Merge Layers (Map Viewer)

The Merge Layer tool copies features from two layers of the same feature type (point, line, or area) into a new layer.

The output is a hosted feature layer.

Example

The City of Los Angeles wants to restore the area around the Los Angeles River by developing a new park. The park must be near the Los Angeles River but not within close proximity to existing parks or toxic release facilities. Buffers around the existing parks and toxic release facilities can be merged into a single layer using the Merge Layers tool to create an exclusion zone where a new park cannot be developed.

Usage notes

The Merge Layers tool includes configurations for input features, merge settings, and the result layer.

Input features

The Input features group includes the following parameters:

  • Input layer identifies the point, line, or polygon layer that will be overlaid.

    For feature inputs, a count of features is displayed below the layer name. The count includes all features in the layer, except features that have been removed using a filter. Environment settings, such as Processing extent, are not reflected in the feature count.
  • Layer to merge identifies the point, line, or polygon layer that will be merged with the input layer. It must be the same geometry type as the input layer. You can choose a layer using the Layer button, or use the Draw input features button to create a sketch layer to use as the input.

    For feature inputs, a count of features is displayed below the layer name. The count includes all features in the layer, except features that have been removed using a filter. Environment settings, such as Processing extent, are not reflected in the feature count.

Merge settings

The Merge settings group includes the following parameters:

  • Merge operation specifies the operation that will be used to merge fields. By default, all the fields from the input layer and layer to merge will be copied to the output. You only need to specify fields and operations for this parameter if you don't want the default behavior applied. Merge operations are optional. You can specify one merge operation per field.

    When specifying the merge operation, you must define the following options:
    • Field—The field that will be modified.
    • Operation—The operation that will be applied to the field:

      OperationDescription

      Rename

      The field will be renamed in the output. A text box will appear where the new name can be specified.

      Remove

      The field will be removed from the output.

      Match

      The field names will be equivalent. Field values from the layer to merge will be copied to the matched output field. Two fields can be matched if they have the same field type.

Result layer

The Result layer group includes the following parameters:

  • Output name specifies the name of the layer that is created and displayed. The name must be unique. If a layer with the same name already exists in your organization, the tool will fail and you will be prompted to use a different name.
  • Save in folder specifies the name of a folder in My content where the result will be saved.

Limitations

Attachments from the input layers will not be included in the output layer.

Environments

Analysis environment settings are additional parameters that affect a tool's results. You can access the tool's analysis environment settings from the Environment settings parameter group.

This tool honors the following analysis environments:

Outputs

The Merge Layers tool creates an output hosted feature layer with point, line, or polygon features. The type of features created depends on the input layer.

By default, all of the fields from both inputs will be copied to the output. If you specified any merge operations, the output fields will reflect those values.

Licensing requirements

This tool requires the following user type and configurations:

  • Creator, Professional, or Professional Plus user type
  • Publisher or Administrator role, or an equivalent custom role

Resources

Use the following resources to learn more: