Route 66 Arcade

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Fortun Bawa

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Aug 4, 2024, 1:55:38 PM8/4/24
to flugalride
HoweverI'm not yet understanding how to return the m-value for any point along the route that was clicked, rather than the centroid or endpoints. The m-value I'm looking for appears in the pop-up panel at lower right in ArcGIS Pro 2.5.0 (see pic below).

The limitation with Arcade is that you start off with the geometry you clicked on (you M-enabled line) and not the point location of where you clicked. Therefore, it is not possible to determine at which location of the line feature you clicked when using Arcade. The SDK should allow you to do this, although the complexity of the implementation will increase.


Thanks for chiming in Ben - You're right...I can get to the m-value for the starting point of the route by replacing "x" with "m" for example...But I'm chasing the m-value for any point along the route, as it appears at the bottom of the pop-up panel at 2.5.0 where the route is clicked. My idea was to build a calculation(expression) in the pop-up which uses this m-value as a variable. The m-value is being populated at the bottom of the pop-up panel. I'm not understanding how to reference it into the pop-up body though (?).


Hey thanks for responding Nicholas - No progress sorry to say...Yeah, my guess is that it is not the right approach for retrieving m-values dynamically along the line because our Arcade expressions above each refer to a specific vertex (?). As my picture above depicts - m-values do show up in the standard popup though (at bottom right)...I wonder about SDK (?)


Hi All,

Working on the same sort of workflow. I guess what would be handy is a "$clickedlocation" profile variabele. We could create the geometry object for that location and hopefully extract M and Z-values from "$feature"..



I try to create a popup for route segments exposing some route statistics. Id also would like to show the progress (M) and elevation (Z) of the clicked location. Only way I can think of to achieve this, is to convert vertices to points and do the popup on that layer.


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Here is my Google Map of our day, made with our GPS tracks. I added the albergues/hotels/cafs on the maps that we visited. There are more albergues as you get closer to Santiago, so I also added some of the more prominent ones.


There are two routes from O Pobo on the south side of Pontevedra, into town. The official route is in orange on the map below and the Camino Complementario I kept in blue, as this is the one that almost everyone takes.


The Camino Complementario follows along a river on a wonderful shady path, however it is about 1/2 kilometer longer. The orange route stays on the highway into Pontevedra, so if it is happening to be pouring rain and you want to avoid a muddy path take it instead. See the text farther below for the description of both routes.


We walked out of our albergue (we wished we had booked a different Redondela albergue instead) and onto the quiet side street of Ra Isidoro Queimalios. After walking past the church of Santiago, at the top of the hill, I saw this interesting shop sign. I just had to take a picture. How do Spaniards pronounce "Virginia?" (There is a pilgrim accommodation here as well.)


The Camino stays straight on and walks down the hill and up another one as the street changes names several times. All is completely shut down this early in the a.m., just after daybreak. A typical Spanish morning. It was a good thing we had our breakfast at the albergue, I suppose!


Walking down the street we came to this hrreo (a small building, historically that stored grain), right in the middle of town! There are many of these historic granaries in Redondela. Here the street is called the Ra da Picota.


Continue just past the hrreo to meet the N-550 after about 700 meters from the main albergue. Carefully cross over it and pick up another side road, veering immediately off to the left. This is called the Ra Campo de Ftbol because it leads to a soccer field that you will pass shortly on your left, after first walking by a college and a high school.


After about 400 meters on the path come to a paved road at a T-intersection and turn left onto the Camio Abreavella and where there are some nice vineyards. Their leaves were a brilliant spring green in April when we walked.


Stay right at a Y-intersection in town. Come to a major T-intersection with the N-550. Carefully cross over the highway on a short jog to the left, then right on the wider paved street, the Aldea Saramagoso.


Continue climbing on this narrow, paved road, lined with high walls and banks. In about 150 meters you come to this lovely old fountain, the Fonte O Viso. I do not know if the water is safe to drink from it. There is a park with picnic tables here as well, if you need.


After another 100 meters, stay lower (yay) and left to continue on a dirt road into the eucalyptus forest. We passed a waymark with an 82.74 kilometer plaque on it! Getting closer now on day twenty-two of the Camino Portugus.


Turn down the hill to the left. Along the road, the Subida O Cruceiro do Viso, is a concrete wall, with a Tribute to Pilgrims (Homenaxe ao Peregrino), display for pilgrims. Pause and admire the accomplishments of others, if you wish.


Right by the Tribute is the Casa D'Mina, a lovely rural home accommodation that gets high recommendations. There is a good restaurante nearby, the Bar Trasnos, if you turn to the left immediately after the Casa.


Continue steeply down the dirt road and in a total of 0.8 kilometer or so, join a paved road the Camio das Sete Fontes toward the next town of Arcade. There is a fountain at this juncture, on your right, of course named the Fonte das Sete Fontes with a pilgrim family sculpture in front of it.


In another 200 meters (total of about 1/2 kilometer on the N-550), look for a waymark to turn left, soon after the very attractive-looking Albergue A Filla do Mar. Walk a mere 30 meters then turn right at the Albergue Casa Calvar and onto a nice little side road through town.


Round a bend and cross the N-550 to the other side and onto the Ra das Lameirias. As soon as we crossed the highway we spied the Restaurant and Hotel Duarte, +34 986 67 00 57. A perfect place for our first break and caf con leche, after about 6.7 kilometers and being not quite halfway for this short day.

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