GeoConvert -- convert geographic coordinates
GeoConvert [
-g |
-d |
-: |
-u |
-m |
-c ] [
-z zone |
-s |
-t |
-S |
-T ] [
-n ] [
-w ] [
-p prec ] [
-l
|
-a ] [
--comment-delimiter commentdelim ] [
--version |
-h |
--help ] [
--input-file
infile |
--input-string instring ] [
--line-separator linesep ] [
--output-file outfile
]
GeoConvert reads from standard input interpreting each line as a
geographic coordinate and prints the coordinate in the format specified by the
options on standard output. The input is interpreted in one of three different
ways depending on how many space or comma delimited tokens there are on the
line. The options
-g,
-d,
-u, and
-m govern the
format of output. In all cases, the WGS84 model of the earth is used (
a = 6378137 m,
f = 1/298.257223563).
- geographic
- 2 tokens (output options -g, -d, or
-:) given as latitude longitude using decimal degrees
or degrees, minutes, and seconds. Latitude is given first (unless the
-w option is given). See "GEOGRAPHIC COORDINATES" for a
description of the format. For example, the following are all equivalent
33.3 44.4
E44.4 N33.3
33d18'N 44d24'E
44d24 33d18N
33:18 +44:24
- UTM/UPS
- 3 tokens (output option -u) given as
zone+hemisphere easting northing or
easting northing zone+hemisphere, where
hemisphere is either n (or north) or s (or
south). The zone is absent for a UPS specification. For
example,
38n 444140.54 3684706.36
444140.54 3684706.36 38n
s 2173854.98 2985980.58
2173854.98 2985980.58 s
- MRGS
- 1 token (output option -m) is used to specify the
center of an MGRS grid square. For example,
38SMB4484
38SMB44140847064
- -g
- output latitude and longitude using decimal degrees.
Default output mode.
- -d
- output latitude and longitude using degrees, minutes, and
seconds (DMS).
- -:
- like -d, except use : as a separator instead of the
d, ', and " delimiters.
- -u
- output UTM or UPS.
- -m
- output MGRS.
- -c
- output meridian convergence and scale for the corresponding
UTM or UPS projection. The meridian convergence is the bearing of grid
north given as degrees clockwise from true north.
-
-z zone
- set the zone to zone for output. Use either 0 <
zone <= 60 for a UTM zone or zone = 0 for UPS.
Alternatively use a zone+hemisphere designation, e.g., 38n.
See "ZONE".
- -s
- use the standard UPS and UTM zones.
- -t
- similar to -s but forces UPS regions to the closest
UTM zone.
-
-S or -T
- behave the same as -s and -t, respectively,
until the first legal conversion is performed. For subsequent points, the
zone and hemisphere of that conversion are used. This enables a sequence
of points to be converted into UTM or UPS using a consistent coordinate
system.
- -n
- on input, MGRS coordinates refer to the south-west corner
of the MGRS square instead of the center; see "MGRS".
- -w
- toggle the longitude first flag (it starts off); if the
flag is on, then on input and output, longitude precedes latitude (except
that, on input, this can be overridden by a hemisphere designator,
N, S, E, W).
-
-p prec
- set the output precision to prec (default 0);
prec is the precision relative to 1 m. See
"PRECISION".
- -l
- on output, UTM/UPS uses the long forms north and
south to designate the hemisphere instead of n or
s.
- -a
- on output, UTM/UPS uses the abbreviations n and
s to designate the hemisphere instead of north or
south; this is the default representation.
-
--comment-delimiter commentdelim
- set the comment delimiter to commentdelim (e.g.,
"#" or "//"). If set, the input lines will be scanned
for this delimiter and, if found, the delimiter and the rest of the line
will be removed prior to processing and subsequently appended to the
output line (separated by a space).
- --version
- print version and exit.
- -h
- print usage and exit.
- --help
- print full documentation and exit.
-
--input-file infile
- read input from the file infile instead of from
standard input; a file name of "-" stands for standard
input.
-
--input-string instring
- read input from the string instring instead of from
standard input. All occurrences of the line separator character (default
is a semicolon) in instring are converted to newlines before the
reading begins.
-
--line-separator linesep
- set the line separator character to linesep. By
default this is a semicolon.
