Couchbase with PHP GeoLocation Search - (Part) Solution - php

Problem
I was in need of a search by range of distance from latitude and longitude. This was relatively straight forward in SQL, however, in couchbase I came across some difficulty. I eventually discovered that spatial views offer a solution for this, however the spatial views aren't accessible via the PHP SDK (yet) and so you had to use the REST Api as an alternative.
Solution
I can get a result set within a range from a latitude and longitude using this method, but now need to sort by date created. Please see end of this post.
My documents are as such:
{
"docType" : "post",
"title" : "Test post",
"location" : {
"latitude" : 1.123456789
"longitude" : -13.9876543210
}
"created" : 1395329441
}
The trick is to create an index with a normal view which will format the keys in a specific way.
The formula
Preppend all keys with "point::"
Add a positive or negative sign "+", or "-"
Make the integer part 3 characters long by prepending with "0"s
Make the decimal part 9 characters long by appending with "0"
Repeat for both latitude and longitude
Example of a Key produced from the document above:
"point::+001.123456789,-013.987654321"
This will give you a key formatted in a way that will be sortable by the unicode collation which couchbase use.
The View
function (doc, meta) {
if(meta.type == "json" && doc.docType == "post" && doc.location){
if(doc.location.latitude && doc.location.longitude){
var prefix = "point::";
var latitude = doc.location.latitude.toString();
var longitude = doc.location.longitude.toString();
var pointKey = prefix.concat(buildKey(latitude), ",", buildKey(longitude));
emit(pointKey, meta.id);
function buildKey(coord){
// positive or negative sign
var sign;
if(coord.substring(0,1) == "-"){
sign = "-";
coord = coord.substring(1, coord.length);
} else {
sign = "+";
}
// remove "+" (incase it is there), though normall this isnt expressed
if(coord.substring(0,1) == "+"){
coord = coord.substring(1, coord.length);
}
var intSize = "000";
var decSize = "000000000";
// get integer and decimal parts of latitude
var parts = coord.split(".");
var int = parts[0];
var dec = parts[1];
// prepend int with 0's so it has a length of 3
if(int.length < intSize.length){
int = intSize.substring(0, intSize.length - int.length) + int;
}
int = int.substring(0,3);
// append dec with 0's so it has a length of 9
if(dec.length < decSize.length){
dec = dec + decSize.substring(0, decSize.length - dec.length);
}
dec = dec.substring(0,9);
return sign.concat(int, ".", dec);
}
}
}
}
The PHP
Now in PHP convert your latitude and longitude into a key in the same format. You can even work out a key for minimum latitude and minimum longitude and maximum latitude and maximum longitude so you can do a search by a "range" (Range will be a box not a circle, but good enough to narrow result set significantly)
For example:
$location = GeoLocation::fromDegrees($data['location']['latitude'], $data['location']['longitude']);
$coordinates = $location->boundingCoordinates(50, 'miles');
$startkey = "point::" . $location->buildKey($coordinates[0]->getLatitudeInDegrees()) . "," . $location->buildKey($coordinates[0]->getLongitudeInDegrees());
$endkey = "point::" . $location->buildKey($coordinates[1]->getLatitudeInDegrees()) . "," . $location->buildKey($coordinates[1]->getLongitudeInDegrees());
$viewOptions = array(
'startkey' => $startkey,
'endkey' => $endkey
);
$results = CBDatabase::$master->searchByView("dev_posts", "by_location", $viewOptions);
The build key function just follows the same rules as above in my view. and the GeoLocation class is taken from here: https://github.com/anthonymartin/GeoLocation.php
Request
I hope this really helps someone. It does work for me. If there is a much better way of doing this I'd love to hear constructive feedback.
I would now like to include a sort by date created within the range of keys. Order by Descending in the options won't work as this will order by the actual location key. The only way I can think of doing this is to include the date.created into the beginning of the key. But I'm not sure if this is the right way to go about this. I am very new to couchbase so guidance would be massively appreciated.

Related

Get Lowest Time in MM:SS:MS Format on Submit

I am trying to get the lowest time value out of the 3 results that's being generated by a Stopwatch with Lap.
The result of the code below can show the time values in these format:
00:00:56
00:02:34
00:02:15
So, I replaced/removed the Colon(:) in order to work with min,max.
I am trying to send the lowest value as part of the form.
$(".submit").click(function(){
var time_trial = [];
$('.laps li').each(function (n) {
time_trial[n] = $(this).html().replace(/:/g, '');
});
return false;
});
Because you give us not informations I assume to have the times as an array in format HH:MM:SS. You could useing the date-functionn for the compare of this, I use the mathematical approach.
Using Array#map to transform each entry of the array. For this I add before the converted timestring (without the ':') the string '1' and use parseInt to get a valid Integer (therefore the 1 because otherwise the leading zeros make problems).
On the resulting array of integers I use Math.min to get the minimum and convert it back to string with toString. At last I use subStr to build the valid format of your timestring.
let times = ['00:00:56', '00:02:34', '00:02:15'];
let res = Math.min(...times.map(t => parseInt('1'+t.replace(/:/g, '')))).toString();
res = res.substr(1,2) + ':' + res.substr(3,2) + ':' + res.substr(5);
console.log( res);

how to output INT values with proper commas from a mysql table? [duplicate]

I am trying to print an integer in JavaScript with commas as thousands separators. For example, I want to show the number 1234567 as "1,234,567". How would I go about doing this?
Here is how I am doing it:
function numberWithCommas(x) {
x = x.toString();
var pattern = /(-?\d+)(\d{3})/;
while (pattern.test(x))
x = x.replace(pattern, "$1,$2");
return x;
}
console.log(numberWithCommas(1000))
Is there a simpler or more elegant way to do it? It would be nice if it works with floats also, but that is not necessary. It does not need to be locale-specific to decide between periods and commas.
I used the idea from Kerry's answer, but simplified it since I was just looking for something simple for my specific purpose. Here is what I have:
function numberWithCommas(x) {
return x.toString().replace(/\B(?=(\d{3})+(?!\d))/g, ",");
}
function numberWithCommas(x) {
return x.toString().replace(/\B(?<!\.\d*)(?=(\d{3})+(?!\d))/g, ",");
}
function test(x, expect) {
const result = numberWithCommas(x);
const pass = result === expect;
console.log(`${pass ? "✓" : "ERROR ====>"} ${x} => ${result}`);
return pass;
}
let failures = 0;
failures += !test(0, "0");
failures += !test(100, "100");
failures += !test(1000, "1,000");
failures += !test(10000, "10,000");
failures += !test(100000, "100,000");
failures += !test(1000000, "1,000,000");
failures += !test(10000000, "10,000,000");
if (failures) {
console.log(`${failures} test(s) failed`);
} else {
console.log("All tests passed");
}
.as-console-wrapper {
max-height: 100% !important;
}
The regex uses 2 lookahead assertions:
a positive one to look for any point in the string that has a multiple of 3 digits in a row after it,
a negative assertion to make sure that point only has exactly a multiple of 3 digits. The replacement expression puts a comma there.
