NAME
Geo::Coordinates::Transform - Transform Latitude/Longitude between various different coordinate functions
SYNOPSIS
use Geo::Coordinates::Convert;
# List of a lat/longs in various formats.
my @lst = ( 47.9805, -116.5586, '47 58.8300', '-116 33.5160', '47 58 49', '-116 33 30');
my $cnv = new Geo::Coordinates::Convert();
my $out_ref = []; # Array reference
# Convert List to Decimal-Degrees... DD.DDDD
$out_ref = $cnv->cnv_to_dd(\@lst);
# Convert List to Degree Decimal-Degrees... DD MM.MMMM
$out_ref = $cnv->cnv_to_ddm(\@lst);
# Convert List to Degrees Minutes Decimal Seconds DD MM SS.SSSS
$out_ref = $cnv->cnv_to_dms(\@lst);
DESCRIPTION
There are several formats used to present geographic coordinates. For example:
* DMS Degrees:Minutes:Seconds (48 30 30, -117 30' 30")
* DM Degrees:Decimal-Minutes (48 30.5, -117 30.5'),
* DD Decimal-Degrees (48.5083333, -17.5083333)
This module converts a list of provided latitude and longitude coordinates in any of the three formats above (mixed input is ok) and converts to the desired format. Note that special characters or non-numerical characters such as " will throw an warning and return NaN for that list item.
In addition, the input does not interpert N,S,W,E designators but expects coordinates to be in positive or negative representation.
Format of the output can be controlled via input arguments in the constructor. The arguments are expected to be in the form of a hash reference. For example:
# Change output format
# Hash aruements are
# 'dd_fmt' = Decimal-Degrees format
# 'dm_fmt' = Decimal-Minutes format
# 'ds_fmt' = Decimal-Second format
# Example
my $cnv = new Geo::Coordinates::Convert( {dd_fmt=>'%3.2f', dm_fmt=>'%3.1f', ds_fmt=>'%d'} );
Minimal sanity checks are performed. 75 minutes will be handled as 1 degree and 15 minutes.
SEE ALSO
The Geographic Coordinate System wiki ia good place for background documentation http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geographic_coordinate_system
A useful web interface using this module can be found here.
http://perlworks.com/calculate/latitude-longitude-conversion/
METHODS
Only three methods provided. Expected input is a reference to a list and output is a reference to list.
$out_ref = $cnv->cnv_to_dd(\@lst); # To Degree Decimal-Degrees... DD.DDDDDDD
$out_ref = $cnv->cnv_to_ddm(\@lst); # To Degree Decimal-Minutes... DD MM.MMMM
$out_ref = $cnv->cnv_to_dms(\@lst); # To Degrees Minutes Decimal Seconds DD MM SS.SSSS
AUTHOR
<troxel at perlworks.com>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright (C) 2010 by Troxel
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself, either Perl version 5.8.8 or, at your option, any later version of Perl 5 you may have available.