I'm trying to submit a query using the postal code to my DB whenever the googlemaps viewport center changes. I know that this can be done with reverse geocoding with something like:

google.maps.event.addListener(map, 'center_changed', function(){
newCenter();
});
...
function newCenter(){
var newc = map.getCenter();
geocoder.geocode({'latLng': newc}, function(results, status){
if (status == google.maps.GeocoderStatus.OK) {
  var newzip = results[0].address_components['postal_code'];
  }
});
};

Of course, this code doesn't actually work. So I was wondering how I would need to change this in order to extract the postal code from the results array. Thanks

link|improve this question
EDIT: It looks like I have no choice but to iterate through the address components and search for one with types[0] == 'postal_code' ? Is there a better way to do that? – Romaine M. Mar 17 '11 at 15:28
@RomainM yes i would assume unless u want to manually parse it from the result – kjy112 Mar 17 '11 at 15:31
feedback

7 Answers

What I've realized so far is that the ZIPCODE is always the last value inside each returned address, so, if you want to retrieve the very first zipcode (this is my case), you can use the following approach:

var address = results[0].address_components;
var zipcode = address[address.length - 1].long_name;
link|improve this answer
ah, there we go. That's a hell of a lot cleaner. Thanks – Romaine M. Mar 18 '11 at 15:51
feedback

Using JQuery?

var searchAddressComponents = results[0].address_components,
    searchPostalCode="";

$.each(searchAddressComponents, function(){
    if(this.types[0]=="postal_code"){
        searchCountry=this.short_name;
    }
});

short_name or long_name will work above
the "searchPostalCode" var will contain the postal (zip?) code IF and only IF you get one from the Google Maps API.

Sometimes you DO NOT get a "postal_code" in return for your query.

link|improve this answer
feedback

You can do this pretty easily using the underscore.js libraray: http://documentcloud.github.com/underscore/#find

_.find(results[0].address_components, function (ac) { return ac.types[0] == 'postal_code' }).short_name
link|improve this answer
thanks buddy, pretty nice one-liner using underscore.js' find() – jpincheira Apr 17 at 10:50
feedback

Alright, so I got it. The solution is a little uglier than I'd like, and I probably don't need the last for loop, but here's the code for anyone else who needs to extract crap from address_components[]. This is inside the geocoder callback function

for(i; i < results.length; i++){
            for(var j=0;j < results[i].address_components.length; j++){
                for(var k=0; k < results[i].address_components[j].types.length; k++){
                    if(results[i].address_components[j].types[k] == "postal_code"){
                        zipcode = results[i].address_components[j].short_name;
                    }
                }
            }
    }
link|improve this answer
feedback

In a word, that's a lot of effort. At least with the v2 API, I could retrieve those details thusly:

var place = response.Placemark[0];
var point = new GLatLng(place.Point.coordinates[1], place.Point.coordinates[0]);

myAddress = place.AddressDetails.Country.AdministrativeArea.SubAdministrativeArea.Locality.Thoroughfare.ThoroughfareName

myCity = place.AddressDetails.Country.AdministrativeArea.SubAdministrativeArea.Locality.LocalityName

myState = place.AddressDetails.Country.AdministrativeArea.AdministrativeAreaName

myZipCode = place.AddressDetails.Country.AdministrativeArea.SubAdministrativeArea.Locality.PostalCode.PostalCodeNumber

There has got to be a more elegant way to retrieve individual address_components without going through the looping jujitsu you just went through.

link|improve this answer
I hope you're right, maybe I just don't get how you're supposed to interact with the object. If you look at the tutorial thing, it's clear that address_components is an array, and since Javascript doesn't have associative arrays, the only way that I can think to do this is with loops code.google.com/apis/maps/documentation/javascript/… – Romaine M. Mar 17 '11 at 22:43
feedback

This takes only two for loops. The "results" array gets updated once we found the first "type" to be "postal_code".

It then updates the original array with the newly found array set and loops again.

            var i, j,
            result, types;

            // Loop through the Geocoder result set. Note that the results
            // array will change as this loop can self iterate.
            for (i = 0; i < results.length; i++) {

                result = results[i];

                types = result.types;

                for (j = 0; j < types.length; j++) {

                    if (types[j] === 'postal_code') {

                        // If we haven't found the "long_name" property,
                        // then we need to take this object and iterate through
                        // it again by setting it to our master loops array and 
                        // setting the index to -1
                        if (result.long_name === undefined) {
                            results = result.address_components;
                            i = -1;
                        }
                        // We've found it!
                        else {
                            postcode = result.long_name;
                        }

                        break;

                    }

                }

            }
link|improve this answer
feedback
places.getDetails( request_details, function(results_details, status){

                // Check if the Service is OK
                if (status == google.maps.places.PlacesServiceStatus.OK) {                  

                    places_postal           = results_details.address_components
                    places_phone            = results_details.formatted_phone_number
                    places_phone_int        = results_details.international_phone_number
                    places_format_address   = results_details.formatted_address
                    places_google_url       = results_details.url
                    places_website          = results_details.website
                    places_rating           = results_details.rating

                    for (var i = 0; i < places_postal.length; i++ ) {
                        if (places_postal[i].types == "postal_code"){
                            console.log(places_postal[i].long_name)
                        }
                    }

                }
            });

This seems to work very well for me, this is with the new Google Maps API V3. If this helps anyone, write a comment, i'm writing my script as we speak... so it might change.

link|improve this answer
feedback

Your Answer

 
or
required, but never shown

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.