For example, if you pass it 123456789.01, the positive assertion will match every spot to the left of the 7 (since 789 is a multiple of 3 digits, 678 is a multiple of 3 digits, 567, etc.). The negative assertion checks that the multiple of 3 digits does not have any digits after it. 789 has a period after it so it is exactly a multiple of 3 digits, so a comma goes there. 678 is a multiple of 3 digits but it has a 9 after it, so those 3 digits are part of a group of 4, and a comma does not go there. Similarly for 567. 456789 is 6 digits, which is a multiple of 3, so a comma goes before that. 345678 is a multiple of 3, but it has a 9 after it, so no comma goes there. And so on. The \B keeps the regex from putting a comma at the beginning of the string.
#neu-rah mentioned that this function adds commas in undesirable places if there are more than 3 digits after the decimal point. If this is a problem, you can use this function:
function numberWithCommas(x) {
var parts = x.toString().split(".");
parts[0] = parts[0].replace(/\B(?=(\d{3})+(?!\d))/g, ",");
return parts.join(".");
}
function numberWithCommas(x) {
var parts = x.toString().split(".");
parts[0] = parts[0].replace(/\B(?=(\d{3})+(?!\d))/g, ",");
return parts.join(".");
}
function test(x, expect) {
const result = numberWithCommas(x);
const pass = result === expect;
console.log(`${pass ? "✓" : "ERROR ====>"} ${x} => ${result}`);
return pass;
}
let failures = 0;
failures += !test(0 , "0");
failures += !test(0.123456 , "0.123456");
failures += !test(100 , "100");
failures += !test(100.123456 , "100.123456");
failures += !test(1000 , "1,000");
failures += !test(1000.123456 , "1,000.123456");
failures += !test(10000 , "10,000");
failures += !test(10000.123456 , "10,000.123456");
failures += !test(100000 , "100,000");
failures += !test(100000.123456 , "100,000.123456");
failures += !test(1000000 , "1,000,000");
failures += !test(1000000.123456 , "1,000,000.123456");
failures += !test(10000000 , "10,000,000");
failures += !test(10000000.123456, "10,000,000.123456");
if (failures) {
console.log(`${failures} test(s) failed`);
} else {
console.log("All tests passed");
}
.as-console-wrapper {
max-height: 100% !important;
}
#t.j.crowder pointed out that now that JavaScript has lookbehind (support info), it can be solved in the regular expression itself:
function numberWithCommas(x) {
return x.toString().replace(/\B(?<!\.\d*)(?=(\d{3})+(?!\d))/g, ",");
}
function numberWithCommas(x) {
return x.toString().replace(/\B(?<!\.\d*)(?=(\d{3})+(?!\d))/g, ",");
}
function test(x, expect) {
const result = numberWithCommas(x);
const pass = result === expect;
console.log(`${pass ? "✓" : "ERROR ====>"} ${x} => ${result}`);
return pass;
}
let failures = 0;
failures += !test(0, "0");
failures += !test(0.123456, "0.123456");
failures += !test(100, "100");
failures += !test(100.123456, "100.123456");
failures += !test(1000, "1,000");
failures += !test(1000.123456, "1,000.123456");
failures += !test(10000, "10,000");
failures += !test(10000.123456, "10,000.123456");
failures += !test(100000, "100,000");
failures += !test(100000.123456, "100,000.123456");
failures += !test(1000000, "1,000,000");
failures += !test(1000000.123456, "1,000,000.123456");
failures += !test(10000000, "10,000,000");
failures += !test(10000000.123456, "10,000,000.123456");
if (failures) {
console.log(`${failures} test(s) failed`);
} else {
console.log("All tests passed");
}
.as-console-wrapper {
max-height: 100% !important;
}
(?<!\.\d*) is a negative lookbehind that says the match can't be preceded by a . followed by zero or more digits. The negative lookbehind is faster than the split and join solution (comparison), at least in V8.
I'm surprised nobody mentioned Number.prototype.toLocaleString.
It's implemented in JavaScript 1.5 (which was introduced in 1999) so it's basically supported across all major browsers.
var n = 34523453.345;
console.log(n.toLocaleString()); // "34,523,453.345"
It also works in Node.js as of v0.12 via inclusion of Intl
If you want something different, Numeral.js might be interesting.
Below are two different browser APIs that can transform Numbers into structured Strings. Keep in mind that not all users' machines have a locale that uses commas in numbers. To enforce commas to the output, any "western" locale may be used, such as en-US
let number = 1234567890; // Example number to be converted
⚠️ Mind that javascript has a maximum integer value of 9007199254740991
toLocaleString
// default behaviour on a machine with a local that uses commas for numbers
let number = 1234567890;
number.toLocaleString(); // "1,234,567,890"
// With custom settings, forcing a "US" locale to guarantee commas in output
let number2 = 1234.56789; // floating point example
number2.toLocaleString('en-US', {maximumFractionDigits:2}); // "1,234.57"
//You can also force a minimum of 2 trailing digits
let number3 = 1.5;
number3.toLocaleString('en-US', {minimumFractionDigits:2, maximumFractionDigits:2}); //"1.50"
NumberFormat
let number = 1234567890;
let nf = new Intl.NumberFormat('en-US');
nf.format(number); // "1,234,567,890"
From what I checked (Firefox at least) they are both more or less same regarding performance.
⚡ Live demo: https://codepen.io/vsync/pen/MWjdbgL?editors=1000
I suggest using phpjs.org 's number_format()
function number_format(number, decimals, dec_point, thousands_sep) {
var n = !isFinite(+number) ? 0 : +number,
prec = !isFinite(+decimals) ? 0 : Math.abs(decimals),
sep = (typeof thousands_sep === 'undefined') ? ',' : thousands_sep,
dec = (typeof dec_point === 'undefined') ? '.' : dec_point,
toFixedFix = function (n, prec) {
// Fix for IE parseFloat(0.55).toFixed(0) = 0;
var k = Math.pow(10, prec);
return Math.round(n * k) / k;
},
s = (prec ? toFixedFix(n, prec) : Math.round(n)).toString().split('.');
if (s[0].length > 3) {
s[0] = s[0].replace(/\B(?=(?:\d{3})+(?!\d))/g, sep);
}
if ((s[1] || '').length < prec) {
s[1] = s[1] || '';
s[1] += new Array(prec - s[1].length + 1).join('0');
}
return s.join(dec);
}
UPDATE 02/13/14
People have been reporting this doesn't work as expected, so I did a JS Fiddle that includes automated tests.
