Serge,
That is precisely what I want! Any ideas on how to accomplish that?
Thanks!
Floyd
On Feb 28, 2013, at 2:52 PM, Serge Fonville <[email protected]> wrote:
> HI,
>
> It seems like you want something according to the following
>
> you know your start long/lat
> you can determine the long/lat arround it
> for every of those you determine the route.
> if you follow that route you know the house you find
> otherwise you can use an increasing circle and if it finds an address on the
> location, you may be able to determine which of the points in the circles
> (which increase in size) is closest.
>
> Does that match what you want?
> If not, could you further elaborate what you want exactly?
>
> Kind regards/met vriendelijke groet,
>
> Serge Fonville
>
> http://www.sergefonville.nl
>
> Convince Microsoft!
> They need to add TRUNCATE PARTITION in SQL Server
> https://connect.microsoft.com/SQLServer/feedback/details/417926/truncate-partition-of-partitioned-table
>
>
> 2013/2/28 Floyd Resler <[email protected]>
>
>
>
> On Feb 28, 2013, at 1:04 PM, [email protected] wrote:
>
> > On 28.02.2013 12:36, Floyd Resler wrote:
> >> I have a project where my client would like to find the nearest
> >> street address from where he current is. Getting the longitude and
> >> latitude is easy enough but I'm having a hard time finding out how to
> >> get the nearest house. I have found a lot of solutions for addresses
> >> maintained in a database but these addresses won't be in a database.
> >> I thought about just querying Google for each longitude and latitude
> >> within in a small circle but my math skills are nowhere near good
> >> enough to accomplish that. Anyone have any ideas?
> >>
> >> Thanks!
> >> Floyd
> >
> >
> > Have you tried Google Maps reverse geocoding?
> > https://developers.google.com/maps/documentation/geocoding/#ReverseGeocoding
> >
> > Ken
> >
> That's what I'm doing but I need to find the closest say five houses to the
> current latitude and longitude coordinates.
>
> Thanks!
> Floyd
>
>