About ArcGlobe display options

You can set options that control how ArcGlobe behaves every time it starts. These application-level options stay the same unless you change them. The options include settings that affect the behavior of ArcGlobe, the geoprocessing framework, tables, and rasters. If you are using multiple viewers, these properties will apply to all the viewers.

There are also ArcGlobe settings that apply only to the current document, such as:

ArcGlobe also supports a full-screen mode in which the application window surrounds are hidden. Press F11 to go to full-screen mode; press F11 again to exit full-screen mode. This mode is also available in ArcScene.

Enable graceful transitions

You can control the way the camera behaves when it moves between locations. You can set options that move the camera smoothly between the locations you zoom to.

Set the full extent view location

You can set the location you see on the globe when you zoom to full extent. This way, when you zoom to the full extent of the globe, you'll see the part of the world you're interested in.

Configure the level of detail

You can control how much of an image or elevation raster's quality, or level of detail, is used when displaying it in ArcGlobe. When changing the level of detail setting for rasters, be aware that the higher the level of detail, the more compromised the performance.

Configure the table of contents

The ArcGlobe table of contents has several options to customize listing your layers. Click the icons at the top of the table of contents tab to switch between these grouping methods. You can tell which mode is active by looking at the button (the active one is pushed in) and the organization of the items on the table of contents. The different ways of listing layers are simply methods of displaying information about the same layers.

See Using the Table of Contents in the ArcMap basics desktop help for more details about ways to list layers in the table of contents.

See Types of 3D layers for more information about layer classification within the table of contents.

Related Topics


6/11/2012