Update 26/11/2017
Here's that fiddle as a Stack Snippet with slightly modified output:
function number_format(number, decimals, dec_point, thousands_sep) {
var n = !isFinite(+number) ? 0 : +number,
prec = !isFinite(+decimals) ? 0 : Math.abs(decimals),
sep = (typeof thousands_sep === 'undefined') ? ',' : thousands_sep,
dec = (typeof dec_point === 'undefined') ? '.' : dec_point,
toFixedFix = function (n, prec) {
// Fix for IE parseFloat(0.55).toFixed(0) = 0;
var k = Math.pow(10, prec);
return Math.round(n * k) / k;
},
s = (prec ? toFixedFix(n, prec) : Math.round(n)).toString().split('.');
if (s[0].length > 3) {
s[0] = s[0].replace(/\B(?=(?:\d{3})+(?!\d))/g, sep);
}
if ((s[1] || '').length < prec) {
s[1] = s[1] || '';
s[1] += new Array(prec - s[1].length + 1).join('0');
}
return s.join(dec);
}
var exampleNumber = 1;
function test(expected, number, decimals, dec_point, thousands_sep)
{
var actual = number_format(number, decimals, dec_point, thousands_sep);
console.log(
'Test case ' + exampleNumber + ': ' +
'(decimals: ' + (typeof decimals === 'undefined' ? '(default)' : decimals) +
', dec_point: "' + (typeof dec_point === 'undefined' ? '(default)' : dec_point) + '"' +
', thousands_sep: "' + (typeof thousands_sep === 'undefined' ? '(default)' : thousands_sep) + '")'
);
console.log(' => ' + (actual === expected ? 'Passed' : 'FAILED') + ', got "' + actual + '", expected "' + expected + '".');
exampleNumber++;
}
test('1,235', 1234.56);
test('1 234,56', 1234.56, 2, ',', ' ');
test('1234.57', 1234.5678, 2, '.', '');
test('67,00', 67, 2, ',', '.');
test('1,000', 1000);
test('67.31', 67.311, 2);
test('1,000.6', 1000.55, 1);
test('67.000,00000', 67000, 5, ',', '.');
test('1', 0.9, 0);
test('1.20', '1.20', 2);
test('1.2000', '1.20', 4);
test('1.200', '1.2000', 3);
.as-console-wrapper {
max-height: 100% !important;
}
This is a variation of #mikez302's answer, but modified to support numbers with decimals (per #neu-rah's feedback that numberWithCommas(12345.6789) -> "12,345.6,789" instead of "12,345.6789"
function numberWithCommas(n) {
var parts=n.toString().split(".");
return parts[0].replace(/\B(?=(\d{3})+(?!\d))/g, ",") + (parts[1] ? "." + parts[1] : "");
}
function formatNumber (num) {
return num.toString().replace(/(\d)(?=(\d{3})+(?!\d))/g, "$1,")
}
print(formatNumber(2665)); // 2,665
print(formatNumber(102665)); // 102,665
print(formatNumber(111102665)); // 111,102,665
Using Regular expression
function toCommas(value) {
return value.toString().replace(/\B(?=(\d{3})+(?!\d))/g, ",");
}
console.log(toCommas(123456789)); // 123,456,789
console.log(toCommas(1234567890)); // 1,234,567,890
console.log(toCommas(1234)); // 1,234
Using toLocaleString()
var number = 123456.789;
// request a currency format
console.log(number.toLocaleString('de-DE', { style: 'currency', currency: 'EUR' }));
// → 123.456,79 €
// the Japanese yen doesn't use a minor unit
console.log(number.toLocaleString('ja-JP', { style: 'currency', currency: 'JPY' }))
// → ¥123,457
// limit to three significant digits
console.log(number.toLocaleString('en-IN', { maximumSignificantDigits: 3 }));
// → 1,23,000
ref MDN:Number.prototype.toLocaleString()
Using Intl.NumberFormat()
var number = 123456.789;
console.log(new Intl.NumberFormat('de-DE', { style: 'currency', currency: 'EUR' }).format(number));
// expected output: "123.456,79 €"
// the Japanese yen doesn't use a minor unit
console.log(new Intl.NumberFormat('ja-JP', { style: 'currency', currency: 'JPY' }).format(number));
// expected output: "¥123,457"
// limit to three significant digits
console.log(new Intl.NumberFormat('en-IN', { maximumSignificantDigits: 3 }).format(number));
// expected output: "1,23,000"
ref Intl.NumberFormat
DEMO AT HERE
<script type="text/javascript">
// Using Regular expression
function toCommas(value) {
return value.toString().replace(/\B(?=(\d{3})+(?!\d))/g, ",");
}
function commas() {
var num1 = document.myform.number1.value;
// Using Regular expression
document.getElementById('result1').value = toCommas(parseInt(num1));
// Using toLocaleString()
document.getElementById('result2').value = parseInt(num1).toLocaleString('ja-JP', {
style: 'currency',
currency: 'JPY'
});
// Using Intl.NumberFormat()
document.getElementById('result3').value = new Intl.NumberFormat('ja-JP', {
style: 'currency',
currency: 'JPY'
}).format(num1);
}
</script>
<FORM NAME="myform">
<INPUT TYPE="text" NAME="number1" VALUE="123456789">
<br>
<INPUT TYPE="button" NAME="button" Value="=>" onClick="commas()">
<br>Using Regular expression
<br>
<INPUT TYPE="text" ID="result1" NAME="result1" VALUE="">
<br>Using toLocaleString()
<br>
<INPUT TYPE="text" ID="result2" NAME="result2" VALUE="">
<br>Using Intl.NumberFormat()
<br>
<INPUT TYPE="text" ID="result3" NAME="result3" VALUE="">
</FORM>
Performance
http://jsben.ch/sifRd
Intl.NumberFormat
Native JS function. Supported by IE11, Edge, latest Safari, Chrome, Firefox, Opera, Safari on iOS and Chrome on Android.
var number = 3500;
console.log(new Intl.NumberFormat().format(number));
// → '3,500' if in US English locale
I am quite impressed by the number of answers this question has got. I like the answer by uKolka:
n.toLocaleString()
But unfortunately, in some locales like Spanish, it does not work (IMHO) as expected for numbers below 10,000:
Number(1000).toLocaleString('ES-es')
Gives 1000 and not 1.000.
See toLocaleString not working on numbers less than 10000 in all browsers to know why.
So I had to use the answer by Elias Zamaria choosing the right thousands separator character:
n.toString().replace(/\B(?=(\d{3})+(?!\d))/g, Number(10000).toLocaleString().substring(2, 3))
This one works well as a one-liner for both locales that use , or . as the thousands separator and starts working from 1,000 in all cases.
Number(1000).toString().replace(/\B(?=(\d{3})+(?!\d))/g, Number(10000).toLocaleString().substring(2, 3))
Gives 1.000 with a Spanish locale context.
Should you want to have absolute control over the way a number is formatted, you may also try the following:
let number = 1234.567
let decimals = 2
let decpoint = '.' // Or Number(0.1).toLocaleString().substring(1, 2)
let thousand = ',' // Or Number(10000).toLocaleString().substring(2, 3)
let n = Math.abs(number).toFixed(decimals).split('.')
n[0] = n[0].split('').reverse().map((c, i, a) =>
i > 0 && i < a.length && i % 3 == 0 ? c + thousand : c
).reverse().join('')
let final = (Math.sign(number) < 0 ? '-' : '') + n.join(decpoint)
console.log(final)
Gives 1,234.57.
This one does not need a regular expression. It works by adjusting the number to the desired amount of decimals with toFixed first, then dividing it around the decimal point . if there is one. The left side is then turned into an array of digits which is reversed. Then a thousands separator is added every three digits from the start and the result reversed again. The final result is the union of the two parts. The sign of the input number is removed with Math.abs first and then put back if necessary.
It is not a one-liner but not much longer and easily turned into a function. Variables have been added for clarity, but those may be substituted by their desired values if known in advance. You may use the expressions that use toLocaleString as a way to find out the right characters for the decimal point and the thousands separator for the current locale (bear in mind that those require a more modern Javascript.)
Thanks to everyone for their replies. I have built off of some of the answers to make a more "one-size-fits-all" solution.