-
--output-file outfile
- write output to the file outfile instead of to
standard output; a file name of "-" stands for standard
output.
prec gives precision of the output with
prec = 0 giving 1 m
precision,
prec = 3 giving 1 mm precision, etc.
prec is the
number of digits after the decimal point for UTM/UPS. For MGRS, The number of
digits per coordinate is 5 +
prec;
prec = -6 results in just the
grid zone. For decimal degrees, the number of digits after the decimal point
is 5 +
prec. For DMS (degree, minute, seconds) output, the number of
digits after the decimal point in the seconds components is 1 +
prec;
if this is negative then use minutes (
prec = -2 or -3) or degrees (
prec <= -4) as the least significant component. Print convergence,
resp. scale, with 5 +
prec, resp. 7 +
prec, digits after the
decimal point. The minimum value of
prec is -5 (-6 for MGRS) and the
maximum is 9 for UTM/UPS, 9 for decimal degrees, 10 for DMS, 6 for MGRS, and 8
for convergence and scale.
The utility accepts geographic coordinates, latitude and longitude, in a number
of common formats. Latitude precedes longitude, unless the
-w option is
given which switches this convention. On input, either coordinate may be given
first by appending or prepending
N or
S to the latitude and
E or
W to the longitude. These hemisphere designators carry an
implied sign, positive for
N and
E and negative for
S and
W. This sign multiplies any +/- sign prefixing the coordinate. The
coordinates may be given as decimal degree or as degrees, minutes, and
seconds. d, ', and " are used to denote degrees, minutes, and seconds,
with the least significant designator optional. (See "QUOTING" for
how to quote the characters ' and " when entering coordinates on the
command line.) Alternatively, : (colon) may be used to separate the various
components. Only the final component of coordinate can include a decimal
point, and the minutes and seconds components must be less than 60.
It is also possible to carry out addition or subtraction operations in
geographic coordinates. If the coordinate includes interior signs (i.e., not
at the beginning or immediately after an initial hemisphere designator), then
the coordinate is split before such signs; the pieces are parsed separately
and the results summed. For example the point 15" east of 39N 70W is
39N 70W+0:0:15E
WARNING: "Exponential" notation is not recognized for
geographic coordinates. Thus 7.0E1 is illegal, while 7.0E+1 is parsed as
(7.0E) + (+1), yielding the same result as 8.0E.
Various unicode characters (encoded with UTF-8) may also be used to denote
degrees, minutes, and seconds, e.g., the degree, prime, and double prime
symbols; in addition two single quotes can be used to represent ".
The other GeographicLib utilities use the same rules for interpreting geographic
coordinates; in addition, azimuths and arc lengths are interpreted the same
way.
Unfortunately the characters ' and " have special meanings in many shells
and have to be entered with care. However note (1) that the trailing
designator is optional and that (2) you can use colons as a separator
character. Thus 10d20' can be entered as 10d20 or 10:20 and 10d20'30" can
be entered as 10:20:30.
- Unix shells (sh, bash, tsch)
- The characters ' and " can be quoted by preceding them
with a \ (backslash); or you can quote a string containing ' with a pair
of "s. The two alternatives are illustrated by
echo 10d20\'30\" "20d30'40" | GeoConvert -d -p -1
=> 10d20'30"N 020d30'40"E
Quoting of command line arguments is similar
GeoConvert -d -p -1 --input-string "10d20'30\" 20d30'40"
=> 10d20'30"N 020d30'40"E
- Windows command shell (cmd)
- The ' character needs no quoting; the " character can
either be quoted by a ^ or can be represented by typing ' twice. (This
quoting is usually unnecessary because the trailing designator can be
omitted.) Thus
echo 10d20'30'' 20d30'40 | GeoConvert -d -p -1
=> 10d20'30"N 020d30'40"E
Use \ to quote the " character in a command line argument
GeoConvert -d -p -1 --input-string "10d20'30\" 20d30'40"
=> 10d20'30"N 020d30'40"E
- Input from a file
- No quoting need be done if the input from a file. Thus each
line of the file "input.txt" should just contain the plain
coordinates.
GeoConvert -d -p -1 < input.txt
MGRS coordinates represent a square patch of the earth, thus
"38SMB4488" is in zone "38n" with 444km <=
easting < 445km and 3688km <=
northing < 3689km.
