I get a list of suburbs within a specified distance from a single location using Queries A.
I’m trying to adapt Queries A to get a list of suburbs surrounding location1, then get list of suburbs surrounding location2 and so on (I'll call this Queries B). Essentially Queries B is doing the same as Queries A, but repeating it for each separate location. My question- how can I do this using MySQL only. Suggestions on how to do this are much appreciated.
Here is a sample of the data I am working with. SqlFiddle here
CREATE TABLE `geoname` (
`geonameid` INT(11) NOT NULL,
`asciiname` VARCHAR(200) NULL DEFAULT NULL COLLATE 'utf8_unicode_ci',
`country` VARCHAR(2) NULL DEFAULT NULL COLLATE 'utf8_unicode_ci',
`latitude` DECIMAL(10,7) NULL DEFAULT NULL,
`longitude` DECIMAL(10,7) NULL DEFAULT NULL,
`fcode` VARCHAR(10) NULL DEFAULT NULL COLLATE 'utf8_unicode_ci',
`population` INT(11) NULL DEFAULT NULL,
`area` INT(11) NULL DEFAULT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (`geonameid`),
INDEX `asciiname` (`asciiname`),
INDEX `country` (`country`),
INDEX `latitude` (`latitude`),
INDEX `longitude` (`longitude`),
INDEX `fcode` (`fcode`),
INDEX `population` (`population`),
INDEX `area` (`area`)
)
COLLATE='utf8_unicode_ci'
ENGINE=InnoDB
;
INSERT INTO geoname(geonameid, asciiname, country, latitude, longitude, fcode, population, area) VALUES
(2147497, 'Tamworth', 'AU', -31.0904800, 150.9290500, 'PPL', 47597, 72),
(8597559, 'Tamworth', 'AU', -21.0457400, 143.6685200, 'PPL', 0, 0),
(8805708, 'Tamworth', 'AU', -21.0471300, 143.6692000, 'HMSD', 0, 0),
(2655603, 'Birmingham', 'GB', 52.4814200, -1.8998300, 'PPL', 984333, 599),
(4782167, 'Roanoke', 'US', 37.2709700, -79.9414300, 'PPL', 97032, 321),
(10114336, 'East Tamworth', 'AU', -31.0854800, 150.9372100, 'PPLX', 2621, 0),
(10114337, 'North Tamworth', 'AU', -31.0786200, 150.9221900, 'PPPL', 0, 0),
(2143940, 'West Tamworth', 'AU', -31.1023600, 150.9144700, 'PPLX', 0, 0),
(2656867, 'Aston', 'GB', 52.5000000, -1.8833300, 'PPLX', 0, 0),
(2646814, 'Hockley', 'GB', 52.5000000, -1.9166700, 'PPLX', 13919, 0),
(2650236, 'Edgbaston', 'GB', 52.4623000, -1.9211500, 'PPLX', 0, 0),
(4754994, 'Cumberland Forest', 'US', 37.1401300, -80.3217100, 'PPLX', 0, 0),
(4774999, 'Mountain Top Estates', 'US', 37.1376300, -80.3247700, 'PPPL', 0, 0),
(4764119, 'Highland Park', 'US', 37.2237400, -80.3917200, 'PPLX', 0, 0);
What I tried
Queries A- get suburbs surrounding a single point of interest
SELECT @lat := latitude, @lng :=longitude FROM geoname WHERE asciiname = 'Tamworth' and country='AU' and population>0 and fcode='PPL';
SELECT
name as suburb, 'Tamworth' as point_of_interest, country,
(
(
ACOS(SIN(@lat * PI() / 180) * SIN(latitude * PI() / 180) + COS(@lat * PI() / 180) * COS(latitude * PI() / 180) * COS((
@lng - longitude
) * PI() / 180)) * 180 / PI()
) * 60 * 1.851999999962112
) AS distance
FROM geoname
WHERE fcode='PPLX' OR fcode='PPPL'
HAVING distance <= '60'
ORDER BY distance ASC;
RESULTS
The query above returns one location for the point of interest.
