NAME Geo::Google - Perform geographical queries using Google Maps SYNOPSIS use strict; use Data::Dumper; use Geo::Google; #Allen's office my $gonda_addr = '695 Charles E Young Dr S, Westwood, CA 90024'; #Stan's Donuts my $stans_addr = '10948 Weyburn Ave, Westwood, CA 90024'; #Roscoe's House of Chicken and Waffles my $roscoes_addr = "5006 W Pico Blvd, Los Angeles, CA"; #Instantiate a new Geo::Google object. my $geo = Geo::Google->new(); #Create Geo::Google::Location objects. These contain #latitude/longitude coordinates, along with a few other details #about the locus. my ( $gonda ) = $geo->location( address => $gonda_addr ); my ( $stans ) = $geo->location( address => $stans_addr ); my ( $roscoes ) = $geo->location( address => $roscoes_addr ); print $gonda->latitude, " / ", $gonda->longitude, "\n"; print $stans->latitude, " / ", $stans->longitude, "\n"; print $roscoes->latitude, " / ", $roscoes->longitude, "\n"; #Create a Geo::Google::Path object from $gonda to $roscoes #by way of $stans. my ( $donut_path ) = $geo->path($gonda, $stans, $roscoes); #A path contains a series of Geo::Google::Segment objects with #text labels representing turn-by-turn driving directions between #two or more locations. my @segments = $donut_path->segments(); #This is the human-readable directions for the first leg of the #journey. print $segments[0]->text(),"\n"; #Geo::Google::Segment objects contain a series of #Geo::Google::Location objects -- one for each time the segment #deviates from a straight line to the end of the segment. my @points = $segments[1]->points; print $points[0]->latitude, " / ", $points[0]->longitude, "\n"; #Now how about some coffee nearby? my @coffee = $geo->near($stans,'coffee'); #Too many. How about some Coffee Bean & Tea Leaf? @coffee = grep { $_->title =~ /Coffee.*?Bean/i } @coffee; #Still too many. Let's find the closest with a little trig and #a Schwartzian transform my ( $coffee ) = map { $_->[1] } sort { $a->[0] <=> $b->[0] } map { [ sqrt( ($_->longitude - $stans->longitude)**2 + ($_->latitude - $stans->latitude)**2 ), $_ ] } @coffee; # Export a location as XML for part of a Google Earth KML file my $strStansDonutsXML = $stans->toXML(); # Export a location as JSON data to use with Google Maps my $strRoscoesJSON = $roscoes->toJSON(); DESCRIPTION Geo::Google provides access to the map data used by the popular Google Maps web application. WHAT IS PROVIDED Conversion of a street address to a 2D Cartesian point (latitude/longitude) Conversion of a pair of points to a multi-segmented path of driving directions between the two points. Querying Google's "Local Search" given a point and one or more query terms. WHAT IS NOT PROVIDED Documentation of the Google Maps map data XML format Documentation of the Google Maps web application API Functionality to create your own Google Maps web page. AUTHOR Allen Day , Michael Trowbridge COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE Copyright (c) 2004-2007 Allen Day. All rights reserved. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. BUGS / TODO Report documentation and software bugs to the author, or better yet, send a patch. Known bugs/issues: Polyline decoding needs to be cleaned up. Lack of documentation. JSON exporting is not exactly identical to the original Google JSON response. Some of the Google Maps-specific data is discarded during parsing, and the perl JSON module does not allow for bare keys while exporting to a JSON string. It should still be functionally interchangeable with a Google JSON reponse. SEE ALSO http://maps.google.com http://www.google.com/apis/maps/ http://libgmail.sourceforge.net/googlemaps.html CONSTRUCTOR new() Usage : my $geo = Geo::Google->new(); Function : constructs and returns a new Geo::Google object Returns : a Geo::Google object Args : n/a OBJECT METHODS error() Usage : my $error = $geo->error(); Function : Fetch error messages produced by the Google Maps XML server. Errors can be produced for a number of reasons, e.g. inability of the server to resolve a street address to geographical coordinates. Returns : The most recent error string. Calling this method clears the last error. Args : n/a location() Usage : my $loc = $geo->location( address => $address ); Function : creates a new Geo::Google::Location object, given a street address. Returns : a Geo::Google::Location object, or undef on error Args : an anonymous hash: key required? value ------- --------- ----- address yes address to search for id no unique identifier for the location. useful if producing XML. icon no image to be used to represent point in Google Maps web application infoStyle no unknown. css-related, perhaps? near() Usage : my @near = $geo->near( $loc, $phrase ); Function : searches Google Local for records matching the phrase provided, with the constraint that they are physically nearby the Geo::Google::Location object provided. search phrase is passed verbatim to Google. Returns : a list of Geo::Google::Location objects Args : 1. A Geo::Google::Location object 2. A search phrase. path() Usage : my $path = $geo->path( $from, $OptionalWaypoints, $to ); Function : get driving directions between two points Returns : a Geo::Google::Path object Args : 1. a Geo::Google::Location object (from) 2. optional Geo::Google::Location waypoints 3. a Geo::Google::Location object (final destination) INTERNAL FUNCTIONS AND METHODS _decode() Usage : my @points = _decode($encoded_points); Function : decode a polyline into its composite lat/lon pairs Returns : an array Args : a string _encode() Usage : my $encoded_points = _encode(@points); Function : encode lat/lon pairs into a polyline string Returns : a string Args : an array _html_unescape() Usage : my $clean = _html_unescape($dirty); Function : does HTML unescape of & > < " special characters Returns : an unescaped HTML string Args : an HTML string. _obj2location() Usage : my $loc = _obj2location($obj); Function : converts a perl object generated from a Google Maps JSON response to a Geo::Google::Location object Returns : a Geo::Google::Location object Args : a member of the $obj->{overlays}->{markers}->[] anonymous array that you get when you read google's JSON response and parse it using JSON::jsonToObj() _JSONrenderSkeleton() Usage : my $perlvariable = _JSONrenderSkeleton(); Function : creates the skeleton of a perl data structure used by the Geo::Google::Location and Geo::Google::Path for rendering to Google Maps JSON format Returns : a mildly complex multi-level anonymous hash/array perl data structure that corresponds to the Google Maps JSON data structure Args : none