17

I have $latitude = 29.6815400 and $longitude = 64.3647100, now in MySQL I would like to take the 15 nearest places to these coordinates and I'm planning to do this query:

SELECT *
FROM places
WHERE latitude  BETWEEN($latitude  - 1, $latitude  + 1)
AND   longitude BETWEEN($longitude - 1, $logintude + 1)
LIMIT 15;

Do you think it's correct or do you suggest something else?

How to do the BEETWEEN, since I want to search trough a maximum of 50Km range the near places?

I forgot to say that I can also use PHP for do anything before to run the query.

Note: I can't use stored procedures.

8
  • are you sure you will get 15 records with these conditions? Commented Jan 10, 2013 at 9:39
  • @mamdouhalramadan nope , for that i asked if is that correct Commented Jan 10, 2013 at 9:40
  • then. sure it is not correct. because this conditions will get you what you have in your db based on fixed condition and what you need is a dynamic approach. like using euclidean distance. but this needs stored procedures!!! Commented Jan 10, 2013 at 9:45
  • what you think about this ? fr.scribd.com/doc/2569355/Geo-Distance-Search-with-MySQL Commented Jan 10, 2013 at 9:46
  • it's exactly what you need. but preferably, you use stored procedures in your case. or if you are using php to do it will be great to. Commented Jan 10, 2013 at 9:48

4 Answers 4

19

here’s the PHP formula for calculating the distance between two points:

function getDistanceBetweenPointsNew($latitude1, $longitude1, $latitude2, $longitude2, $unit = 'Mi') 
{
   $theta = $longitude1 - $longitude2;
   $distance = (sin(deg2rad($latitude1)) * sin(deg2rad($latitude2))+
               (cos(deg2rad($latitude1)) * cos(deg2rad($latitude2)) * cos(deg2rad($theta)));
   $distance = acos($distance); $distance = rad2deg($distance); 
   $distance = $distance * 60 * 1.1515;

   switch($unit) 
   { 
     case 'Mi': break;
     case 'Km' : $distance = $distance * 1.609344; 
   } 
   return (round($distance,2)); 
}

then add a query to get all the records with distance less or equal to the one above:

$qry = "SELECT * 
        FROM (SELECT *, (((acos(sin((".$latitude."*pi()/180)) *
        sin((`geo_latitude`*pi()/180))+cos((".$latitude."*pi()/180)) *
        cos((`geo_latitude`*pi()/180)) * cos(((".$longitude."-
        `geo_longitude`)*pi()/180))))*180/pi())*60*1.1515*1.609344) 
        as distance
        FROM `ci_geo`)myTable 
        WHERE distance <= ".$distance." 
        LIMIT 15";

and you can take a look here for similar computations.

and you can read more here

Update:

you have to take in mind that to calculate longitude2 and longitude2 you need to know that:

Each degree of latitude is approximately 69 miles (111 kilometers) apart. The range varies (due to the earth's slightly ellipsoid shape) from 68.703 miles (110.567 km) at the equator to 69.407 (111.699 km) at the poles. This is convenient because each minute (1/60th of a degree) is approximately one mile.

A degree of longitude is widest at the equator at 69.172 miles (111.321) and gradually shrinks to zero at the poles. At 40° north or south the distance between a degree of longitude is 53 miles (85 km).

so to calculate $longitude2 $latitude2 according to 50km then approximately:

$longitude2 = $longitude1 + 0.449; //0.449 = 50km/111.321km
$latitude2 = $latitude1 + 0.450; // 0.450 = 50km/111km
13
  • this not require stored procedures right? :P Commented Jan 10, 2013 at 10:08
  • no this does not require stored procedures. Commented Jan 10, 2013 at 10:10
  • wonderfull i'll test that later watching also about performance benchmark and i'll tell you or directly accept the answer! Commented Jan 10, 2013 at 10:16
  • 1
    updated the query to fit the KM case. with some error modifications :) Commented Jan 10, 2013 at 16:34
  • 1
    You should have an ORDER BY to return the results in order of ascending distance. Commented Feb 3, 2014 at 23:09
16

As a rule of thumb, avoid queries that cause a full table scan.

Instead, you can speculate a very-fast and very-optimized SQL query selecting all the places with coordinates inside a simple square of side $radius, instead of selecting suddenly a perfect circle with that radius. Then, PHP or whatever can quickly filter the surplus.

