77

Possible Duplicate:
Working with latitude/longitude values in Java

Duplicate:

I need to calculate the distance between two points given by two coordinates. The project I am working on is a Java-project, so Java-code will be great, but pseudo-code can also be given, then I can implement it myself :)

As you probably know, there are three ways to represent coordinates:

  • Degrees:Minutes:Seconds (49°30'00"N, 123°30'00"W)
  • Degrees:Decimal Minutes (49°30.0', -123°30.0'), (49d30.0m,-123d30.0')
  • Decimal Degrees (49.5000°,-123.5000°), generally with 4-6 decimal numbers.

It's the third way my coordinates are given in, so the code for this values will be preferred :)

8
  • Take a look at <a href="jan.ucc.nau.edu/~cvm/latlongdist.html">this latitude/longitude distance calculator</a>. It has a link to relevant source code (including an explanation) and a link to the math behind the calculation. It's actually pretty interesting.
    – lc.
    May 8, 2009 at 1:42
  • This site shows you the formula which is the part I assume you are having trouble with? You might want to specify if you want a straight line from point A to point B (through Earth) or if you want the distance as presented on the site. I'm sorry I don't exactly recall their names. However, the code seems relatively straightforward.
    – nevets1219
    May 8, 2009 at 1:43
  • I used the code from this site successfully: * Longditude and latitude calculation I had to make some calculations on the answers to make it into european meters, but that was pretty straight forward :) May 8, 2009 at 1:48
  • 2
  • 2
    See the Vicenty formula -- movable-type.co.uk/scripts/latlong-vincenty.html -- if you care about the Earth not quite being a sphere
    – mob
    Nov 10, 2009 at 23:22

3 Answers 3

193

Based on another question on stackoverflow, I got this code.. This calculates the result in meters, not in miles :)

 public static float distFrom(float lat1, float lng1, float lat2, float lng2) {
    double earthRadius = 6371000; //meters
    double dLat = Math.toRadians(lat2-lat1);
    double dLng = Math.toRadians(lng2-lng1);
    double a = Math.sin(dLat/2) * Math.sin(dLat/2) +
               Math.cos(Math.toRadians(lat1)) * Math.cos(Math.toRadians(lat2)) *
               Math.sin(dLng/2) * Math.sin(dLng/2);
    double c = 2 * Math.atan2(Math.sqrt(a), Math.sqrt(1-a));
    float dist = (float) (earthRadius * c);

    return dist;
    }
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  • 17
    Why convert to Float and then back to float?
    – Steve Kuo
    May 8, 2009 at 4:05
  • 3
    return (float) (dist * meterConversion)
    – mob
    Nov 10, 2009 at 23:18
  • 6
    The earth radius is 3958.75 in miles not kilometers. So your code above returns miles. Nov 12, 2011 at 8:55
  • 5
    @swinefeaster: There's meterConversion constant in the second to last line which turns miles into meters. Nov 21, 2011 at 2:30
  • 9
    Just use 6369 as the earthRadius rather than Miles and then convert them to metric afterwards. Apr 13, 2012 at 15:02
27

You can use the Java Geodesy Library for GPS, it uses the Vincenty's formulae which takes account of the earths surface curvature.

Implementation goes like this:

import org.gavaghan.geodesy.*;

...

GeodeticCalculator geoCalc = new GeodeticCalculator();

Ellipsoid reference = Ellipsoid.WGS84;  

GlobalPosition pointA = new GlobalPosition(latitude, longitude, 0.0); // Point A

GlobalPosition userPos = new GlobalPosition(userLat, userLon, 0.0); // Point B

double distance = geoCalc.calculateGeodeticCurve(reference, userPos, pointA).getEllipsoidalDistance(); // Distance between Point A and Point B

The resulting distance is in meters.

0
4

In C++ it is done like this:

#define LOCAL_PI 3.1415926535897932385 

double ToRadians(double degrees) 
{
  double radians = degrees * LOCAL_PI / 180;
  return radians;
}

double DirectDistance(double lat1, double lng1, double lat2, double lng2) 
{
  double earthRadius = 3958.75;
  double dLat = ToRadians(lat2-lat1);
  double dLng = ToRadians(lng2-lng1);
  double a = sin(dLat/2) * sin(dLat/2) + 
             cos(ToRadians(lat1)) * cos(ToRadians(lat2)) * 
             sin(dLng/2) * sin(dLng/2);
  double c = 2 * atan2(sqrt(a), sqrt(1-a));
  double dist = earthRadius * c;
  double meterConversion = 1609.00;
  return dist * meterConversion;
}
2
  • Can "a" ever be negative?
    – Xi Wei
    Dec 10, 2015 at 23:46
  • @XiWei No. Latitudes are between -pi/2 and pi/2 so their cosines are positives. And the other factors are squared. Apr 26, 2017 at 9:08

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