Double or decimal for latitude/longitude values in C#
Go for double
, there are several reasons.
- Trigonometric functions are available only for double
- Precision of double (range of 100 nanometers) is far beyond anything you'll ever require for Lat/Lon values
- GeoCoordinate Class and third-Party modules (e.g. DotSpatial) also use double for coordinates
A double has up to 15 decimal digits of precision. So, lets assume three of those digits are going to be on the left of the decimal point for lat/long values (max of 180deg). This leaves 12 digits of precision on the right. Since a degree of lat/long is ~111km, 5 of those 12 digits would give us precision to the meter. 3 more digits would give us precision to the millimeter. The remaining 4 digits would get us precision to around 100 nanometers. Since double will win from the perspective of performance and memory, I see no reason to even consider using decimal.
I faced this question quite a while ago when i started with spacial programming. I read a book a while ago that led me to this.
//sql server has a really cool dll that deals with spacial data such like
//geography points and so on.
//add this namespace
Using Microsoft.SqlServer.Types;
//SqlGeography.Point(dblLat, dblLon, srid)
var lat_lon_point = Microsoft.SqlServer.Types.SqlGeography.Point(lat, lon, 4326);
This is the best way when working in your application with spacial data. then to save the data use this in sql
CREATE TABLE myGeoTable
{
LatLonPoint GEOMETRY
}
else, if you are using something else that isnt sql just convert the point to hexadecimal and store it. I know after a long time using spacial that this is the safest.
Double
Combining the answers, it is how Microsoft represents it itself in SqlGeography library
[get: Microsoft.SqlServer.Server.SqlMethod(IsDeterministic=true, IsPrecise=true)] public System.Data.SqlTypes.SqlDouble Lat { get; } Property Value SqlDouble A SqlDouble value that specifies the latitude.