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  • Rank 148,454 (Top 3 %)
  • Language
    PHP
  • License
    MIT License
  • Created about 8 years ago
  • Updated 9 months ago

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Repository Details

Easily add longitude and latitude columns to your records and use inherited functionality for calculating distances

Laravel Geographical

Easily add longitude and latitude columns to your records and use inherited functionality for calculating distances.

First either update your database or add this to a migration for each model:

$table->double('longitude');
$table->double('latitude');

Finally, edit you model to use the Geographical Trait, as the example below:

<?php

namespace App\Models;

use Malhal\Geographical\Geographical;
use Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Model;

class ModelExample extends Model
{
    use Geographical;

1. Distance

Find the distance to all the entries in your table from a particular location.

$query = ModelExample::distance($latitude, $longitude);
$asc = $query->orderBy('distance', 'ASC')->get();

2. Geofence

Find all the entries in your table inside a circular geo-fence.

$query = ModelExample::geofence($latitude, $longitude, $inner_radius, $outer_radius);
$all = $query->get();

Use $inner_radius= 0 & $outer_radius = any number in miles that you desire.

Units

The default unit of distance is miles. You can change it to kilometers by putting this in your model

protected static $kilometers = true;

Notes

  1. The method returns a Eloquent\Builder object so that you can add optional conditions if you want.
  2. If you require to select only a certain columns, it can be achieved by using select().
    ModelExample::select('id', 'name')->distance($latitude, $longitude);
    (select() should precede the distance()/geofence())
  3. You can use distance as an aggregate column in the result. (Aggregate columns cannot be used in WHERE, use HAVING to execute any condition.)
  4. If you use different column names for latitude and longitude, mention them in the Model.php
    const LATITUDE  = 'lat';
    const LONGITUDE = 'lng';

Options

  1. You may pass an array of options as the third parameter of the distance method, these options will allow you to set a new table name or column names at runtime.

    $query = Model::distance($latitude, $longitude, $options);
  2. There are three fields you set with the options parameter at runtime: table, latitude_column, and longitude_column:

    $options = [
       'table' => 'coordinates',
       'latitude_column' => 'lat',
       'longitude_column' => 'lon'
    ]
    
    Model::select('id', 'name')->distance($latitude, $longitude, $options);
  3. The table field will allow you to set the table from which the the coordinates will be selected at runtime, allowing you to join the coordinates to your model from another table.

    Model::join('locations', function($join){ 
               $join->on('model.id', '=', 'locations.model_id');
           })
           ->select('id', 'name')
           ->distance($latitude, $longitude, ['table' => 'locations']);
  4. The latitude_column and longitude_column fields can be used to set the column names for a joined table, or to override the default column names (including those set on your model) at runtime. If you don't set the column name fields at runtime when using a joined table then column names set on your model, or the defaults of 'latitude' and 'longitude' will be used. Setting const LATITUDE = 'lat' or const LONGITUDE = 'lng' on a joined model will have no effect.

Installation

PHP 5.6.4+ and Laravel 5+ are required.

To get the latest version of Laravel Geographical, simply require the project using Composer:

$ composer require malhal/laravel-geographical