Re: [GENERAL] earthdistance is not giving correct results.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (mike cox) writes: I'm running PostgreSQL 8.0 beta 1. I'm using the earthdistance to find the distance between two different latitude and logitude locations. Unfortunately, the result seems to be wrong. Here is what I'm doing: select earth_distance(ll_to_earth('122.55688','45.513746'),ll_to_earth('122.396357','47.648845')); The result I get is this: I believe ll_to_earth() is expecting ll_to_earth(latitude, longitude), Also, I think earth_distance returns it's value in meters. ---(end of broadcast)--- TIP 1: subscribe and unsubscribe commands go to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: [GENERAL] earthdistance is not giving correct results.
I agree, NS or EW long lat should be the same. I was just pointing to the wrong figure. Also, if ll_to_earth takes lat first, it should report an error for a |lat| 90... Michael Fuhr wrote: On Sat, Oct 02, 2004 at 09:29:16PM -0400, Jean-Luc Lachance wrote: Maybe it would work with the right long lat... try Protland OR -122.67555, 45.51184 Seattle WA -122.32956, 47.60342 It doesn't matter which hemisphere the longitudes are in as long as they're in the same hemisphere: test= select earth_distance(ll_to_earth('122.55688','45.513746'),ll_to_earth('122.396357','47.648845')); earth_distance -- 128862.563227506 (1 row) test= select earth_distance(ll_to_earth('-122.55688','45.513746'),ll_to_earth('-122.396357','47.648845')); earth_distance -- 128862.563227506 (1 row) What *does* matter is that one specify (lat, lon) instead of (lon, lat): test= select earth_distance(ll_to_earth('45.513746', '122.55688'),ll_to_earth('47.648845', '122.396357')); earth_distance -- 237996.256627247 (1 row) That's 238km, or about 148mi; using your coordinates gives almost the same answer, about 234km or 146mi. As I said, the distance between Portland and Seattle is around 150mi. Also, do not forget that it is the line distance not the driving distance. I doubt anybody thought that earth_distance() was calculating driving distance. How would it know what route to follow without an extensive road database and a route specification? ---(end of broadcast)--- TIP 2: you can get off all lists at once with the unregister command (send unregister YourEmailAddressHere to [EMAIL PROTECTED])
Re: [GENERAL] earthdistance is not giving correct results.
On Sun, Oct 03, 2004 at 11:36:20 -0400, Jean-Luc Lachance [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: I agree, NS or EW long lat should be the same. I was just pointing to the wrong figure. Also, if ll_to_earth takes lat first, it should report an error for a |lat| 90... I disagree with this. Latitudes greater than 90 degrees have a reasonable meaning and it can be useful to use 0 to 180 instead of -90 to 90. The same thing applies to longitude. ---(end of broadcast)--- TIP 3: if posting/reading through Usenet, please send an appropriate subscribe-nomail command to [EMAIL PROTECTED] so that your message can get through to the mailing list cleanly
[GENERAL] earthdistance is not giving correct results.
I'm running PostgreSQL 8.0 beta 1. I'm using the earthdistance to find the distance between two different latitude and logitude locations. Unfortunately, the result seems to be wrong. Here is what I'm doing: select earth_distance(ll_to_earth('122.55688','45.513746'),ll_to_earth('122.396357','47.648845')); The result I get is this: 128862.563227506 The distance from Portland to Seattle is not 128862 miles. __ Do you Yahoo!? Yahoo! Mail is new and improved - Check it out! http://promotions.yahoo.com/new_mail ---(end of broadcast)--- TIP 1: subscribe and unsubscribe commands go to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: [GENERAL] earthdistance is not giving correct results.
mike cox [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes: The distance from Portland to Seattle is not 128862 miles. How about 128.8 kilometers? The earthdistance docs say it's in meters unless you've redefined the base unit. regards, tom lane ---(end of broadcast)--- TIP 4: Don't 'kill -9' the postmaster
Re: [GENERAL] earthdistance is not giving correct results.
On Sat, Oct 02, 2004 at 07:09:25PM -0400, Tom Lane wrote: mike cox [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes: The distance from Portland to Seattle is not 128862 miles. How about 128.8 kilometers? The earthdistance docs say it's in meters unless you've redefined the base unit. 128.8 kilometers is about 80 miles; the distance from Portland to Seattle is more like 150 miles. earth_distance(ll_to_earth('122.55688','45.513746'),ll_to_earth('122.396357','47.648845')); I haven't played with earthdistance, but I'd guess that the arguments to ll_to_earth should be (latitude, longitude) instead of (longitude, latitude). Here are some queries from my own implementation of the haversine function, which is another way to measure distances on a sphere: = select haversine(122.55688, 45.513746, 122.396357, 47.648845); haversine -- 79.9258188445352 That distance is miles, which is almost exactly equivalent to the 128.8km figure from earth_distance(). Correcting the order of the arguments gives this: = select haversine(45.513746, 122.55688, 47.648845, 122.396357); haversine -- 147.614987754694 That's more like the true distance in miles between Portland and Seattle -- Michael Fuhr http://www.fuhr.org/~mfuhr/ ---(end of broadcast)--- TIP 8: explain analyze is your friend
Re: [GENERAL] earthdistance is not giving correct results.