Let me show the concept in PHP:

// your input variables
$lat    = 45.6072;
$lon    = 7.65678;
$radius = 50; // expressed in Km

// every latitude degree° is ~ 111Km
$angle_radius_lat = $radius / 111;

// longitude takes into account equator distance
$angle_radius_lon = $angle_radius_lat * cos( deg2rad( $lat ) );

// define a simple square with your lat/lng as center
$min_lat = $lat - $angle_radius_lat;
$max_lat = $lat + $angle_radius_lat;
$min_lon = $lon - $angle_radius_lon;
$max_lon = $lon + $angle_radius_lon;

// query places inside the square
// use here your own database function
$results_raw = query_results( "SELECT latitude, longitude FROM ... WHERE latitude BETWEEN $min_lat AND $max_lat AND longitude BETWEEN $min_lon AND $max_lon" );

// filter the surplus outside the circle
$results = [];
foreach( $results_raw as $result ) {

    if( getDistanceBetweenPointsNew( $lat, $lon, $result->latitude, $result->longitude, 'Km' ) <= $radius ) {
        $results[] = $result;
    }

}

// these are your places inside the circle of your radius
var_dump( $results );

In this way MySQL runs a very friendly query that does not cause a full table scan, while PHP strips out the surplus with something similar to the getDistanceBetweenPointsNew() function posted in this page, comparing the distance from the coordinates of the result set to the center of your radius.

Important: in order to do not waste the big performance gain, create a database index on your coordinates columns (latitude and longitude). Happy hacking!

5
  • Totally agree with @EricJOYÉ calculation using cos($lat) and it's not a small error, it's big. I get 15km difference in 50km. That's not acceptable at all.
    – Ergec
    Commented Oct 18, 2017 at 7:11
  • Thanks for the correction. Commented Feb 12, 2018 at 9:57
  • 1
    @IgniteCoders Well, it depends from the query complexity and the dimension of your result set. The most important thing is to avoid a database full table scan, and with this approach you avoid it. Commented Apr 23, 2019 at 18:01
  • Hi @EricJOYÉ and Ergec. Thank you again for your comments, now integrated in the answer. As per StackOverflow guidelines, if your comment is no longer updated with the answer, please delete. Otherwise it might look like that there is still a bug in the question. I will do the same them. Thank you so much! Commented May 13, 2022 at 10:39
  • Also note that cos($lat) is not correct since $lat is not in radiants so I've now expressed it as cos( deg2rad( $lat ) ) in the answer. Commented May 16, 2022 at 17:34
2

I've done something similar with a selling houses app, ordering by distance from a given point, place this in your SQL select statement:

((ACOS(SIN(' . **$search_location['lat']** . ' * PI() / 180) * SIN(**map_lat** * PI() / 180) + COS(' . **$search_location['lat']** . ' * PI() / 180) * COS(**map_lat** * PI() / 180) * COS((' . **$search_location['lng']** . ' - **map_lng**) * PI() / 180)) * 180 / PI()) * 60 * 1.1515) AS "distance"

Replace $search_location with your relevant lat/lng values and the map_lat/map_lng values are the SQL columns which contain the lat/lng values. You can then order the results by distance and either use a where or having clause to filter our properties within a 50km range.

I would recommend using SQL as the approach compared to PHP in the event you require additional functionality such as paging.

1
  • 1
    nice but main problem now is exactly to set the 50km example range :P Commented Jan 10, 2013 at 14:36
0

A bit late but it may help someone - if you want the nearest city by location, I wouldn't go on distance because then an isolated location wouldn't retrieve anything. Try this:

$G_how_close_to_find_cities = "1.1"; // e.g. 1.1 = 10% , 1.2=20% etc
$G_how_many_cities_to_find_by_coordinates = "10";
$query = "SELECT * from Cities  WHERE 
                        Cities__Latitude <= ('".$latitude*$G_how_close_to_find_cities."') AND Cities__Latitude >= ('".$latitude/$G_how_close_to_find_cities."') 
                    AND Cities__Longitude <= ('".$longitude*$G_how_close_to_find_cities."') AND Cities__Longitude >= ('".$longitude/$G_how_close_to_find_cities."') 
                    ORDER BY SQRT(POWER((Cities__Latitude - ".$latitude."),2)+POWER((Cities__Longitude - ".$longitude."),2)) LIMIT 0,".$G_how_many_cities_to_find_by_coordinates;

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