Consistent with this representation, coordinates are
truncated (instead
of
rounded) to the requested precision. When an MGRS coordinate is
provided as input,
GeoConvert treats this as a representative point
within the square. By default, this representative point is the
center
of the square ("38n 444500 3688500" in the example above). (This
leads to a stable conversion between MGRS and geographic coordinates.)
However, if the
-n option is given then the south-west corner of the
square is returned instead ("38n 444000 3688000" in the example
above).
If the input is
geographic,
GeoConvert uses the standard rules of
selecting UTM vs UPS and for assigning the UTM zone (with the Norway and
Svalbard exceptions). If the input is
UTM/UPS or
MGRS, then the
choice between UTM and UPS and the UTM zone mirrors the input. The
-z
zone,
-s, and
-t options allow these rules to be
overridden with
zone = 0 being used to indicate UPS. For example, the
point
79.9S 6.1E
corresponds to possible MGRS coordinates
32CMS4324728161 (standard UTM zone = 32)
31CEM6066227959 (neighboring UTM zone = 31)
BBZ1945517770 (neighboring UPS zone)
then
echo 79.9S 6.1E | GeoConvert -p -3 -m => 32CMS4328
echo 31CEM6066227959 | GeoConvert -p -3 -m => 31CEM6027
echo 31CEM6066227959 | GeoConvert -p -3 -m -s => 32CMS4328
echo 31CEM6066227959 | GeoConvert -p -3 -m -z 0 => BBZ1917
Is
zone is specified with a hemisphere, then this is honored when
printing UTM coordinates:
echo -1 3 | GeoConvert -u => 31s 500000 9889470
echo -1 3 | GeoConvert -u -z 31 => 31s 500000 9889470
echo -1 3 | GeoConvert -u -z 31s => 31s 500000 9889470
echo -1 3 | GeoConvert -u -z 31n => 31n 500000 -110530
NOTE: the letter in the zone specification for UTM is a hemisphere
designator
n or
s and
not an MGRS latitude band letter.
Convert the MGRS latitude band letter to a hemisphere as follows: replace
C thru
M by
s (or
south); replace
N thru
X by
n (or
north).
echo 38SMB4488 | GeoConvert => 33.33424 44.40363
echo 38SMB4488 | GeoConvert -: -p 1 => 33:20:03.25N 044:2413.06E
echo 38SMB4488 | GeoConvert -u => 38n 444500 3688500
echo E44d24 N33d20 | GeoConvert -m -p -3 => 38SMB4488
GeoConvert can be used to do simple arithmetic using degree, minutes, and
seconds. For example, sometimes data is tiled in 15 second squares tagged by
the DMS representation of the SW corner. The tags of the tile at 38:59:45N
077:02:00W and its 8 neighbors are then given by
t=0:0:15
for y in -$t +0 +$t; do
for x in -$t +0 +$t; do
echo 38:59:45N$y 077:02:00W$x
done
done | GeoConvert -: -p -1 | tr -d ': '
=>
385930N0770215W
385930N0770200W
385930N0770145W
385945N0770215W
385945N0770200W
385945N0770145W
390000N0770215W
390000N0770200W
390000N0770145W
An illegal line of input will print an error message to standard output
beginning with "ERROR:" and causes
GeoConvert to return an
exit code of 1. However, an error does not cause
GeoConvert to
terminate; following lines will be converted.
- UTM
- Universal Transverse Mercator,
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Universal_Transverse_Mercator_coordinate_system>.
- UPS
- Universal Polar Stereographic,
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Universal_Polar_Stereographic>.
- MGRS
- Military Grid Reference System,
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Military_grid_reference_system>.
- WGS84
- World Geodetic System 1984,
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WGS84>.
An online version of this utility is availbable at
<
https://geographiclib.sourceforge.io/cgi-bin/GeoConvert>.
The algorithms for the transverse Mercator projection are described in C. F. F.
Karney,
Transverse Mercator with an accuracy of a few
nanometers, J. Geodesy
85(8), 475-485 (Aug. 2011); DOI
<
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00190-011-0445-3>; preprint
<
https://arxiv.org/abs/1002.1417>.
GeoConvert was written by Charles Karney.
GeoConvert was added to GeographicLib,
<
https://geographiclib.sourceforge.io>, in 2009-01.