Chill people!!  I love Mapinfo and ArcView.  I wouldn�t have a job if it
werent for them.  All hail GIS.  All milkshakes are created for an equal
purpose, they are just different flavours.  Take a sip and enjoy!  

Amen.

-----Original Message-----
From: Christine Schildhauer [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Friday, 19 March 2004 7:37 PM
To: Mapinfo-List (E-Mail)
Subject: AW: MI-L sorting tables



> That's because it IS difficult, compared to ArcView.  In ArcView, you
just
> click a column name, then click an "ascending" button or a
"descending"
> button and it resorts the table on the fly...literally two clicks.

I actually do not agree ... using the sort_tab tool from directionsmag
it is just click (choose the table and the column you want to sort) and
go, a temporary table will be created, which can be stored permanently
if necessary.

http://www.directionsmag.com/files/index.php/view/146

So - have a try ! Christine

Mit freundlichen Gr��en
Christine Schildhauer

Ingenieurgruppe IVV GmbH
Saarbr�cker Stra�e 36A
10405 Berlin
Tel: (030) 818 772-13
Fax: (030) 818 772-22
MailTo:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http:\\www.ivv-berlin.de



-----Urspr�ngliche Nachricht-----
Von: Phillips, Frank [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Gesendet: Donnerstag, 18. M�rz 2004 20:50
An: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Betreff: RE: MI-L sorting tables - Don't Get Defensive, Please


I did not mean to stir up a bee's nest with my original reply to the
sort post.  I was merely making the point that "simple" sorting in
ArcView is much quicker and easier.  This is not to say "My GIS is
better than your GIS...".  I have three GIS's (ArcView, Arc8, and
MapInfo) so I have a unique perspective in being able to compare them.
I am also not "new" to MapInfo, I've been using it for a year now, and
am at the end of a development cycle of a set of custom MapInfo tools
that will be implemented in my department. I am also a stockholder in
MapInfo, so I have financial interest in seeing MapInfo succeed.
There's no need to get defensive...after all, I am abandoning 10 years
of ArcView use in my department to cut over to MapInfo...so I've put my
money where my mouth is.

But to address Bill's comments below, here goes:

  >You make this sound so difficult... Just choose Query > Select,
  >and fill out the Select dialog, choosing the field you want to
  >sort on.

That's because it IS difficult, compared to ArcView.  In ArcView, you
just click a column name, then click an "ascending" button or a
"descending" button and it resorts the table on the fly...literally two
clicks.

  >Huh? "...ArcView can do it on the fly simply by rearranging the
  >order of the rows...?" That's the result of a sort. How does that
  >define what to sort on?

The way to define what to sort on is to just simply click the field name
as you're looking at the "browser" (ArcView calls this a "table").

As I said to Uffe, this is a "simple" one-column sort I'm talking about.
When it comes to a multi-column sort, MapInfo beats ArcView
hands-down...in fact, ArcView 3.x can't even do a multi-column sort
because of the nature of clicking on the column name you want to
sort...how could you click more than one column name...you can't.

This is a trade-off between ArcView and MapInfo...MI's sorting tool is
more advanced, but takes longer to use.  ArcView's sorting tool is quick
and easy, but limited.  The reason why my initial reaction was so
"strong" is because (at least in my case) I need "simple" sorting 90% of
the time, and yet I have to do so much "more" in MapInfo than in ArcView
to get the desired result...

Regarding storing geographic styles in the TAB, I thought this was
really cool when I first saw it in MapInfo.  The way ArcView 3.x handles
this is to thematically alter the data, then store that file off with
the shape (TAB)...when the shape is loaded into a view (mapper) it
automatically picks up that file and instantly applies the style.  Two
ways to do what is essentially the same thing...which is better?  I
haven't decided yet. But I do know that the way Arc8 does it appears to
be the best because it's the most flexible: you get a layer looking the
way you want it, then save off a "lyr" file, which is a very small file
that tells Arc what to do with the data when it loads.  That's the best
of both worlds.  It's akin to my daughter playing with dolls: a Barbie
is a Barbie, but when you put different clothes on her, she becomes a
different person.  An Arc8 "lyr" file works the same way...the data is
the same, but the "lyr" file dresses it up the way you want to see it
when you load it.

Frank


-----Original Message-----
From: Bill Thoen [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, March 18, 2004 12:22 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: MI-L sorting tables


"Phillips, Frank" wrote:
> 
> Hi, Carri.  I am also a former ArcView user, and I'm shocked by
MapInfo's
> inability to do "on the fly" sorting of browser fields.  Yes, there is
a
way
> to do this, but you have to do a new SQL query to get your sort.  I
have
not

You make this sound so difficult... Just choose Query > Select, and fill
out the Select dialog, choosing the field you want to sort on.

> yet found a way to do what I "think" you want to do (that is, the easy
way
> that ArcView can do it on the fly simply by rearranging the order of
the
> rows in a browser window).  There must be some technical limitation
inside
> of MapInfo...

Huh? "...ArcView can do it on the fly simply by rearranging the order of
the rows...?" That's the result of a sort. How does that define what to
sort on?

But you're right. It could be made easier. A click on a column name
could indicate that the user wants the browser view ascendingly sorted
on that column. A second click could mean "sort descending." But MapInfo
doesn't do this yet. 

A lot of the shocks that ArcView users get when they switch are just
that they don't know how to do things the MapInfo way. I've had the same
experience learning ArcView, and it's just a little culture shock. I can
remember waxing wroth one day trying to change a value in an ArcView
"browser."  In MapInfo this is easy to do; just highlight it and change
the value. But in ArcView you have to know about unlocking the table
first or you can't do squat to it. I was so used to MapInfo's way, I
couldn't see why ArcView made this so hard to do.

In truth, it turned out to be easy, and it made sense, once I knew how
and why it's done that way. Another shocking first-encounter thing about
ArcView is that it doesn't store graphic styles with its map features. I
thought that was a real limitation at the time, but once I learned how
styles are applied and saved, it wasn't such a pain, and in fact, I've
come to see that convention as a more pure GIS implementation than
MapInfo's way. MapInfo's combining styles with objects is certainly an
easier implementation to use, but I now think that logically styles are
not an intrinsic component of the geometry.

I wonder if anybody could design a perfect GIS tool. There's always such
a range of needs, abilities and budgets in any large user community that
you just can't please everyone all the time with a single product. I
guess I'm happy when I've learned enough about a product that it pleases
me.

- Bill Thoen


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