The first snippet adds a function that mimics PHP's number_format() to the Number prototype. If I am formatting a number, I usually want decimal places so the function takes in the number of decimal places to show. Some countries use commas as the decimal and decimals as the thousands separator so the function allows these separators to be set.
Number.prototype.numberFormat = function(decimals, dec_point, thousands_sep) {
dec_point = typeof dec_point !== 'undefined' ? dec_point : '.';
thousands_sep = typeof thousands_sep !== 'undefined' ? thousands_sep : ',';
var parts = this.toFixed(decimals).split('.');
parts[0] = parts[0].replace(/\B(?=(\d{3})+(?!\d))/g, thousands_sep);
return parts.join(dec_point);
}
You would use this as follows:
var foo = 5000;
console.log(foo.numberFormat(2)); // us format: 5,000.00
console.log(foo.numberFormat(2, ',', '.')); // european format: 5.000,00
I found that I often needed to get the number back for math operations, but parseFloat converts 5,000 to 5, simply taking the first sequence of integer values. So I created my own float conversion function and added it to the String prototype.
String.prototype.getFloat = function(dec_point, thousands_sep) {
dec_point = typeof dec_point !== 'undefined' ? dec_point : '.';
thousands_sep = typeof thousands_sep !== 'undefined' ? thousands_sep : ',';
var parts = this.split(dec_point);
var re = new RegExp("[" + thousands_sep + "]");
parts[0] = parts[0].replace(re, '');
return parseFloat(parts.join(dec_point));
}
Now you can use both functions as follows:
var foo = 5000;
var fooString = foo.numberFormat(2); // The string 5,000.00
var fooFloat = fooString.getFloat(); // The number 5000;
console.log((fooString.getFloat() + 1).numberFormat(2)); // The string 5,001.00
I think this is the shortest regular expression that does it:
/\B(?=(\d{3})+\b)/g
"123456".replace(/\B(?=(\d{3})+\b)/g, ",")
I checked it on a few numbers and it worked.
Number.prototype.toLocaleString() would have been awesome if it was provided natively by all browsers (Safari).
I checked all other answers but noone seemed to polyfill it. Here is a poc towards that, which is actually a combination of first two answers; if toLocaleString works it uses it, if it doesn't it uses a custom function.
var putThousandsSeparators;
putThousandsSeparators = function(value, sep) {
if (sep == null) {
sep = ',';
}
// check if it needs formatting
if (value.toString() === value.toLocaleString()) {
// split decimals
var parts = value.toString().split('.')
// format whole numbers
parts[0] = parts[0].replace(/\B(?=(\d{3})+(?!\d))/g, sep);
// put them back together
value = parts[1] ? parts.join('.') : parts[0];
} else {
value = value.toLocaleString();
}
return value;
};
alert(putThousandsSeparators(1234567.890));
The thousands separator can be inserted in an international-friendly manner using the browser's Intl object:
Intl.NumberFormat().format(1234);
// returns "1,234" if the user's locale is en_US, for example
See MDN's article on NumberFormat for more, you can specify locale behavior or default to the user's. This is a little more foolproof because it respects local differences; many countries use periods to separate digits while a comma denotes the decimals.
Intl.NumberFormat isn't available in all browsers yet, but it works in latest Chrome, Opera, & IE. Firefox's next release should support it. Webkit doesn't seem to have a timeline for implementation.
You can either use this procedure to format your currency needing.
var nf = new Intl.NumberFormat('en-US', {
style: 'currency',
currency: 'USD',
minimumFractionDigits: 2,
maximumFractionDigits: 2
});
nf.format(123456.789); // ‘$123,456.79’
For more info you can access this link.
https://www.justinmccandless.com/post/formatting-currency-in-javascript/
if you are dealing with currency values and formatting a lot then it might be worth to add tiny accounting.js which handles lot of edge cases and localization:
// Default usage:
accounting.formatMoney(12345678); // $12,345,678.00
// European formatting (custom symbol and separators), could also use options object as second param:
accounting.formatMoney(4999.99, "€", 2, ".", ","); // €4.999,99
// Negative values are formatted nicely, too:
accounting.formatMoney(-500000, "£ ", 0); // £ -500,000
// Simple `format` string allows control of symbol position [%v = value, %s = symbol]:
accounting.formatMoney(5318008, { symbol: "GBP", format: "%v %s" }); // 5,318,008.00 GBP
The following code uses char scan, so there's no regex.
function commafy( num){
var parts = (''+(num<0?-num:num)).split("."), s=parts[0], L, i=L= s.length, o='';
while(i--){ o = (i===0?'':((L-i)%3?'':','))
+s.charAt(i) +o }
return (num<0?'-':'') + o + (parts[1] ? '.' + parts[1] : '');
}
It shows promising performance: http://jsperf.com/number-formatting-with-commas/5
2015.4.26: Minor fix to resolve issue when num<0. See https://jsfiddle.net/runsun/p5tqqvs3/
Here's a simple function that inserts commas for thousand separators. It uses array functions rather than a RegEx.
/**
* Format a number as a string with commas separating the thousands.
* #param num - The number to be formatted (e.g. 10000)
* #return A string representing the formatted number (e.g. "10,000")
*/
var formatNumber = function(num) {
var array = num.toString().split('');
var index = -3;
while (array.length + index > 0) {
array.splice(index, 0, ',');
// Decrement by 4 since we just added another unit to the array.
index -= 4;
}
return array.join('');
};
CodeSandbox link with examples: https://codesandbox.io/s/p38k63w0vq
Use This code to handle currency format for india. Country code can be changed to handle other country currency.
let amount =350256.95
var formatter = new Intl.NumberFormat('en-IN', {
minimumFractionDigits: 2,
});
// Use it.
formatter.format(amount);
output:
3,50,256.95
You can also use the Intl.NumberFormat constructor. Here is how you can do it.
resultNumber = new Intl.NumberFormat('en-IN', { maximumSignificantDigits: 3 }).format(yourNumber);
Universal, fast, accurate, simple function
Using RegEx (Fast & Accurate)
Support Numbers(Float/Integer)/String/Multiple numbers in a string
Smart well (Not grouping decimals - Compatible with different types of grouping)
Support all browsers specially 'Safari' & 'IE' & many older browsers
[Optional] Respecting non-English (Persian/Arabic) digits (+ Pre-fix)
TL;DR - Full version function (minified):
// num: Number/s (String/Number),
// sep: Thousands separator (String) - Default: ','
// dec: Decimal separator (String) - Default: '.' (Just one char)
// u: Universal support for languages characters (String - RegEx character set / class) - Example: '[\\d\\u0660-\\u0669\\u06f0-\\u06f9]' (English/Persian/Arabic), Default: '\\d' (English)
function formatNums(num,sep,dec,u){sep=sep||',';u=u||'\\d';if(typeof num!='string'){num=String(num);if(dec&&dec!='.')num=num.replace('.',dec);}return num.replace(RegExp('\\'+(dec||'.')+u+'+|'+u+'(?=(?:'+u+'{3})+(?!'+u+'))','g'),function(a){return a.length==1?a+sep:a})}
text='100000000 English or Persian/Arabic ۱۲۳۴۵۶۷۸۹/٠١٢٣٤٥٦٧٨٩ this is 123123123.123123123 with this -123123 and these 10 100 1000 123123/123123 (2000000) .33333 100.00 or any like 500000Kg';
console.log(formatNums(10000000.0012));
console.log(formatNums(10000000.0012,'.',',')); // German
console.log(formatNums(text,',','.','[\\d\\u0660-\\u0669\\u06f0-\\u06f9]')); // Respect Persian/Arabic digits
<input oninput="document.getElementById('result').textContent=formatNums(this.value)" placeholder="Type a number here">
<div id="result"></div>
Why NOT satisfied with other answers?
