. For example, the formula =IF(B5


Also, some functions, such as SUM, require numerical arguments only, while other functions, such as REPLACE, require a text value for at least one of their arguments. If you use the wrong data type, functions might return unexpected results or show a #VALUE! error.


It's fairly common to use x as the multiplication operator in a formula, but Excel can only accept the asterisk (*) for multiplication. If you use constants in your formula, Excel shows an error message and can fix the formula for you by replacing the x with the asterisk (*).


In the formula, "Today is " has a space before the ending quotation mark to provide the blank space you want between the words "Today is" and "Monday, May 30." Without quotation marks around the text, the formula might show the #NAME? error.


For example, to return the value from cell D3 in a worksheet named Quarterly Data in your workbook, type: ='Quarterly Data'!D3. Without the quotation marks around the sheet name, the formula shows the #NAME? error.


Always check to see if you have any formulas that refer to data in cells, ranges, defined names, worksheets, or workbooks before you delete anything. You can then replace these formulas with their results before you remove the referenced data.


If a defined name is missing, and a formula that refers to that name returns a #NAME? error, define a new name that refers to the range you want, or change the formula to refer directly to the range of cells (for example, A2:D8).


For example, you might want to copy the resulting value of a formula to a cell on another worksheet. Or you might want to delete the values that you used in a formula after you copied the resulting value to another cell on the worksheet. Both of these actions cause an invalid cell reference error (#REF!) to appear in the destination cell, because the cells that contain the values you used in the formula can no longer be referenced.


If the underlined part of the formula is a reference to another formula, select Step In to show the other formula in the Evaluation box. Select Step Out to go back to the previous cell and formula.


The Evaluate Formula tool won't necessarily tell you why your formula is broken, but it can help point out where. This can be a very handy tool in larger formulas where it might otherwise be difficult to find the problem.


Some functions are recalculated every time the worksheet changes. Those functions, including the RAND, AREAS, INDEX, OFFSET, CELL, INDIRECT, ROWS, COLUMNS, NOW, TODAY, and RANDBETWEEN functions, can cause the Evaluate Formula dialog box to show results that are different from the actual results in the cell on the worksheet.


Hello! Thank you for this amazing resource. I'm new (very new) to SEO. I'm wanting to see if I am understanding broken links correctly.... I can google certain terms after my domain name and the search will populate an entry with a title and description. But when I click it, it still takes me to what looks like my page design, just no content. As an example, my page is "swamp fitness" and if I google search "swamp fitness 2017 promo" (something very outdated) the search will still populate that page (from 2017!) and meta data but clicking it goes nowhere. Would this be what is defined as a "broken link" and very bad for SEO/crawling?


A broken link, also known as a dead link, is a hyperlink on a webpage that no longer works because the destination page has been moved, deleted, or renamed. When a user clicks on a broken link, they are usually redirected to an error page, which can negatively impact user experience and SEO. Broken links are a common problem on the web, as pages are frequently updated or removed over time, and it's important for website owners to regularly check for and fix any broken links on their sites to ensure that users can access the content they're looking for.


How to search expired domains from broken links? I have found that we can also search expired domains from broken links. I also need recommendations about how can i make backlinks from competitor sites such as emirate visa.


Broken link is an error in a website that is not linked to any page. Website link is usually made to carry the traffic from one page to another page of the website. Broken link means the web pages are not connected correctly and a visitor can't see the information. So, it is important to clean the broken links to make sure that website is working well.


I am as new to SEO as you are (I think). But did you remove that page 'swamp fitness 2017 promo' and did you place a redirect (302) on that page? I would start with that. You can also pass on any authority you've built up on your older 2017 page. I can imagine that a hard delete and no redirect can have you listed wrong in Google.


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It's hard to describe in words, but it involves a lot of leveling, a lot of smoothing. The tongue stays closer to the center of the mouth rather than doing the pronounced, defined highs and lows that shape the L and R sounds. The vocal cords vibrate in smooth, singing tones rather than doing the little hop up and down that makes for a normal American English syllable.


Nor is there ever anything blatantly offensive in the content that makes me not want to take the role. I get uncomfortable with a narration having a "Chinese accent" just to give "color," so to speak, to a video set in China, but it's no different in spirit than having a Southern-accented narrator for a video set in Texas.


Because here's the thing. Nearly every Chinese immigrant I've met does, in fact, "talk like that," because it's almost impossible not to have a thick accent when your first language is as fundamentally phonetically different from English as Mandarin or Cantonese is.


But it's equally true that every single Chinese-American kid born here I've met emphatically does not "talk like that." In fact, there isn't a Chinese-American accent the way there's a distinct cadence to how black Americans or Latino Americans talk. Most Chinese-Americans have a pitch-perfect "invisible" accent for wherever they live.

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