1.8 KiB
date | description | tags | slug | title | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2014-03-23T20:00:00Z | Blow up a polyline to search inside the generated polygon. |
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buffered-polyline | Buffered Polyline |
At work, we needed a simple way to buffer a polyline in order to search for stuff along the route from A to B. I'll explain how we used Google's Maps API and JSTS in order to achieve this easily.
The first thing we had to do was to "transform" each element in the overview_path
(which the DirectionsService
returns) to GeoJSON, because that's what JSTS understands.
{{< highlight javascript "linenos=table" >}} var overviewPath = response.routes[0].overview_path, overviewPathGeo = []; for(var i = 0; i < overviewPath.length; i++) { overviewPathGeo.push( [overviewPath[i].lng(), overviewPath[i].lat()] ); } {{< / highlight >}}
The next step was getting overviewPathGeo
into JSTS and letting it do the work of buffering the line.
{{< highlight javascript "linenos=table" >}} var distance = 10/111.12, // Roughly 10km geoInput = { type: "LineString", coordinates: overviewPathGeo }; var geoReader = new jsts.io.GeoJSONReader(), geoWriter = new jsts.io.GeoJSONWriter(); var geometry = geoReader.read(geoInput).buffer(distance); var polygon = geoWriter.write(geometry); {{< / highlight >}}
The polygon
variable now contains a polygon that neatly fits around the overviewPath
, with a distance (buffer size) of roughly 10km.
Since it is nested, you need to call polygon.coordinates[0]
in order to get back the coordinates of the polygon (as GeoJSON).
You could then use the the coordinates to draw the generated polygon on the map (along with the route), in order to produce something like this: