ArcGIS Desktop

  • ArcGIS Pro
  • ArcMap

  • My Profile
  • Help
  • Sign Out
ArcGIS Desktop

ArcGIS Online

The mapping platform for your organization

ArcGIS Desktop

A complete professional GIS

ArcGIS Enterprise

GIS in your enterprise

ArcGIS for Developers

Tools to build location-aware apps

ArcGIS Solutions

Free template maps and apps for your industry

ArcGIS Marketplace

Get apps and data for your organization

  • Documentation
  • Support
Esri
  • Sign In
user
  • My Profile
  • Sign Out

ArcMap

  • Home
  • Get Started
  • Map
  • Analyze
  • Manage Data
  • Tools
  • Extensions

Deleting the persisted transformation from a raster dataset

There are two ways to delete the persisted transformation from your file-based raster dataset:

  • Delete the associated .aux.xml or world file.
  • Edit the associated .aux.xml file.

Note:

You can only delete the persisted transformation for a file-based raster dataset, not a geodatabase raster dataset.

Note:

To delete or edit the persisted transformation, you work outside ArcGIS.

If you delete the .aux.xml file, you will lose all the information stored within it, including the transformation, statistics, and histogram information. Therefore, it may be more advantageous to edit the .aux.xml file to remove the transformation information. To do this, open the .aux.xml file with any XML editor or text editor, remove the content between the <GeodataXform> tag, then save the file.

  1. In Windows Explorer, navigate to the location of the raster dataset.

    If the directory the raster dataset is in is read-only, the .aux.xml file is written to the proxy location.

    Learn about raster proxy files and their location

  2. Click the file that matches the raster dataset name ending in .aux.xml. or the associated world file.

    For example, if the raster is myraster.img, the file you need to select is myraster.img.aux.xml.

  3. Press the DELETE key.

Related topics

  • Applying a transformation to a raster dataset
  • Persist a transformation to a raster dataset without rectifying it
  • World files for raster datasets

ArcGIS Desktop

  • Home
  • Documentation
  • Support

ArcGIS Platform

  • ArcGIS Online
  • ArcGIS Desktop
  • ArcGIS Enterprise
  • ArcGIS for Developers
  • ArcGIS Solutions
  • ArcGIS Marketplace

About Esri

  • About Us
  • Careers
  • Esri Blog
  • User Conference
  • Developer Summit
Esri
Tell us what you think.
Copyright © 2019 Esri. | Privacy | Legal