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Software Spec: ArcMap 10.2.1 Advanced Licence.

I have a single folder, let's call it "Processing". Inside this folder are 15 empty folders. Let's call these "Output_1" through to "Output_15". There is nothing else in the "Processing" folder.

I am trying to use ModelBuilder to create an empty file geodatabase inside each Output folder with the same name as the folder. i.e. in the "Output_1" folder, the file gdb will be called "Output_1.gdb".

I thought this would be very straight forward using an "Iterate Workspace" iterator, where the input is the "Processing" folder.

I could then use the output workspace from the iterator as the file gdb location into the "Create file gdb" tool, and the %Name% from the iterator as the file dgb name.

However, the "Create File GDB" tool won't accept the workspace output from the iterator as the file gdb location.

I have tried changing the iterator settings so that the workspace type it looks for is only folders, but this doesn't fix this issue.

I have also tried changing the input variable (called "Processing") between a "folder" and a "workspace". This makes no difference.

Is there something fundamental I am missing? Or is this a bug?

enter image description here

If I first run just the iterator part of the model, I am then able to connect the "wokspace" output as the input location for the "Create file gdb" tool. I can then run just the "Create file gdb" tool, but obviously this only runs for the last folder that was read by the iterator.

enter image description here

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  • I have solved this using a list and the parse path tool rather than an iterator. However, it would still be good to know if this can be done with an iterator.
    – Dan_h_b
    Jun 1, 2015 at 12:48

2 Answers 2

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I was able to get this to work by:

  1. Specifying that Workspace is a Precondition to Create File GDB enter image description here
  2. Using %Name%\%Name% as the File GDB Name, not as part of the location enter image description here

This results in the desired output:

enter image description here

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  • Good find! I'll put an image of my solution up as well in case somebody else tries to do the same.
    – Dan_h_b
    Jun 1, 2015 at 15:58
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This is how I ended up doing it, by using a list variable for the 15 folders as the input. And the Parse type to return the "Name".

enter image description here

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