NAME
Geo::Hash::XS - Geo::Hash in XS
SYNOPSIS
my $gh = Geo::Hash::XS->new();
my $hash = $gh->encode( $lat, $lon ); # default precision = 32
my $hash = $gh->encode( $lat, $lon, $precision );
my ($lat, $lon) = $gh->decode( $hash );
DESCRIPTION
Geo::Hash::XS encodes and decodes geohash strings, fast.
Currently this module is alpha quality (especially the adjacent()
and negihbors()
methods, which I just kind of copied the logic from elsewhere). Please submit tests and patches!
METHODS
$gh = Geo::Hash::XS->new()
$hash = $gh->encode($lat, $lon[, $precision])
Encodes the given $lat
and $lon
to a geohash. If $precision
is not given, automatically adjusts the precision according the the given $lat
and $lon
values.
If you do not want Geo::Hash::XS to spend time calculating this, explicitly specify $precision
.
($lat, $lon) = $gh->decode( $hash )
Decodes $hash to $lat and $lon
($lat_range, $lon_range) = $gh->decode_to_interval( $hash )
Like decode()
but decode_to_interval()
decodes $hash to $lat_range and $lon_range. Each range is a reference to two element arrays which contains the upper and lower bounds.
$adjacent_hash = $gh->adjacent($hash, $where)
Returns the adjacent geohash. $where
denotes the direction, so if you want the block to the right of $hash
, you say:
use Geo::Hash::XS qw(ADJ_RIGHT);
my $gh = Geo::Hash::XS->new();
my $adjacent = $gh->adjacent( $hash, ADJ_RIGHT );
@list_of_geohashes = $gh->neighbors($hash, $around, $offset)
Returns the list of neighbors (the blocks surrounding $hash)
$precision = $gh->precision($lat, $lon)
Returns the apparent required precision to describe the given latitude and longitude.
CONSTANTS
ADJ_LEFT, ADJ_RIGHT, ADJ_TOP, ADJ_BOTTOM
Used to specify the direction in adjacent()
PERFORMANCE
Here's the output from running benchmark/encode.pl:
Geo::Hash: 0.02
Geo::Hash::XS: 0.00014
precision = auto...
Rate perl xs
perl 18332/s -- -98%
xs 964744/s 5163% --
precision = 5...
Rate perl xs
perl 16500/s -- -98%
xs 1011557/s 6030% --
precision = 10...
Rate perl xs
perl 8650/s -- -99%
xs 980236/s 11232% --
precision = 20...
Rate perl xs
perl 4736/s -- -99%
xs 858875/s 18035% --
precision = 30...
Rate perl xs
perl 3050/s -- -100%
xs 712136/s 23252% --
Obviously, the benefit of doing this calculation in XS becomes larger with higher precision, but generaly you don't need precision > 10.
LICENSE
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
See http://www.perl.com/perl/misc/Artistic.html
AUTHOR
Copyright (c) 2010 Daisuke Maki <daisuke@endeworks.jp>