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I'm guessing that the units it uses is meters (m), but it doesn't seem clear from the documentation I've found. Is this correct?

If so, just to verify, in order to convert between miles/meters, I presume these functions should do the trick:

public static function mi2m($mi) {  // miles to meters
    return $mi * 1609.344;
}
public static function m2mi($m) {  // meters to miles
    return $m * 0.000621371192;
}
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3 Answers

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The documentation seems unambiguous. Most of the module uses metres by default. But you can change that to any units you like by modifying a single function, earth. Presumably all the other functions use this function so your units are able to be arbitrary if this is overriden.

Note though that the point <@> point operator always works in miles, and this can't be adjusted.

Your conversion functions are correct, but that's easy to check as well:

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The radius of the Earth is obtained from the earth() function. It is given in meters

If the radius of the Earth is in meters, I'm gonna guess that your math is going to be wrong unless you also use meters.

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Why the downmod? – Paul Betts Oct 24 at 1:11
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The documentation is clear: paragraph 2 of section F.8.1 says: “The radius of the Earth is obtained from the earth() function. It is given in meters.”

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Yeah, but that's talking about the earth() function, it doesn't mention what units the other functions. I deduced they all use meters from this line, but it is definitely not clear. – Matt Huggins Oct 23 at 21:36
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It's apparently expressed in terms of what earth() returns (that's how I understand the comment saying that can modify earth() to your needs). You're on a sphere (that's an approximation but the manual mentions it), the only distance that's relevant is the radius. All the other values are either angles, or distances where the radius is a factor (i.e., if the radius would be multiplied by 2, all the distances that you compute would also be). – Arthur Reutenauer Oct 23 at 21:51

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