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I am developing wpf application. I have one static world map of 500 width and 500 height. I have one form in my application. In this from user enters the latitude and longitude and submit the details. I want to show the exact location of these latitude and longitude on my static map. So I am trying to convert these latitude and longitude into pixels. I am using ellipse to show the circle on my static map. How should I convert the geographical coordinates into pixels in C# ? Can you please provide me any code or link through which I can solve the above issue ? My question is similar to the link

Convert long/lat to pixel x/y on a given picture

I found this link useful.

Edit : I have used the link

http://code.google.com/p/geographical-dot-net/source/browse/trunk/GeographicalDotNet/GeographicalDotNet/Projection/GoogleMapsAPIProjection.cs

and written the following code

GoogleMapsAPIProjection googleApiProjObj = new GoogleMapsAPIProjection(0);
            float x = 18.29F;
            float y = 73.57F;
            System.Drawing.PointF p1 = new System.Drawing.PointF(x,y);
            System.Drawing.PointF p2 =googleApiProjObj.FromCoordinatesToPixel(p1);

            //CircleEllipse.Margin = new Thickness(longitudePixels,latitudePixels, 0, 0);
            CircleEllipse.Margin = new Thickness(p2.X, p2.Y, 0, 0);
            CircleEllipse.Visibility = Visibility.Visible;

18.29 and 73.57 are lat and log of Pune city in India. In the above code p2.x giving me 141 and p2.y giving me 49. So the above code not showing me the Pune location on map. My xaml code is as follows

<ScrollViewer HorizontalScrollBarVisibility="Auto" Grid.Row="4" Width="500" Height="500" Background="Gray">
            <Grid>
                <Image Margin="0,0,0,0" x:Name="MapImage" Source="Images\World-Blank-Map.png" Stretch="Fill" Width="500" Height="500" ></Image>
                <Ellipse Canvas.Top="50" 
      Canvas.Left="50" 
      Fill="Red" 
      Height="5"
      Width="5"
      Visibility="Collapsed"
      StrokeThickness="4"                     

      x:Name="CircleEllipse"
      HorizontalAlignment="Left"
      VerticalAlignment="Top"
      Margin="0,0,0,0" />
            </Grid>
        </ScrollViewer>
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  • I am trying to use C# code suggested by @Jader Dias in the link Oct 5, 2012 at 7:01
  • 1
    What projection does your "static world map" use? Is it a Google static map?
    – Marcelo
    Oct 5, 2012 at 7:33
  • Hello @Mercelo. My map use Mercator Projection Oct 5, 2012 at 8:32
  • 1
    Some information is still missing. A standard Google Map, using the Mercator projection, contains the entire world in one map tile of 256 x 256 pixels, not 500 x 500. How did your "static world map" get to that size?
    – Marcelo
    Oct 5, 2012 at 10:13
  • @Marcelo you are right. I have taken the 256*256 google map image. Now everything is working fine. It shows the correct location for given latitude and longitude. Oct 5, 2012 at 12:33

2 Answers 2

2

You provided your own answer, take a look at the code at the following

http://code.google.com/p/geographical-dot-net/source/browse/trunk/GeographicalDotNet/GeographicalDotNet/Projection/GoogleMapsAPIProjection.cs

public class GoogleMapsAPIProjection
{
    private readonly double PixelTileSize = 256d;
    private readonly double DegreesToRadiansRatio = 180d / Math.PI;
    private readonly double RadiansToDegreesRatio = Math.PI / 180d;
    private readonly PointF PixelGlobeCenter;
    private readonly double XPixelsToDegreesRatio;
    private readonly double YPixelsToRadiansRatio;

    public GoogleMapsAPIProjection(double zoomLevel)
    {
        var pixelGlobeSize = this.PixelTileSize * Math.Pow(2d, zoomLevel);
        this.XPixelsToDegreesRatio = pixelGlobeSize / 360d;
        this.YPixelsToRadiansRatio = pixelGlobeSize / (2d * Math.PI);
        var halfPixelGlobeSize = Convert.ToSingle(pixelGlobeSize / 2d);
        this.PixelGlobeCenter = new PointF(
            halfPixelGlobeSize, halfPixelGlobeSize);
    }