On Sat, Oct 02, 2004 at 17:55:31 -0600, Michael Fuhr [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: On Sat, Oct 02, 2004 at 07:09:25PM -0400, Tom Lane wrote: mike cox [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes: The distance from Portland to Seattle is not 128862 miles. How about 128.8 kilometers? The earthdistance docs say it's in meters unless you've redefined the base unit. 128.8 kilometers is about 80 miles; the distance from Portland to Seattle is more like 150 miles. earth_distance(ll_to_earth('122.55688','45.513746'),ll_to_earth('122.396357','47.648845')); I haven't played with earthdistance, but I'd guess that the arguments to ll_to_earth should be (latitude, longitude) instead of (longitude, latitude). I double checked to make sure the README file says the right thing and it does say that latitude is the first argument and longitude the second. So it just looks like the arguments were given in the wrong order. ---(end of broadcast)--- TIP 4: Don't 'kill -9' the postmaster
Re: [GENERAL] earthdistance is not giving correct results.
Maybe it would work with the right long lat... try Protland OR -122.67555, 45.51184 Seattle WA -122.32956, 47.60342 Also, do not forget that it is the line distance not the driving distance. Michael Fuhr wrote: On Sat, Oct 02, 2004 at 07:09:25PM -0400, Tom Lane wrote: mike cox [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes: The distance from Portland to Seattle is not 128862 miles. How about 128.8 kilometers? The earthdistance docs say it's in meters unless you've redefined the base unit. 128.8 kilometers is about 80 miles; the distance from Portland to Seattle is more like 150 miles. earth_distance(ll_to_earth('122.55688','45.513746'),ll_to_earth('122.396357','47.648845')); I haven't played with earthdistance, but I'd guess that the arguments to ll_to_earth should be (latitude, longitude) instead of (longitude, latitude). Here are some queries from my own implementation of the haversine function, which is another way to measure distances on a sphere: = select haversine(122.55688, 45.513746, 122.396357, 47.648845); haversine -- 79.9258188445352 That distance is miles, which is almost exactly equivalent to the 128.8km figure from earth_distance(). Correcting the order of the arguments gives this: = select haversine(45.513746, 122.55688, 47.648845, 122.396357); haversine -- 147.614987754694 That's more like the true distance in miles between Portland and Seattle ---(end of broadcast)--- TIP 1: subscribe and unsubscribe commands go to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: [GENERAL] earthdistance is not giving correct results.
On Sat, Oct 02, 2004 at 09:29:16PM -0400, Jean-Luc Lachance wrote: Maybe it would work with the right long lat... try Protland OR -122.67555, 45.51184 Seattle WA -122.32956, 47.60342 It doesn't matter which hemisphere the longitudes are in as long as they're in the same hemisphere: test= select earth_distance(ll_to_earth('122.55688','45.513746'),ll_to_earth('122.396357','47.648845')); earth_distance -- 128862.563227506 (1 row) test= select earth_distance(ll_to_earth('-122.55688','45.513746'),ll_to_earth('-122.396357','47.648845')); earth_distance -- 128862.563227506 (1 row) What *does* matter is that one specify (lat, lon) instead of (lon, lat): test= select earth_distance(ll_to_earth('45.513746', '122.55688'),ll_to_earth('47.648845', '122.396357')); earth_distance -- 237996.256627247 (1 row) That's 238km, or about 148mi; using your coordinates gives almost the same answer, about 234km or 146mi. As I said, the distance between Portland and Seattle is around 150mi. Also, do not forget that it is the line distance not the driving distance. I doubt anybody thought that earth_distance() was calculating driving distance. How would it know what route to follow without an extensive road database and a route specification? -- Michael Fuhr http://www.fuhr.org/~mfuhr/ ---(end of broadcast)--- TIP 9: the planner will ignore your desire to choose an index scan if your joining column's datatypes do not match
Re: [GENERAL] earthdistance is not giving correct results.
Michael Fuhr [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes: What *does* matter is that one specify (lat, lon) instead of (lon, lat): The earthdistance README does specify that latitude is the first argument, but it doesn't get the function name right :-( ... it says ll_to_cube instead of ll_to_earth. Anyone want to go through the file and fix any other obvious documentation errors? regards, tom lane ---(end of broadcast)--- TIP 5: Have you checked our extensive FAQ? http://www.postgresql.org/docs/faqs/FAQ.html