MarkLogic 10 Product Documentation
geo.bearinggeo.bearing(
p1 as cts.point,
p2 as cts.point,
[options as String[]]
) as Number
Summary
Returns the true bearing in radians of the path from the first point
to the second. An error is raised if the two points are the same.
Parameters |
p1 |
The first point.
|
p2 |
The second point.
|
options |
Options for the operation. The default is ().
Options include:
- "coordinate-system=string"
- Use the given coordinate system. Valid values are:
- wgs84
- The WGS84 coordinate system.
- wgs84/double
- The WGS84 coordinate system at double precision.
- etrs89
- The ETRS89 coordinate system.
- etrs89/double
- The ETRS89 coordinate system at double precision.
- raw
- The raw (unmapped) coordinate system.
- raw/double
- The raw coordinate system at double precision.
- "precision=value"
- Use the coordinate system at the given precision. Allowed values:
float and double .
- "units=value"
- Unit of measure of the tolerance value. Valid values are
miles (default), km ,
feet , meters .
- "tolerance=distance"
- Tolerance is the largest allowable variation in geometry calculations.
If the distance between two points is less than tolerance, then the two
points are considered equal. For the raw coordinate system, use the units
of the coordinates. For geographic coordinate systems, use the units
specified by the units option.
|
Usage Notes
The value of the precision
option takes precedence over
that implied by the governing coordinate system name, including the
value of the coordinate-system
option. For example, if the
governing coordinate system is "wgs84/double" and the precision
option is "float", then the operation uses single precision.
Tolerance reflects how accurate you believe the data is. Computing a
bearing between two points that are effectively equal within the limits
of data accuracy is likely to produce useless results: The tolerance
parameter can be used to force an error in this situation. Effective
tolerance may be limited by the limits of precision.
See Also
Example
const sf = cts.point(37, -122);
const ny = cts.point(40, -73);
geo.bearing(sf, ny);
=> 1.2212785952625
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