+---------------------------------+
| @lat | @lng |
+---------------------------------+
| 52.6339900 | -1.6958700 |
+---------------------------------+
and a list of suburbs surrounding Tamworth.
| point_of_interest | suburb | country | distance |
|-------------------|----------------------|---------|--------------------|
| Tamworth | East Tamworth | AU | 0.9548077598752538 |
| Tamworth | North Tamworth | AU | 1.4707125875055387 |
| Tamworth | West Tamworth | AU | 1.915025922482298 |
I tried to create Queries B using MySQL user variables, GROUP_CONCAT()
and FIND_IN_SET()
. The idea was that I could cycle through the values a bit like using an array. I can post my last attempt if you wish, but I am not even close to a solution (not for lack of trying).
UPDATE: Here is one of my last attempts.
SELECT @lat := GROUP_CONCAT(latitude), @lng :=GROUP_CONCAT(longitude), @city :=GROUP_CONCAT(asciiname), @area :=GROUP_CONCAT(area) FROM geoname WHERE (asciiname = 'Tamworth' or asciiname = 'Birmingham' or asciiname = 'Roanoke') and population>0 and fcode='PPL';
SELECT
FIND_IN_SET(asciiname, @city) as point_of_interest, asciiname as suburb, country,
(
(
ACOS(SIN(FIND_IN_SET(latitude, @lat) * PI() / 180) * SIN(latitude * PI() / 180) + COS(FIND_IN_SET(latitude, @lat) * PI() / 180) * COS(latitude * PI() / 180) * COS((
FIND_IN_SET(longitude, @lng) - longitude
) * PI() / 180)) * 180 / PI()
) * 60 * 1.851999999962112
) AS distance
FROM geoname
HAVING distance <= FIND_IN_SET(distance, @area)
ORDER BY distance ASC;
Desired Results for Queries B. For 3 points of interest-Tamworth, Birmingham and Roanoke- this is what I would expect to see.
| point_of_interest | suburb | country | distance |
|-------------------|----------------------|---------|--------------------|
| Tamworth | East Tamworth | AU | 0.9548077598752538 |
| Tamworth | North Tamworth | AU | 1.4707125875055387 |
| Tamworth | West Tamworth | AU | 1.915025922482298 |
| Birmingham | Aston | GB | 2.347111909955497 |
| Birmingham | Hockley | GB | 2.3581405942861164 |
| Birmingham | Edgbaston | GB | 2.568384753388139 |
| Roanoke | Cumberland Forest | US | 36.66226789588173 |
| Roanoke | Mountain Top Estates | US | 37.02185777044897 |
| Roanoke | Highland Park | US | 40.174566427830094 |
Suggestions on how to do this using MySQL are greatly appreciated.
You simply need to perform a self-join. Joining tables is a very fundamental part of SQL—you really should read up on it before trying to understand this answer further.
SELECT poi.asciiname,
suburb.asciiname,
suburb.country,
DEGREES(
ACOS(
SIN(RADIANS( poi.latitude))
* SIN(RADIANS(suburb.latitude))
+ COS(RADIANS( poi.latitude))
* COS(RADIANS(suburb.latitude))
* COS(RADIANS(poi.longitude - suburb.longitude))
)
) * 60 * 1.852 AS distance
FROM geoname AS poi
JOIN geoname AS suburb
WHERE poi.asciiname IN ('Tamworth', 'Birmingham', 'Roanoke')
AND poi.population > 0
AND poi.fcode = 'PPL'
AND suburb.fcode IN ('PPLX', 'PPPL')
HAVING distance <= 60
ORDER BY poi.asciiname, distance
See it on sqlfiddle.
You'll have noticed that I've used MySQL's IN()
operator as a shorthand for value = A OR value = B OR ...
.
You'll also have noticed that I've used MySQL's DEGREES()
and RADIANS()
functions rather than trying to perform such conversions explicitly.
You were then multiplying minutes of latitude by a factor of 1.851999999962112
, which was rather strange: it's extremely close to 1.852
, which is the precise number of kilometres in a nautical mile (historically defined as a minute of latitude), but yet bizarrely slightly different—I've assumed you meant to use that instead.
Finally, you had the literal value by which you were filtering the distances in the resultset as a string, i.e. '60'
, whereas obviously this is a numeric value and should be unquoted.