Number.prototype.toLocaleString() / Intl.NumberFormat
(Right answer)
If no well arguments, we can't expect same result. Also with arguments options we still can't be sure what can be the result because it will use local settings and possible client modifications effect on it or the browser/device not support it.
>~2016 browsers support and still in 2021 some reports that in some cases like Safari or IE/Edge do not return as expected.
toLocaleString() Work with numbers, Intl.NumberFormat Work with String/Numbers; Strings will be/have to be parsed and also rounded if necessary, so:
If we already have a localized string with non-English digits we have to replace numbers with the English one, then parse it, then use it again with the local options. (If it return what we expect)
Generally while parsing we cant expect not missing decimal zeros or details in big numbers or respecting other languages numeral characters
Decimal / Thousand separator characters can not be customized more than language options, except with post-fixings with replace() + RegEx again. (For example in Persian usually we don't use the suggested Arabic comma and also sometime we use ∕ Fraction/Division slash as decimal separator)
Slow performance in loops
Not so good RegEx ways (Fastest & One-liner ways)
/\B(?=(\d{3})+\b)/ it will group decimals too. // 123,123.123,123 !!!
/(?<!\.\d+)\B(?=(\d{3})+\b)/ used look-behind that not supported well yet. Please check:
https://caniuse.com/js-regexp-lookbehind
https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/RegExp#browser_compatibility
Note: Generally lookbehind can be against of original RegEx structure (because of how the analyzer should work like do not buffer the raw behind as a parser) and actually it can make the performance seriously low (In this case ~30%). I think it pushed inside over the time by requests.
/\B(?=(?=\d*\.)(\d{3})+(?!\d))/ just work with float numbers and ignore integers.
.replace(/(?:[^.\d]|^)\d+/g,function(a){return a.replace(/\B(?=(?:\d{3})+\b)/g,',');}) (My old idea) Using 2 RegEx. First one find the integer parts, second one put separator. Why 2 functions, when it can be mixed?
/(\..*)$|(\d)(?=(\d{3})+(?!\d))/g (Good idea by #djulien - i voted up) but when the RegEx is global, (\..*)$ it can make a mistake even with a space in end.
Also using capturing groups (Example: (\d)) will make the performance low so if it possible, use non-capturing groups (Example: (?:\d)) or if an statement already exist in our function let's mix it.
In this case, not using capturing groups improve performance about ~20% and in case of /\B(?=(\d{3})+\b)/g vs /\B(?=(?:\d{3})+\b)/g, the second one is ~8% faster.
About regex performances:
Note: Sure different methods, browsers, hardware, system status, cases and even changes on ECMAScript will effect on result of checking performance. But some changes logically should effect result and i used this one just as visual example.
Using library's like Numeral.js so much not necessary functions for a simple task.
Heavy code / Not accurate functions that used .split('.') or .toFixed() or Math.floor() ...
Final result:
There is no best of all and it should be chosen based on the need. My priority of sorting;
Compatibility
Capability
Universality
Ease of use
Performance
toLocaleString() (Compatibility - Universality) [Native function]
If you have to change digits and grouping from English to another language
If you are not sure about your client language
If you don't need to have exact expected result
If you don't care about older version of Safari
// 1000000.2301
parseFloat(num) // (Pre-fix) If the input is string
.toLocaleString('en-US', {
useGrouping: true // (Default is true, here is just for show)
});
// 1,000,000.23
Read more: https://www.w3schools.com/jsref/jsref_tolocalestring_number.asp
Intl.NumberFormat() (Capability - Universality - Compatibility) [Native function]
Almost same as toLocaleString() +
Great capability of supporting currency, units, etc... any language (Modern browsers)
// 1000000.2301
new Intl.NumberFormat('en-US', { // It can be 'fa-IR' : Farsi - Iran
numberingSystem: 'arab'
}).format(num)
// ١٬٠٠٠٬٠٠٠٫٢٣
Read more: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Intl/NumberFormat/NumberFormat
With these much options of the native functions, we still can not expect:
Exact result (+ Not parsing the input / Not rounding / Not converting big numbers)
Accepting other languages digits as input
Customizing separators
Trusting browsers support
Performance
So you maybe need a function like any of these:
formatNums() (Compatibility - Ease of use)
Full version (Capability) (Not faster than toLocaleString) - Explain:
function formatNums(num, sep, dec, u) {
// Setting defaults
sep = sep || ','; // Seperator
u = u || '\\d'; // Universal character set \d: 0-9 (English)
// Mixing of Handeling numbers when the decimal character should be changed + Being sure the input is string
if (typeof num != 'string') {
num = String(num);
if (dec && dec != '.') num = num.replace('.', dec); // Replacing sure decimal character with the custom
}
//
return num.replace(RegExp('\\' + (dec || '.') + u + '+|' + u + '(?=(?:' + u + '{3})+(?!' + u + '))', 'g'),
// The RegEx will be like /\.\d+|\d(?=(?:\d{3})+(?!\d))/g if not be customized
// RegEx explain:
// 1) \.\d+ : First try to get any part that started with a dot and followed by any much of English digits, one or more (For ignoring it later)
// 2) | : Or
// 3) \d : Get any 1 char digit
// 3.1) (?=...) : That the next of that should be
// 3.2) (?:\d{3}) : 3 length digits
// 3.2.1) + : One or more of the group
// 3.3) (?!\d) : ...till any place that there is no digits
function(a) { // Any match can be the decimal part or the integer part so lets check it
return a.length == 1 ? a + sep : a // If the match is one character, it is from the grouping part as item (3) in Regex explain so add the seperator next of it, if not, ignore it and return it back.
})
}
function formatNums(num,sep,dec,u) {
sep=sep||',';
u=u||'\\d';
if(typeof num!='string') {
num=String(num);
if( dec && dec!='.') num=num.replace('.',dec);
}
return num.replace(RegExp('\\'+(dec||'.')+u+'+|'+u+'(?=(?:'+u+'{3})+(?!'+u+'))','g'),function(a) {return a.length==1 ? a+sep : a})
}
console.log(formatNums(1000000.2301));
console.log(formatNums(100.2301));
console.log(formatNums(-2000.2301));
console.log(formatNums(123123123,' , '));
console.log(formatNums('0000.0000'));
console.log(formatNums('5000000.00'));
console.log(formatNums('5000000,00',' ',','));
console.log(formatNums(5000000.1234,' ',','));
console.log(formatNums('۱۲۳۴۵۶۷۸۹/۹۰۰۰',',','/','[\\d\\u0660-\\u0669\\u06f0-\\u06f9]'));
Play with the examples here:
https://jsfiddle.net/PAPIONbit/198xL3te/
Light version (Performance) (~30% faster than toLocaleString)
function formatNums(num,sep) {
sep=sep||',';
return String(num).replace(/\.\d+|\d(?=(?:\d{3})+(?!\d))/g,
function(a) {
return a.length==1?a+sep:a
}
);
}
console.log(formatNums(1000000.2301));
console.log(formatNums(100.2301));
console.log(formatNums(-2000.2301));
console.log(formatNums(123123123,' '));
Check the RegEx (Without the necessary function) : https://regexr.com/66ott
(num+'').replace(/\B(?=(?:\d{3})+\b)/g,','); (Performance - Compatibility)
Best choose if The input is Specified / Predefined. (Like usual prices that sure will not have more than 3 decimals)
(~65% faster than toLocaleString)
num=1000000;
str='123123.100';
console.log((num+'').replace(/\B(?=(?:\d{3})+\b)/g,','));
console.log(str.replace(/\B(?=(?:\d{3})+\b)/g,','));
+
For Persian/Arabic local clients:
If your client going to use Persian/Arabic numbers for input as what is usual in Iran, I think the best way is instead of keeping the original characters, convert them to English before you deal with, to you can calculate it.
