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How do you calculate the distance between two markers in Google maps V3? (Similar to the distanceFrom function inV2.)

Thanks..

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10 Answers

up vote 67 down vote accepted

If you want to calculate it yourself, then you can use the Haversine formula:

rad = function(x) {return x*Math.PI/180;}

distHaversine = function(p1, p2) {
  var R = 6371; // earth's mean radius in km
  var dLat  = rad(p2.lat() - p1.lat());
  var dLong = rad(p2.lng() - p1.lng());

  var a = Math.sin(dLat/2) * Math.sin(dLat/2) +
          Math.cos(rad(p1.lat())) * Math.cos(rad(p2.lat())) * Math.sin(dLong/2) * Math.sin(dLong/2);
  var c = 2 * Math.atan2(Math.sqrt(a), Math.sqrt(1-a));
  var d = R * c;

  return d.toFixed(3);
}
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thanks for the alternate solution not using the API! – roberthuttinger Mar 26 at 13:19

There actually seems to be a method in GMap3. It's a static method of the google.maps.geometry.spherical namespace.

It takes as arguments two LatLng objects and will utilize a default Earth radius of 6378137 meters, although the default radius can be overridden with a custom value if necessary.

Make sure you include:

<script type="text/javascript" src="http://maps.google.com/maps/api/js?sensor=false&v=3&libraries=geometry"></script>

in your head section.

The call will be:

google.maps.geometry.spherical.computeDistanceBetween (latLngA, latLngB);
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2  
So why is there a 1% difference in the answer given by Google's spherical computeDistanceBetween and the Haversine distance formula? – RamenRecon Aug 31 '12 at 22:41
1  
@RamenRecon I'm not certain but a quess would be that they use different values for the earths radius. – Emil Badh Oct 11 '12 at 8:01

There is the computeDistanceBetween() in the new V3 Geometry Library

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You can get good accuracy at the cost of increased processing time with the Vincenty algorithm, implemented in Javascript.

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Here is the c# implementation of the this forumula

 public class DistanceAlgorithm
{
    const double PIx = 3.141592653589793;
    const double RADIO = 6378.16;

    /// <summary>
    /// This class cannot be instantiated.
    /// </summary>
    private DistanceAlgorithm() { }

    /// <summary>
    /// Convert degrees to Radians
    /// </summary>
    /// <param name="x">Degrees</param>
    /// <returns>The equivalent in radians</returns>
    public static double Radians(double x)
    {
        return x * PIx / 180;
    }

    /// <summary>
    /// Calculate the distance between two places.
    /// </summary>
    /// <param name="lon1"></param>
    /// <param name="lat1"></param>
    /// <param name="lon2"></param>
    /// <param name="lat2"></param>
    /// <returns></returns>
    public static double DistanceBetweenPlaces(
        double lon1,
        double lat1,
        double lon2,
        double lat2)
    {
        double dlon =  Radians(lon2 - lon1);
        double dlat =  Radians(lat2 - lat1);

        double a = (Math.Sin(dlat / 2) * Math.Sin(dlat / 2)) + Math.Cos(Radians(lat1)) * Math.Cos(Radians(lat2)) * (Math.Sin(dlon / 2) * Math.Sin(dlon / 2));
        double angle = 2 * Math.Atan2(Math.Sqrt(a), Math.Sqrt(1 - a));
        return (angle * RADIO) * 0.62137;//distance in miles
    }

}    
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1  
This doesn't apply to the original question of how to do it in Google Maps. – Niklas Ringdahl Mar 14 '11 at 13:35
There is no inbuilt function to calcuate distance directly, you have to use directory services for two points and extract the distance out of the returned XML/JSON. – naveed_ahmad Mar 15 '11 at 15:32
My comment was on the fact that it would have been better to supply a solution in javascript, as the thread starter didn't say if he/she was using php, .net or static html. – Niklas Ringdahl Mar 16 '11 at 8:23

Just add this to the beginning of your JavaScript code:

google.maps.LatLng.prototype.distanceFrom = function(latlng) {
  var lat = [this.lat(), latlng.lat()]
  var lng = [this.lng(), latlng.lng()]
  var R = 6378137;
  var dLat = (lat[1]-lat[0]) * Math.PI / 180;
  var dLng = (lng[1]-lng[0]) * Math.PI / 180;
  var a = Math.sin(dLat/2) * Math.sin(dLat/2) +
  Math.cos(lat[0] * Math.PI / 180 ) * Math.cos(lat[1] * Math.PI / 180 ) *
  Math.sin(dLng/2) * Math.sin(dLng/2);
  var c = 2 * Math.atan2(Math.sqrt(a), Math.sqrt(1-a));
  var d = R * c;
  return Math.round(d);
}

and then use the function like this:

var loc1 = new GLatLng(52.5773139, 1.3712427);
var loc2 = new GLatLng(52.4788314, 1.7577444);
var dist = loc2.distanceFrom(loc1);
alert(dist/1000);
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With google you can do it using the spherical api, google.maps.geometry.spherical.computeDistanceBetween (latLngA, latLngB);.

However, if the precision of a spherical projection or a haversine solution is not precise enough for you (e.g. if you're close to the pole or computing longer distances), you should use a different library.

Most information on the subject I found on Wikipedia here.

A trick to see if the precision of any given algorithm is adequate is to fill in the maximum and minimum radius of the earth and see if the difference might cause problems for your use case. Many more details can be found in this article

In the end the google api or haversine will serve most purposes without problems.

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Using PHP, you can calculate the distance using this simple function :

// to calculate distance between two lat & lon

function calculate_distance($lat1, $lon1, $lat2, $lon2, $unit='N') 
{ 
  $theta = $lon1 - $lon2; 
  $dist = sin(deg2rad($lat1)) * sin(deg2rad($lat2)) +  cos(deg2rad($lat1)) * cos(deg2rad($lat2)) * cos(deg2rad($theta)); 
  $dist = acos($dist); 
  $dist = rad2deg($dist); 
  $miles = $dist * 60 * 1.1515;
  $unit = strtoupper($unit);

  if ($unit == "K") {
    return ($miles * 1.609344); 
  } else if ($unit == "N") {
      return ($miles * 0.8684);
    } else {
        return $miles;
      }
}

// function ends here
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Had to do it... The action script way

//just make sure you pass a number to the function because it would accept you mother in law...
public var rad = function(x:*) {return x*Math.PI/180;}

protected  function distHaversine(p1:Object, p2:Object):Number {
    var R:int = 6371; // earth's mean radius in km
    var dLat:Number = rad(p2.lat() - p1.lat());
    var dLong:Number = rad(p2.lng() - p1.lng());

    var a:Number = Math.sin(dLat/2) * Math.sin(dLat/2) +
                Math.cos(rad(p1.lat())) * Math.cos(rad(p2.lat())) * Math.sin(dLong/2) * Math.sin(dLong/2);
    var c:Number = 2 * Math.atan2(Math.sqrt(a), Math.sqrt(1-a));
    var d:Number = R * c;

    return d;
}
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See the distanceFrom function on the GLatLng object; the function parameters have slightly changed between v2 and v3.

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2  
Are you sure this is the case? The documentation does not list it. – mikl Apr 23 '10 at 11:58
You're actually quite right there. The v3 documentation does indeed not mention the distanceFrom function, and the link in my reply was indeed pointing to v2. – Tom van Enckevort Apr 23 '10 at 13:23

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