On 30 June 2012 10:42, Fabrizio Bartolomucci <[email protected]> wrote: > Thanks Larry, > actually that is quite strange given the coordinates seem to move on the same > direction while the drawn polyline seem to also have a reverse path. I also > tried to just print the first 100 dots, but they already featured that odd > behavior. > As for the origin, the main points, in effect corresponding to the threading > of the return path, are the positions of the bus stops of a bus line, and the > points in between are the ones returned by google to connect them through > roads. Could you point me to the points producing that weird effect and/or to > a web site where I may submit my points and have them drawn on a map without > having to mangle with the iOS app?
I checked the first one 2012-06-29 17:16:27.947 inArrivo[6293:707] 41.702019, 12.345350 which also appears slightly further down: 2012-06-29 17:16:27.977 inArrivo[6293:707] 41.702019, 12.345350 so it's definitely the data. You could try and find a duplicate of every row like I did, but that might take some time. It's probably the only way though: can you load the points into a database to help you? I don't know of a site where you can submit a list of points though, other than one where they are encoded first, which isn't going to help find duplicate points. -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Google Maps API V2" group. To post to this group, send email to [email protected]. To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [email protected]. For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/google-maps-api?hl=en.