    public PointF FromCoordinatesToPixel(PointF coordinates)
    {
        var x = Math.Round(this.PixelGlobeCenter.X
            + (coordinates.X * this.XPixelsToDegreesRatio));
        var f = Math.Min(
            Math.Max(
                 Math.Sin(coordinates.Y * RadiansToDegreesRatio),
                -0.9999d),
            0.9999d);
        var y = Math.Round(this.PixelGlobeCenter.Y + .5d * 
            Math.Log((1d + f) / (1d - f)) * -this.YPixelsToRadiansRatio);
        return new PointF(Convert.ToSingle(x), Convert.ToSingle(y));
    }

    public PointF FromPixelToCoordinates(PointF pixel)
    {
        var longitude = (pixel.X - this.PixelGlobeCenter.X) /
            this.XPixelsToDegreesRatio;
        var latitude = (2 * Math.Atan(Math.Exp(
            (pixel.Y - this.PixelGlobeCenter.Y) / -this.YPixelsToRadiansRatio))
            - Math.PI / 2) * DegreesToRadiansRatio;
        return new PointF(
            Convert.ToSingle(latitude),
            Convert.ToSingle(longitude));
    }
}
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  • Hi @Marcelo. I have updated my question? Can you please tell me where I am going wrong Oct 5, 2012 at 8:47
  • I have done the copy and paste of GoogleMapsAPIProjection class. Should we need to specify width and height of map anywhere in the class GoogleMapsAPIProjection ? Should I need to do any changes in the class GoogleMapsAPIProjection? Oct 5, 2012 at 8:49
0

I post my api Mercator Projection for Google Maps. ;-) You have three classes:

  • Constants
  • PointCoordinates: latitude and longitude.
  • PointPixel: x,y for level 0 of google Maps.

    You can convert PointPixel from/to PointCoordinates

{

public static class PointUtils
{
    public const double MercatorGoogleHeight = 256;
    public const double MercatorGoogleWidth = 256;
    public const double PixelLongintudeOrigin = MercatorGoogleWidth / 2;
    public const double PixelLatitudeOrigin = MercatorGoogleHeight / 2;
    public const double PixelsPerLongintudeDegre = MercatorGoogleWidth / 360;
    public const double RadsPerLatitudeDegre = MercatorGoogleHeight / (2 * Math.PI);
}

/// <summary>
/// Point Pixel on Mercator Google Zoom 0
/// </summary>
public class PointPixel
{
    public double X { get; set; }
    public double Y { get; set; }

    public PointCoordinates ToPointCoordinates()
    {
        var lng = (X - PointUtils.PixelLongintudeOrigin) / PointUtils.PixelsPerLongintudeDegre;
        var latRad = (Y - PointUtils.PixelLatitudeOrigin)/-PointUtils.RadsPerLatitudeDegre;
        var lat = (2*Math.Atan(Math.Exp(latRad)) - Math.PI/2).RadToDeg();
        return new PointCoordinates()
            {
                Latitude = lat,
                Longitude = lng
            };
    }

}

/// <summary>
/// Point on Map World
/// </summary>
public class PointCoordinates
{

    public double Latitude { get; set; }
    public double Longitude { get; set; }

    public PointPixel ToPointPixel()
    {
        var x = PointUtils.PixelLongintudeOrigin + PointUtils.PixelsPerLongintudeDegre * Longitude;
        var siny = Math.Sin(Latitude.DegToRad());
        var y = PointUtils.PixelLatitudeOrigin - (Math.Log((1 + siny) / (1 - siny)) / 2) * PointUtils.RadsPerLatitudeDegre;
        return new PointPixel() { X = x, Y = y };

    }


}

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