// ۱۲۳۴۵۶۷۸۹۰
function toEnNum(n) { // Replacing Persian/Arabic numbers character with English
n.replace(/[\u0660-\u0669\u06f0-\u06f9]/g, // RegEx unicode range Persian/Arabic numbers char
function(c) {
return c.charCodeAt(0) & 0xf; // Replace the char with real number by getting the binary index and breaking to lowest using 15
}
);
}
// 1234567890
And for still showing them as original looking there is 2 ways:
CSS Using Persian/Arabic fonts with local digits (My choose)
Convert the result back with Intl.NumberFormat or a function like: https://stackoverflow.com/a/13787021/7514010
My Old-school function on this post: (~15% Faster than toLocalString)
// 10000000.0012
function formatNums(n, s) {
return s = s || ",", String(n).
replace(/(?:^|[^.\d])\d+/g, // First this RegEx take just integer parts
function(n) {
return n.replace(/\B(?=(?:\d{3})+\b)/g, s);
})
}
// 10,000,000.0012
var formatNumber = function (number) {
var splitNum;
number = Math.abs(number);
number = number.toFixed(2);
splitNum = number.split('.');
splitNum[0] = splitNum[0].replace(/\B(?=(\d{3})+(?!\d))/g, ",");
return splitNum.join(".");
}
EDIT:
The function only work with positive number. for exmaple:
var number = -123123231232;
formatNumber(number)
Output: "123,123,231,232"
But to answer the question above toLocaleString() method just solves the problem.
var number = 123123231232;
number.toLocaleString()
Output: "123,123,231,232"
Cheer!
My answer is the only answer that completely replaces jQuery with a much more sensible alternative:
function $(dollarAmount)
{
const locale = 'en-US';
const options = { style: 'currency', currency: 'USD' };
return Intl.NumberFormat(locale, options).format(dollarAmount);
}
This solution not only adds commas, but it also rounds to the nearest penny in the event that you input an amount like $(1000.9999) you'll get $1,001.00. Additionally, the value you input can safely be a number or a string; it doesn't matter.
If you're dealing with money, but don't want a leading dollar sign shown on the amount, you can also add this function, which uses the previous function but removes the $:
function no$(dollarAmount)
{
return $(dollarAmount).replace('$','');
}
If you're not dealing with money, and have varying decimal formatting requirements, here's a more versatile function:
function addCommas(number, minDecimalPlaces = 0, maxDecimalPlaces = Math.max(3,minDecimalPlaces))
{
const options = {};
options.maximumFractionDigits = maxDecimalPlaces;
options.minimumFractionDigits = minDecimalPlaces;
return Intl.NumberFormat('en-US',options).format(number);
}
Oh, and by the way, the fact that this code does not work in some old version of Internet Explorer is completely intentional. I try to break IE anytime that I can catch it not supporting modern standards.
Please remember that excessive praise, in the comment section, is considered off-topic. Instead, just shower me with up-votes.
I Wrote this one before stumbling on this post. No regex and you can actually understand the code.
$(function(){
function insertCommas(s) {
// get stuff before the dot
var d = s.indexOf('.');
var s2 = d === -1 ? s : s.slice(0, d);
// insert commas every 3 digits from the right
for (var i = s2.length - 3; i > 0; i -= 3)
s2 = s2.slice(0, i) + ',' + s2.slice(i);
// append fractional part
if (d !== -1)
s2 += s.slice(d);
return s2;
}
$('#theDudeAbides').text( insertCommas('1234567.89012' ) );
});
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.11.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<div id="theDudeAbides"></div>
For anyone who likes 1-liners and a single regex, but doesn't want to use split(), here is an enhanced version of the regex from other answers that handles (ignores) decimal places:
var formatted = (x+'').replace(/(\..*)$|(\d)(?=(\d{3})+(?!\d))/g, (digit, fract) => fract || digit + ',');
The regex first matches a substring starting with a literal "." and replaces it with itself ("fract"), and then matches any digit followed by multiples of 3 digits and puts "," after it.
For example, x = 12345678.12345678 will give formatted = '12,345,678.12345678'.
Let me try to improve uKolka's answer and maybe help others save some time.
Use Numeral.js.
document.body.textContent = numeral(1234567).format('0,0');
<script src="//cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/numeral.js/1.4.5/numeral.min.js"></script>
You should go with Number.prototype.toLocaleString() only if its browser compatibilty is not an issue.
Just for future Googlers (or not necessarily 'Googlers'):
All of solutions mentioned above are wonderful, however, RegExp might be awfully bad thing to use in a situation like that.
So, yes, you might use some of the options proposed or even write something primitive yet useful like:
const strToNum = str => {
//Find 1-3 digits followed by exactly 3 digits & a comma or end of string
let regx = /(\d{1,3})(\d{3}(?:,|$))/;
let currStr;
do {
currStr = (currStr || str.split(`.`)[0])
.replace( regx, `$1,$2`)
} while (currStr.match(regx)) //Stop when there's no match & null's returned
return ( str.split(`.`)[1] ) ?
currStr.concat(`.`, str.split(`.`)[1]) :
currStr;
};
strToNum(`123`) // => 123
strToNum(`123456`) // => 123,456
strToNum(`-1234567.0987`) // => -1,234,567.0987
The regexp that's used here is fairly simple and the loop will go precisely the number of times it takes to get the job done.
And you might optimize it far better, "DRYify" code & so on.
Yet,
(-1234567.0987).toLocaleString();
(in most situations) would be a far better choice.
The point is not in the speed of execution or in cross-browser compatibility.
In situations when you'd like to show the resulting number to user, .toLocaleString() method gives you superpower to speak the same language with the user of your website or app (whatever her/his language is).
This method according to ECMAScript documentation was introduced in 1999, and I believe that the reason for that was the hope that the Internet at some point will connect people all around the world, so, some "internalization" tools were needed.
Today the Internet does connect all of us, so, it is important to remember that the world is a way more complex that we might imagine & that (/almost) all of us are here, in the Internet.
Obviously, considering the diversity of people, it is impossible to guarantee perfect UX for everybody because we speak different languages, value different things, etc. And exactly because of this, it is even more important to try to localize things as much as it's possible.
