I am trying to follow along here, but don't understand where you moved the code to. I don't see "varsouth" anywhere. Can you post your code? Here is mine...trying to follow along: // Perform search over this bounds } //Get the Lat and Long of the RouteBoxer getNorthEast(bounds); getSouthWest(bounds); var northeast = bounds.getNorthEast(); var southwest = bounds.getSouthWest(); var lateast = northeast.lat(); var longnorth = northeast.lng(); var latwest = southwest.lat(); var longsouth = southwest.lng(); document.getElementById("south").innerHTML = longsouth; document.getElementById("west").innerHTML = latwest;
On Wednesday, February 6, 2013 5:28:53 PM UTC-8, KP wrote: > Okay! All I had to do was include the "document" code directly underneath > the "varsouth" code, as you suggested. Now, the lats and longs appear on > the webpage. Thanks so much! > > I've been reviewing the site you provided, but I'm having trouble making > the leap to my next phase: querying a MySQL database with these lats and > longs to show points of interest in my map. > > I'm using Ruby on Rails, and I know that I can hard-code a latitude and > longitude to find locations by doing this in my controller: > > @nearbylocations = Masterlocation.find(:all, :conditions => ["latitude > > 25 AND latitude < 30"], :order => ['nickname asc']) > > Can you provide a link to a tutorial or a suggestion of how I can get > where I am now to actually including these POIs in the map? The "Using > PHP/MySQL with Google Maps" is good, but it's difficult to make the leap > from that code to doing it in Rails. > > I really appreciate the help, Barry! > > - Kevin > > > > On Tuesday, February 5, 2013 2:46:10 PM UTC-5, barryhunter wrote: >> >> >> >> >> as part of my >>> >>> function calcRoute() { >>> >>> I wanted to see if this was working. So, at the very end of my script, I >>> added: >>> >>> document.getElementById("south").innerHTML = longsouth; >>> document.getElementById("west").innerHTML = latwest; >>> >>> >> Sounds like a scope issue. You trying to use the variables when they have >> gone out of scope. Can only 'use' them inside the loop. >> >> > -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Google Maps JavaScript API v3" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to google-maps-js-api-v3+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com. To post to this group, send email to google-maps-js-api-v3@googlegroups.com. Visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/google-maps-js-api-v3?hl=en. For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/groups/opt_out.