GeoFun
Library for doing geographic calculations like distance, azimuth and
position determination for geodesics and rhumb lines, orthodromes and
loxodromes, respectively.
This version makes use of GeographicLib for doing most of the
calculations.
This is a C++ package that uses pybind11 to wrap the C++ version of
GeographicLib, which makes it faster (~100x) than the pure python
version of
geographiclib <https://geographiclib.sourceforge.io/html/python/index.html>__.
Compare:
.. code:: python
In [1]: from geofun import geodesic_inverse
In [2]: %timeit geodesic_inverse(52, 4, 28, -16.6)
1.17 µs ± 37 ns per loop (mean ± std. dev. of 7 runs, 1000000 loops each)
In [3]: from geographiclib.geodesic import Geodesic
In [4]: %timeit Geodesic.WGS84.Inverse(52, 4, 28, -16.6)
107 µs ± 170 ns per loop (mean ± std. dev. of 7 runs, 10000 loops each)
In [5]: geodesic_inverse(52, 4, 28, -16.6)
Out[5]: (-139.28471885516532, 3168557.154495447, -152.90624110350674)
In [6]: Geodesic.WGS84.Inverse(52, 4, 28, -16.6)
Out[6]:
{'lat1': 52,
'lon1': 4.0,
'lat2': 28,
'lon2': -16.6,
'a12': 28.519118381735783,
's12': 3168557.1544954455,
'azi1': -139.28471885516532,
'azi2': -152.90624110350674}
Installing
pip install pygeofun should work without needing to compile anything on Windows, Linux
(x86_64, aarch64) and MacOS 13 (x86_64) for python versions 3.9 - 3.12. For other
platforms you might need to build the C++ parts.
Wheel contributions for other platforms are very welcome.
Building
-
Get
poetry <https://python-poetry.org/docs/master/#installing-with-the-official-installer>__
if you don't have it
-
Check out the source code:
git clone https://github.com/jrversteegh/geofun.git --recurse-submodules
-
Execute poetry build to build the package or poetry install
to get a virtual environment to work in. Both require a working
modern C++ compiler. GCC 9.4 and MSVC 14.3 were tested. Others may
work.
Examples
Some operator abuse was used to mark the difference between geodesic and
mercator based operations. + and - are addition and subtraction
in the mercator projection (loxodromes) and * and / are addition
and subtraction on geodesics (orthodromes). If you object to this,
you’re probably right. Any suggestions for a better way are quite
welcome.
.. code:: python
from geofun import Position, Vector
Just off Hoek van Holland
org = Position(52.0, 4.0)
nm95 = 95 * 1852.0
Go west 95 nm to Felixstowe
rmbv = Vector(270.0, nm95)
pos1 = org + rmbv
Go to the same point using great circle line
gcv = pos1 / org
pos2 = org * gcv
We should end up at the same location
assert pos1 == pos2
How disappointing: we managed to gain just 9m by crossing the
North sea using a great circle :p
assert nm95 - gcv.length == 9.101067085022805, f'Unexpected: {gcv.length}'
print(f'From {org} to {pos1}')
print(f'Rhumb: {rmbv}')
print(f'Great circle: {gcv}')
Another verification
assert pos1 - org == rmbv
assert pos1 / org == gcv
Another example. Flying from Kennedy Airport to Amsterdam Schiphol Airport and splitting
both a great circle and a rhumbline route into segments:
.. code:: python
from geofun import Position, Vector
Both airports
JFK = Position("40°38′23″N 73°46′44″W")
AMS = Position("52°18′00″N 4°45′54″E")
Loxodromic route:
loxo = (AMS - JFK).split_loxo(JFK, 10)
Print list of positions and flight vectors
print("\nLoxodrome JFK -> AMS:")
for p1, p2 in zip(loxo[:-1], loxo[1:]):
print(f"Position: {p1}, vector: {p2 - p1}")
print(f"Destination: {p2}")
Orthodromic route:
ortho = (AMS / JFK).split_ortho(JFK, 10)
Print list of positions and flight vectors
print("\nOrthodrome JFK -> AMS:")
for p1, p2 in zip(ortho[:-1], ortho[1:]):
print(f"Position: {p1}, vector: {p2 / p1}")
print(f"Destination: {p2}")
Classes
Position
Position(latitude: int, longitude: int) -> Position Position in arc seconds.
Position(latitude: float, longitude: float) -> Position Position in arc degrees.
Position(position: str) -> Position Position parsed from string.
Vector
Vector(azimuth: float, length: float) -> Vector Polar vector in arc degrees and meters.
Point
Point(x: float, y: float) -> Point Point on locally flat coordinate system, x pointing north, y pointing east.
Many operators will work on classes like:
- Point + Point, adds x and y coordinates of points
- Point + Vector, offsets point by vector
- Position + Vector, offsets position by vector along loxodrome
- Position * Vector, offsets position by vector along orthodrome
- Position - Position, get loxodromic vector from position to position
- Position / Position, get orthodromic vector from position to position
Functions
get_version() -> str
Get the library version
geodesic_direct(latitude: float, longitude: float, azimuth: float, distance: float) -> tuple
Get position and final azimuth after moving distance along great circle
with starting azimuth
geodesic_inverse(latitude1: float, longitude1: float, latitude2: float, longitude2: float) -> tuple
Get starting azimuth, distance and ending azimuth of great circle
between positions
rhumb_direct(latitude: float, longitude: float, azimuth: float, distance: float) -> tuple
Get position and final azimuth after moving distance from starting
position at fixed azimuth/along rhumb line
rhumb_inverse(latitude1: float, longitude1: float, latitude2: float, longitude2: float) -> tuple
Get rhumb line azimuth, distance and final azimuth between positions
angle_diff(arg0: numpy.ndarray[numpy.float64], arg1: numpy.ndarray[numpy.float64]) -> object
Signed difference between to angles
angle_mod(arg0: numpy.ndarray[numpy.float64]) -> object
Return angle bound to [0.0, 360.0>
angle_mod_signed(arg0: numpy.ndarray[numpy.float64]) -> object
Return angle bound to [-180.0, 180.0>