Question

In php, given a latitude and longitude point, a bearing (in degrees), and a distance (in feet or km or whatever) how do I figure out what the new lat lng point is? here is what I tried, but it's wrong.

function destinationPoint($lat, $lng, $brng, $dist) {
      $meters = $dist/3.2808399; // dist in meters
      $dist =  $meters/1000; // dist in km
      $rad = 6371; // earths mean radius
      $dist = $dist/$rad;  // convert dist to angular distance in radians
      $brng = deg2rad($brng);  // conver to radians 
      $lat1 = deg2rad($lat); 
      $lon1 = deg2rad($lng);

      $lat2 = asin(sin($lat1)*cos($dist) + cos($lat1)*sin($dist)*cos($brng) );
      $lon2 = $lon1 + atan2(sin($brng)*sin($dist)*cos($lat1),cos($dist)-sin($lat1)*sin($lat2));
      $lon2 = ($lon2+3*M_PI) % (2*M_PI) - M_PI;  // normalise to -180..+180º
      $lat2 = rad2deg($lat2);
      $lon2 = rad2deg($lon2);


        echo "lat2 = ".$lat2."<br/>";
        echo "lon2 = ".$lon2."<br/>";
    }
Was it helpful?

Solution

Just change

$lon2 = ($lon2+3*M_PI) % (2*M_PI) - M_PI;

to

$lon2 = fmod($lon2 + 3*M_PI, 2*M_PI) - M_PI;

According to PHP's documentation about the modulus operator (%),

Operands of modulus are converted to integers (by stripping the decimal part) before processing.

fmod "[r]eturns the floating point remainder (modulo) of the division of the arguments."

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