> Do you *really* need that level of precision? Six decimal places is
> enough to get a marker with an accuracy of around a metre. The last
> digit you're losing represents a hundredth of a nanometre.

Hmm, in that case I'm wondering why the marker is misplaced because I
took the (correct) value from Google Earth. And no, I don't need a
hundred
of a nanometer, meter for sure is good enough. I did not realise how
accurate 15 digits after the comma are.

> If your markers are misplaced, you probably need to look a little
> nearer the decimal point than the fourteenth decimal place.

I have to do further investigations. Like I said, I took the values
from
a kml file with the correct lat/lng values. Therefore I was surprised
to
have the marker on another position than in Google Earth (maybe wrong
by 20 meters).

Just as an example, it's pointing to the soccer stadium instead of the
hockey arena (building on the upper right corner).

But most probably the error is somewhere else (and most probably
a real stupid error which I simply oversaw so far). Well, I'll see if
I
can find out.
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