So, considering that there're some particular standards for representation of date, time, numbers, etc. & that we have a tool to display those things in the format preferred by the final user, isn't that rare and almost irresponsible not to use that tool (especially in situations when we want to display this data to the user)?
For me, using RegExp instead of .toLocaleString() in situation like that sounds a little bit like creating a clock app with JavaScript & hard-coding it in such a way so it'll display Prague time only (which would be quite useless for people who don't live in Prague) even though the default behaviour of
new Date();
is to return the data according to final user's clock.
An alternative way, supporting decimals, different separators and negatives.
var number_format = function(number, decimal_pos, decimal_sep, thousand_sep) {
var ts = ( thousand_sep == null ? ',' : thousand_sep )
, ds = ( decimal_sep == null ? '.' : decimal_sep )
, dp = ( decimal_pos == null ? 2 : decimal_pos )
, n = Math.floor(Math.abs(number)).toString()
, i = n.length % 3
, f = ((number < 0) ? '-' : '') + n.substr(0, i)
;
for(;i<n.length;i+=3) {
if(i!=0) f+=ts;
f+=n.substr(i,3);
}
if(dp > 0)
f += ds + parseFloat(number).toFixed(dp).split('.')[1]
return f;
}
Some corrections by #Jignesh Sanghani, don't forget to upvote his comment.
I think this function will take care of all the issues related to this problem.
function commaFormat(inputString) {
inputString = inputString.toString();
var decimalPart = "";
if (inputString.indexOf('.') != -1) {
//alert("decimal number");
inputString = inputString.split(".");
decimalPart = "." + inputString[1];
inputString = inputString[0];
//alert(inputString);
//alert(decimalPart);
}
var outputString = "";
var count = 0;
for (var i = inputString.length - 1; i >= 0 && inputString.charAt(i) != '-'; i--) {
//alert("inside for" + inputString.charAt(i) + "and count=" + count + " and outputString=" + outputString);
if (count == 3) {
outputString += ",";
count = 0;
}
outputString += inputString.charAt(i);
count++;
}
if (inputString.charAt(0) == '-') {
outputString += "-";
}
//alert(outputString);
//alert(outputString.split("").reverse().join(""));
return outputString.split("").reverse().join("") + decimalPart;
}
If you're looking for a short and sweet solution:
const number = 12345678.99;
const numberString = String(number).replace(
/^\d+/,
number => [...number].map(
(digit, index, digits) => (
!index || (digits.length - index) % 3 ? '' : ','
) + digit
).join('')
);
// numberString: 12,345,678.99
I think your solution is one of the shorter ones I've seen for this. I don't think there are any standard JavaScript functions to do this sort of thing, so you're probably on your own.
I checked the CSS 3 specifications to see whether it's possible to do this in CSS, but unless you want every digit in its own <span>, I don't think that's possible.
I did find one project on Google Code that looked promising: flexible-js-formatting. I haven't used it, but it looks pretty flexible and has unit tests using JsUnit. The developer also has a lot of posts (though old) about this topic.
Be sure to consider international users: lots of nations use a space as the separator and use the comma for separating the decimal from the integral part of the number.

Get itinerary latitudes & longitude from google maps with PHP

I want to list the latitude and longitude of itinerary. It could be all points or it could be all points in 1-2 kilometers.
What I'm trying to do is: user selected A as the starting point and B as the ending point. I want to show some places near the road between A and B on the map. But I need a positions for this.
As an example, a JavaScript code is shared here and It is said that this can be done with DirectionsResult Object.
var request = {
origin: start_point,
destination: end_point,
travelMode: google.maps.TravelMode.DRIVING
};
var directionsService = new google.maps.DirectionsService();
directionsService.route(request, function(response, status) {
if (status == google.maps.DirectionsStatus.OK) {
var path = (response.routes[0].overview_path);
}
});
But I'm trying to do this with php and I have to do this with php.
I read google map api. I've also read the yandex map api, but this seems to be done only with javascript.
Does anyone know a way to do this with php?
From comments I understand the question is to find (using PHP) the intermediate lat,lng pairs that can be extracted from the polyline points in a google directions query.
This is a bit unusual because people normally use the polyline points for map drawing in the browser, and so the JavaScript libraries are well equipped for this task. However, not so in PHP.
The points data appears in the JSON result object as string of ascii characters, sometimes quite long and always 'unreadable'. Into this string is encoded a list of intermediate lat lng pairs between the start and end of each leg. The coding method is presented at the google site https://developers.google.com/maps/documentation/utilities/polylinealgorithm and the algorithm below is just a reversal of that and is commented accordingly.
The example shows a directions find between 2 points, on crescent shaped streets, in Perth, Australia. The start-end points were chosen to encourage multiple intermediate points as would be needed to draw the route. Substitute your own search as needed.
Note that the JSON also provides these fields also at the end of each results object.
"overview_polyline" : {
"points" : "~n{aEmbwaU_B#cCBk#Lo#d#UVOb#Mh#Ab####BBF#DGNABD`#Fh#Pb#VZn#b#d#J"
},
This is much less detailed and less accurate (if you draw will probably depart from actual road lines on map), but can also be decoded in the same way.
The best intermediate points are however, by iterating through the steps using:
"polyline" : {
"points" : "~n{aEmbwaUg##w#?{A?g#BUBUHSJ[XUVOb#Mh#Ab#"
},
Finally, the original source for the algorithm can be found here http://unitstep.net/blog/2008/08/02/decoding-google-maps-encoded-polylines-using-php/. So thanks to Peter Chng for this work back in 2008! Peter also acknowledges Mark MClure who did the original coding in JavaScript. I hacked about with and added more comments - to make more aligned with the google recipe, but no more.
I have also just realised there is this link https://github.com/emcconville/google-map-polyline-encoding-tool which (I think but have not tested) provides a class and a CLI tool to do the conversions both ways.
$json = file_get_contents("https://maps.googleapis.com/maps/api/directions/json?origin=20%20%20Kintyre%20Crescent,%20Churchlands&destination=%2018Kinross%20Crescent,%20Churchlands&key=");
$details = json_decode($json,true);
print_r($details); // show the full result
$points = $details['routes'][0]['legs'][0]['steps'][0]['polyline']['points'];
echo($points); // show the points string for one leg
// show the start and end locations for that leg
print_r($details['routes'][0]['legs'][0]['steps'][0]['start_location']);
print_r($details['routes'][0]['legs'][0]['steps'][0]['end_location']);
// work out the intermdiate points (normally used for drawing)
$decodedPoints= decodePolylinePoints($points);
print_r($decodedPoints); // print out the intermediate points
// This function decodes the polylone points in PHP
function decodePolylinePoints($pointsString)
{
$len = strlen($pointsString);
$latLons = array(); // the output array
$lat = 0; // temp storage for lat and lng
$lng = 0;
$index = 0; // index to curent character
while ($index < $len) // process each lat,lng pair
{
// first build the lat
// NOTE: first lat is an absolute value
// NOTE: subsequent lats are offsets from previous values for coding efficiency
$char = 0; // char as read from points string
$shift = 0; // cumulative shift amount
$value = 0; // temp value during computation
do // Read, convert and shift 5 bit chunks until terminator is reached to get lat
{
$char = ord(substr($pointsString, $index++)) - 63; // return ascii value less 63
$value |= ($char & 0x1f) << $shift; // convert to 5 bit and shift left
$shift += 5; // next shift is 5 extra
}
while ($char >= 0x20); // value of 20 indicates end of lat
$lat += (($value & 1) ? ~($value >> 1) : ($value >> 1)); // convert negative values and save
// now build the lng
// NOTE: first lng is an absolute value
// NOTE: subsequent lngs are offsets from previous values for coding efficiency
$shift = 0;
$value = 0;
do // build up lng from 5 bit chunks
{
$char= ord(substr($pointsString, $index++)) - 63; // return ascii value less 63
$value |= ($char & 0x1f) << $shift; // convert to 5 bit and shift left
$shift += 5; // next shift is 5 extra
}
while ($char >= 0x20); // value of 20 indicates end of lng
$lng += (($value & 1) ? ~($value >> 1) : ($value >> 1)); // convert negative values and save
$latLons[] = array($lat * 1e-5, $lng * 1e-5); // original values were * 1e5
}
return $latLons; // points array converted to lat,lngs
}

How to calculate the next ipv6 address?

