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Esri EADP19-001 Exam - Topic 4 Question 10 Discussion

Actual exam question for Esri's EADP19-001 exam
Question #: 10
Topic #: 4
[All EADP19-001 Questions]

ArcGIS user is updating all the newly paved roads after some recent constructions. The snapping tolerance is set to 15 pixels. They zoom out to the full extent to see their progress.

What should the ArcGIS user do next to maintain the accuracy of their editing?

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Suggested Answer: A

Contribute your Thoughts:

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Caprice
4 months ago
Surprised that increasing road thickness is even an option!
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Catalina
4 months ago
Wait, can you really increase sticky move tolerance?
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Fernanda
4 months ago
Increasing snapping tolerance seems risky.
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Blossom
5 months ago
Totally agree with that!
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Regenia
5 months ago
I think they should return to the previous scale.
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Louvenia
5 months ago
I practiced a similar question where adjusting tolerances was key, but I feel uncertain about the sticky move tolerance here.
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Margot
5 months ago
I think returning to the previous scale might help with seeing the details better, but I can't recall if that's the best option.
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Audra
5 months ago
I remember something about maintaining accuracy, but I'm not sure if increasing the snapping tolerance is the right move.
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Valda
5 months ago
Increasing the thickness of the roads seems unrelated to accuracy, but I wonder if it could help in some way.
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Denae
5 months ago
Okay, let me walk through this step-by-step. ETO means building to order, so you only produce what's needed. ATO means assembling from stock, so you'd need to hold more inventory. That suggests the answer is B, inventory costs.
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Jestine
5 months ago
I'm pretty confident A is the correct answer. Naming both data sets in the DATA statement is the standard way to create multiple data sets in a single DATA step. The other options don't seem to match the question as well.
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Nickole
5 months ago
I'm a bit unsure about this one. The question is asking about "peripheral" variables, so I'm not sure if that means variables that are not directly part of the call itself. I'll have to think this through carefully.
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