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ArcView 3.x

ArcView GIS 3.x
ArcViewGIS.png
ArcView GIS showing data for the Chesapeake Bay.
Developer(s) ESRI
Initial release October 5, 1995 (1995-10-05)
Stable release
3.3 / May 22, 2002
Development status Discontinued
Operating system

ArcView 3.3: Windows, Solaris, AIX, IRIX, Digital UNIX, HP-UX

ArcView 3.0a: in addition Classic Mac OS, DG/UX
Type GIS
License Proprietary

ArcView 3.3: Windows, Solaris, AIX, IRIX, Digital UNIX, HP-UX

ArcView GIS was a geographic information system software product produced by ESRI. It was replaced by new product line, ArcGIS, in 2000. Regardless of it being discontinued and replaced, some users still find the software useful and hold the opinion it is a superior product for some tasks.

ArcView started as a graphical program for spatial data and maps made using ESRI's other software products. In subsequent versions, more functionality was added to ArcView and it became a true GIS program capable of complex analysis and data management. The simple GUI was preferred by many over the less user friendly, more powerful ARC/INFO that was primarily used from a Command-line interface.

ArcView 1.0 was released in 1991 to provide access to GIS for non-traditional users of the technology. ESRI's flagship professional GIS at the time, Arc/INFO, was based on a command line interface and was not accessible to users that only needed view and query capability. The release did not support Shapefiles at the time.

ArcView 1 was very popular, and ESRI promised a more functional 2.x version of the product. This product was developed using a multi-platform windowing environment called Neuron Data, which allowed the product to be supported on the increasingly popular Windows 95 and Windows 2000, UNIX, and Mac OS 9 platforms. This product, when finally released (18 months after its initial release date) was very successful for ESRI and brought GIS technology to many people who had not used it before.


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