The file from which the data is to be read.
Click this button to select tables for export. You must have a personal database to browse.
After you click the Browse button, a search window appears while the system compiles a table list from the database. Once the table list appears, you can select one or more tables, and then click the OK button to dismiss the window. The table name(s) will appear in the table list field in the Reader Parameters box.
Enter any SQL where clause that constrains the attributes of the layers selected in the layer list (for example, NUMLANES=2).
Specifies whether to only translate features that contain some kind of geometry.
Specifies whether or not to resolve the domain code found in feature classes and tables into the domain value.
This means that when an attribute of a feature has a coded value domain associated with it, another attribute will also be added that represents the textual description of the coded attribute. The new attribute will be <attribute-name>_resolved, where <attribute-name> is the name of the attribute containing the code.
Specifies whether or not to resolve the subtype field values found on feature classes and tables into the name of the actual subtype.
You can speed up translations involving the Geodatabase Reader by not resolving subtypes and coded value domains. These operations add extra processing to each row of tables and feature classes that contain subtypes or coded value domains.
Specifies whether to read the network portion of network features. When checked, junctions will be read as points (geodb_point) and edges will be read as lines (geodb_polyline). Additionally, none of the network related attribution will be supplied on the features. Checking this option speeds up reading of network features significantly.
Determines whether to read relationship features present in a source dataset. When this parameter is checked, feature types containing simple relationships will be ignored, and feature types containing attributed relationships will be treated as non-spatial tables. When this parameter is unchecked, relationships will be read normally as either simple or attributed. The speed of reading features is vastly improved if relationships are ignored.
Determines whether complex edge features should be split. When split, complex edge features are read at the element level rather than the feature level. The element level represents the logical view of the geometric network. As a result, no network connectivity information is lost.
For information on the attributes that each FME feature stores when this option is checked, please see the Esri Geodatabase Reader/Writer > Reader Overview > Reader Keywords > SPLIT_COMPLEX_EDGES.
Specifies whether or not to split multi-part annotations into separate features for each "element" when reading. If checked, a single feature for each element (usually a word) in a multi-part annotation will be produced on reading, resulting in feature-specific attributes such as angle and text position being stored according to the location of each element. If left unchecked, multi-part annotations will be read normally, as a single feature storing a single set of attributes describing the positioning of the text.
This parameter exposes Format Attributes in Workbench when you create a workspace:
Using the minimum and maximum x and y parameters, define a bounding box that will be used to filter the input features. Only features that interact with the bounding box are returned.
If all four coordinates of the search envelope are specified as 0, the search envelope will be disabled.
Select this option to remove any portions of exported features outside the area of interest.