On Apr 20, 7:50 pm, Marc-André Morin <[email protected]> wrote:
> I'm sending to my databases some geolocation point with my iPhone.
> (48.84141918333333, -67.49892986666667) Google give me
> 48.841419, -67.498930. Check out this map:
>
> www.mayartson.com/maps.jpg
>
> The geolocation point was taken in the red square area so the differece is
> bigger than 10cm. The option are : maybe my iPhone don't gave me the right
> point, or it's because Google use only 6 digits?

If you simply click on a map (in a browser on a real computer), the
latitude and longitude returned have something like 14 decimal places.
I guess that your iPhone is truncating things because its Javascript
can't cope with more than six, BUT six is enough to place a marker
within 10cm.

Because you gave a link to a picture, I can't tell what's going on.
It's not possible to debug a picture. If you give a real link to a
real web page we may be to explain what's happening.

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