Geo::Coder::Google::V3 - Google Maps Geocoding API V3
use Geo::Coder::Google; my $geocoder = Geo::Coder::Google->new(apiver => 3); my $location = $geocoder->geocode( location => 'Hollywood and Highland, Los Angeles, CA' );
Geo::Coder::Google::V3 provides a geocoding functionality using Google Maps API V3.
$geocoder = Geo::Coder::Google->new(apiver => 3); $geocoder = Geo::Coder::Google->new(apiver => 3, language => 'ru'); $geocoder = Geo::Coder::Google->new(apiver => 3, gl => 'ca'); $geocoder = Geo::Coder::Google->new(apiver => 3, oe => 'latin1');
To specify the language of Google's response add language parameter with a two-letter value. Note that adding that parameter does not guarantee that every request returns translated data.
language
You can also set gl parameter to set country code (e.g. ca for Canada).
gl
You can ask for a character encoding other than utf-8 by setting the oe parameter, but this is not recommended.
You can optionally use your Maps Premier Client ID, by passing your client code as the client parameter and your private key as the key parameter. The URL signing for Premier Client IDs requires the Digest::HMAC_SHA1 and MIME::Base64 modules. To test your client, set the environment variables GMAP_CLIENT and GMAP_KEY before running 02_v3_live.t
client
key
GMAP_CLIENT=your_id GMAP_KEY='your_key' make test
$location = $geocoder->geocode(location => $location); @location = $geocoder->geocode(location => $location);
Queries $location to Google Maps geocoding API and returns hash reference returned back from API server. When you call the method in an array context, it returns all the candidates got back, while it returns the 1st one in a scalar context.
When you'd like to pass non-ascii string as a location, you should pass it as either UTF-8 bytes or Unicode flagged string.
$location = $geocoder->reverse_geocode(latlng => '37.778907,-122.39732'); @location = $geocoder->reverse_geocode(latlng => '37.778907,-122.39732');
Similar to geocode except it expects a latitude/longitude parameter.
Accessor method to get and set UserAgent object used internally. You can call env_proxy for example, to get the proxy information from environment variables:
$coder->ua->env_proxy;
You can also set your own User-Agent object:
$coder->ua( LWPx::ParanoidAgent->new );
Tatsuhiko Miyagawa <miyagawa@bulknews.net>
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
Geo::Coder::Yahoo, http://www.google.com/apis/maps/documentation/#Geocoding_Examples
List of supported languages: http://spreadsheets.google.com/pub?key=p9pdwsai2hDMsLkXsoM05KQ&gid=1
To install Geo::Coder::Google, copy and paste the appropriate command in to your terminal.
cpanm
cpanm Geo::Coder::Google
CPAN shell
perl -MCPAN -e shell install Geo::Coder::Google
For more information on module installation, please visit the detailed CPAN module installation guide.