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There seems to be no standard whether Longitude,Latitude or Latitude,Longitude should be used. WSG84 and stuff based directly on it, seem to prefer Long,Lat.

"Normal people" always tend to speak of Lat, Long - so I've very often seen code or frameworks that use Lat, Long (e.g. google Maps)

Is there any strong argument for either way?

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  • For anyone reading this, it's not correct; WSG84 is lat/long and that's how the relevant ISO spec says you should present latitude and longitude. The currently accepted answer, which states there is no universal standard, is factually incorrect. A bunch of popular JavaScript libraries ignore the standard (and hundreds of years of convention), really because some developers found it easier to do it that way and didn't know or care about the existing standard or the long standing convention. Sep 21, 2022 at 11:45

3 Answers 3

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You are correct, there is no universal standard on the order:

In mathematical functions which do an universal conversion, between x,y or lon,lat or inverse, the lon,lat order should be used, because the x-axis relates to longitude and y to latitude and the x,y order is usually preferred.

Further, if you program a piece of code which is related to draw a lon,lat coordinate on x,y coordinates (screen), I also would use the lon,lat order because of the direct relation to x,y.

The order lat,lon is the classical one, coming from (old) navigation and geography. I assume that latitude in that field is used first because it was easier to measure (using only a ruler, the sun and a stick for length of shadow measuring). The longitude was not determinable for long time. If you read old adventure reports, they only tell the latitude that their expeditions reached).

I think therefore they use latitude first, the measurement of longitude came later in history, once precise chronometers have been available and transportable.

So for apps that display coordinates info on a screen you should display latitude first.

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  • Just a note, in "classic" geodesy you usually work with a left-hand-coordinate system when you use Cartesian coordinates, i.e. X-Axes is the vertical axis - usually named "northing". Y-Axes is used for "easting". However, in geoinformatics it is again mostly the right-hand coordinate system. So, always make a clear definition like "lat/lon" or "easting/northing" Jul 9, 2015 at 19:53
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    ISO 6709 (Wikipedia link) says Latitude first, Longitude second.
    – Midavalo
    Apr 9, 2017 at 23:41
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    So, unfortunately, "there is no standard on the order" is an incorrect answer. Dec 17, 2020 at 19:27
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As mentioned in the comments by @Midavalo, there is a standard for the representation of geographic locations by coordinates: ISO 6709.

It describes that a geographical point is specified by the following four items:

  • a first horizontal coordinate (y), such as latitude
  • a second horizontal coordinate (x), such as longitude
  • optionally, a vertical coordinate, i.e. height or depth
  • optionally, an identification of the coordinate reference system (CRS)

The order, positive direction, and units of coordinates are supposed to be defined by that CRS, but when such a CRS identification is missing -- which is very often -- the data must be interpreted by the following conventions:

  • Latitude comes before longitude
  • North latitude is positive
  • East longitude is positive
  • Fraction of degrees is preferred over sexagesimal (degrees, minutes, seconds) notation

So, unless another coordinate reference system is mentioned, the standard is "latitude, longitude, (elevation)".

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    The order latitude first applies only when the coordinate is exclusively interpreted as geographic coordinate. In function with mixed interpretation, like in geo transformations the order lon, lat is prefered. ISo 6709 does not apply for mixed usage.
    – AlexWien
    Apr 12, 2021 at 13:15
  • generally speaking any standard is as standard as amount of people which chose to follow it. if wikipedia says its standard it doesnt really mean anything. anyone can write anything on the internet these days. Sep 25, 2021 at 17:30
  • I agree, the ISO spec is the right thing to follow. The order for the representation is explicitly spelled out in the standards doc and it's hazardous that a bunch of tech bros willfully ignore it (ignoring literally hundreds of years of convention out of hubris). Sep 21, 2022 at 11:30
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There seems to be no standard whether Longitude,Latitude or Latitude,Longitude should be used.

The problem is the exact opposite: there are several competing standards. There's ISO 6709 which specifies Lat-Long and is followed by the EPSG:4326 Geodetic Parameter to represent coordinates on the World Geodetic System. But there's also the CRS:84 parameter which uses the same coordinate system but with inverted axis (Long-Lat).

It's a matter of choosing which standard to follow rather than lacking standardization. Still, that doesn't mean that all choices are equally convenient.

Is there any strong argument for either way?

Yes, prefer Lat-Long for GIS data unless you're catering to a specific audience or use case. As mentioned, most people default to Lat-Long and many GIS applications will too, so if you have no reason to prefer Long-Lat, stick to Lat-Long. Otherwise, it might be better to just pick whatever convention your tools will favor. For instance, Long-Lat is the choice for GeoJSON so if you're primarily processing GeoJSON data, it's your call to decide if it's worth it to convert back and forth. If you're not using GIS software and just want to store coordinates as if they were (x,y) points on a plane, Long-Lat is more intuitive - but beware the risks of rolling your own geodesic calculations instead of using a proper GIS library to interpret coordinate reference systems.

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