Areas that overlap or share a common boundary or attribute value are merged together to form a single area.
You can control which boundaries are merged by specifying a field. For example, if you have a layer of counties, and each county has a State_Name attribute, you can dissolve boundaries using the State_Name attribute. Counties will be merged together if they have the same value for State_Name. The end result is a layer of state boundaries.
The layer containing area features that will be dissolved.
In addition to choosing a layer from your map, you can choose Browse Layers at the bottom of the drop-down list to browse to your contents for a big data file share dataset or feature layer.
You can choose one of two methods for merging area features:
Multipart is a representation of a place or thing that has more than one part but is defined as one feature because it references one set of attributes. In a layer of states, for example, the state of Hawaii could be considered a multipart feature because its separate geometric parts are classified as a single state.
Allow multipart features offers two options:
When areas are merged, you can summarize their attribute values with meaningful statistics. For example, if you are dissolving the boundary between counties based on State_Name, and each county has a Population field, you could calculate the sum of Population for the state.
You can calculate statistics on features that are summarized. You can calculate the following on numeric fields:
You can calculate the following on string fields:
The name of the layer that will be created in My Content and added to the map. The default name is based on the tool name and the input layer name. If the layer already exists, the tool will fail.
Using the Save result in drop-down box, you can specify the name of a folder in My Content where the result will be saved.