The method parameter determines the interpolation method used to create the temporary tins in rubbersheeting.
Esri rubber sheeting.
The source layer drawn with solid lines is adjusted to the more accurate target layer.
This tool is intended to be used following the generate rubbersheet links tool.
The following is a summary of the command sequence that should be used when rubber sheeting two or more coverages.
See about spatial adjustment rubbersheeting for more details.
Before aerial photography arrived most maps were highly inaccurate by modern standards.
For conceptual and detailed usage information refer to.
This process moves the features of a layer using a piecewise transformation that preserves straight lines.
Rubbersheeting is used to make small geometric adjustments in your data usually to align features with more accurate information.
Rubber sheeting is a useful technique in historical gis where it is used to digitize and add old maps as feature layers in a modern gis.
Rubbersheeting makes spatial adjustments to align the input feature locations with more accurate target feature locations based on the specified rubbersheet links.
About rubbersheeting rubbersheeting is typically used to align two or more layers.
In rubbersheeting adjustments you are usually trying to align one layer with another that is often in close proximity.
Rubbersheeting is used to make small geometric adjustments in your data usually to align features with more accurate information.
It is slightly faster and produces good results when you have many rubbersheet links spread uniformly over the data.
The source layer drawn with solid lines is adjusted to the more accurate target layer.
Rubber sheeting may improve the value of such sources and make them easier to compare to modern maps.
Editing coverages tables with arcedit the adjust command in the arcedit command reference and understanding gis.