I've got stuck on a hopefully simple task: I want to get the next ip address.
Here are some of my tests:
//$binaryIp = inet_pton('192.168.1.1');
$binaryIp = inet_pton('2001:cdba::1');
$verySimple = inet_ntop(
$binaryIp++
);
var_dump($verySimple); //'2001:cdba::1'
$simpleMaths = inet_ntop(
$binaryIp + inet_pton('0.0.0.1')
);
var_dump($simpleMaths); //inet_ntop(): Invalid in_addr value
$aLittleBitOfSuccess = long2ip(
ip2long(inet_ntop($binaryIp)) + 1
);
var_dump($aLittleBitOfSuccess); //'0.0.0.1' but with IPv4 '192.168.1.2'
OK, until here it's obvious that my tries are more nonsense than a real aproach to my problem but what else can I try? I've searched the web and found some solutions for subnet calculations and stuff like that but nothing for simple addition or subtraction.
My next try would be to split the string from inet_ntop() and fiddle around with the hex-values but there must be a simple solution to add 1 to an in6_addr!
With a few exceptions, an IPv6 address is divided into two 64-bit parts: the Network/Subnet and the Interface ID. You should be interested in the 64 bits of the Interface ID.
The easiest thing to do is to parse the address into the two 64-bit unsigned integers, increment the Interface ID, then recombine the two parts into a 128-bit address.
I've choosen the hex-way and made this function:
protected function binaryIncrement($binaryIp, $increment = 1) {
//inet_pton creates values where each "character" is one ip-address-byte
//we are splitting the string so we can handle every byte for itselve.
$binaryIpArrayIn = str_split($binaryIp);
$binaryIpArrayOut = array();
$carry = 0 + $increment;
//reverse array because our following addition is done from right to left.
foreach (array_reverse($binaryIpArrayIn) as $binaryByte) {
//transforming on byte from our ip address to decimal
$decIp = hexdec(bin2hex($binaryByte));
$tempValue = $decIp + $carry;
$tempValueHex = dechex($tempValue);
//check if we have to deal with a carry
if (strlen($tempValueHex) > 2) {
//split $tempValueHex in carry and result
//str_pad because hex2bin only accepts even character counts
$carryHex = str_pad(substr($tempValueHex,0,1),2,'0',STR_PAD_LEFT);
$tempResultHex = str_pad(substr($tempValueHex,1,2),2,'0',STR_PAD_LEFT);
$carry = hexdec($carryHex);
} else {
$carry = 0;
$tempResultHex = str_pad($tempValueHex,2,'0',STR_PAD_LEFT);
}
//fill our result array
$binaryIpArrayOut[] = hex2bin($tempResultHex);
}
//we have to reverse our arry back to normal order and building a string
$binaryIpOut = implode(array_reverse($binaryIpArrayOut));
return $binaryIpOut;
}
$binaryIpV6In = inet_pton('2001:cdba::FFFF');
$binaryIpV6Out = $this->binaryIncrement($binaryIpV6In);
var_dump(inet_ntop($binaryIpV6Out));
$binaryIpV4In = inet_pton('192.168.1.1');
$binaryIpV4Out = $this->binaryIncrement($binaryIpV4In, 256);
var_dump(inet_ntop($binaryIpV4Out));
This way I can use the same method for IPv4 and IPv6.

Create single value from Latitude and Longitude pair in PHP

I'm working on a Google Maps project within a PHP application. I need to find a way to store a latitude and longitude pair as a singular value. I'm using this to help store markers with identical coordinates.
Is there way I can encode the latitude/longitude pair into a single string? I would like something like:
$lat = 45.18392;
$long = 62.18293;
// Would return a single string like 893jfd8sj39k
$single_string = make_single_string($lat, $long);
function make_single_string($lat, $long)
{
// Do something here with $lat and $long
return $single_string;
}
The most important part of the function is that it must return the same string EVERY time.
Thanks for the help!
I think you are looking for this:
function make_single_string($lat, $long)
{
$single_string = md5( $lat.'-'.$long );
return $single_string;
}
result will be something like this:
04f59f6c007149079d0b5cc81ee0d25f
You can return a hash of both numbers:
function make_single_string($lat, $long)
{
return md5($lat.'-'.$long);
}
Cant you concatenate the string on the return? with .'s...
return $lat . "," . $long;
Is there a reason that you're not using an object for this?
$lat = 45.18392;
$long = 62.18293;
$pos = array(
'lat'=>$lat,
'long'=>$long
);
It's much more readable and as a bonus you don't have to parse it later (can be easily serialized as well).
If you want reversibility (and you probably do) then you need to come up with a standard input format. Assuming your latitude can go between +/-90, and your longitudes between +/-180, you could do something like:
Make sure the latitude and longitude have signs. If positive, prepend the + sign.
Zero-pad on the front to two digits (for latitude) and three digits (for longitude). 9.2 degrees of latitude would become +09.2.
Zero-pad on the end to however many significant digits you want (say, six). 9.2 degrees of latitude would then become +09.200000.
Convert +, -, and . to some kind of standard notation. Say, P for +, M for -, and d for .. For 9.2 degrees of latitude you'd get P09d200000.
Concatenate the latitude and longitude.
Then you get a string that's reversible and only has alphanumeric characters in it. You might not need something this fancy, though.
Why not just concat them?
$string = $lat . "-" . $long;
I mean if you really wanted to I supposed you could take the above and use md5 on it:
$string = md5($lat . "-" . $long);
What you're looking for really exists, and is not as simple as md5( $lat.'-'.$long );, as to be effective must be done before a process of generalization.
It´s called Geohash. In PHP there are different implementations. This is good, but Google offers several options.
Use a class or plain object.
class
class Coord {
public $lat;
public $long;
__construct($lat, $long) {
$this->lat = $lat;
$this->long = $long;
}
}
$coord = new Coord(45.18392, 62.18293);
echo $coord->lat;
echo $coord->long;
plain object
$coords = new stdClass();
$coords->lat = 45.18392;
$coords->long = 62.18293;
echo $coord->lat;
echo $coord->long;
If you needs to save these in a database, you could serialize the objects into a string, then unserialize as you pull them again from the database.
http://php.net/manual/en/function.serialize.php

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