Oliver Kohll - Mailing Lists wrote:

On 21 Jul 2010, at 23:14, Joe Conway <m...@joeconway.com <mailto:m...@joeconway.com>> wrote:

If you want something simple, and not requiring PostGIS, but plpgsql
instead, see:

http://archives.postgresql.org/pgsql-sql/2003-12/msg00193.php

For completeness, the earthdistance module also provides the distance between two lat/longs, the point<@>point syntax is simple to use:
http://www.postgresql.org/docs/8.3/static/earthdistance.html

Trying to figure out the proper usage.  My assumptions:

use ll_to_earth() to get point values to pass to 'point <@> point'

First issue, ll_to_earth() returns three values, not one.

Second issue, I tried something like:

select (ll_to_earth(46,67)<@>ll_to_earth(57,87));

I get:

ERROR:  operator does not exist: earth <@> earth
LINE 1: select (ll_to_earth(46,67)<@>ll_to_earth(57,87));

So I tried:

select (4618419.15006707<@>4394453.66154081);

And I get:

ERROR:  operator does not exist: numeric <@> numeric
LINE 1: select (4618419.15006707<@>4394453.66154081);
                                ^
HINT: No operator matches the given name and argument type(s). You might need to add explicit type casts.

What am I missing???



--
Until later, Geoffrey

"I predict future happiness for America if they can prevent
the government from wasting the labors of the people under
the pretense of taking care of them."
- Thomas Jefferson

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