Proj4js is a JavaScript library to transform point coordinates from one coordinate system to another, including datum transformations. Originally a port of PROJ.4 and GCTCP C it is a part of the MetaCRS group of projects.
##Installing
Depending on your preferences
npm install proj4
bower install proj4
jam install proj4
component install proj4js/proj4js
or just manually grab the file proj4.js
from the latest release.
if you do not want to download anything, Proj4js is also hosted on cdnjs for direct use in your browser applications.
##Using
the basic signature is:
proj4(fromProjection[, toProjection2, coordinates])
Projections can be proj or wkt strings.
Coordinates may an object of the form {x:x,y:y}
or an array of the form [x,y]
.
When all 3 arguments are given, the result is that the coordinates are transformed from projection1 to projection 2. And returned in the same format that they were given in.
var firstProjection = 'PROJCS["NAD83 / Massachusetts Mainland",GEOGCS["NAD83",DATUM["North_American_Datum_1983",SPHEROID["GRS 1980",6378137,298.257222101,AUTHORITY["EPSG","7019"]],AUTHORITY["EPSG","6269"]],PRIMEM["Greenwich",0,AUTHORITY["EPSG","8901"]],UNIT["degree",0.01745329251994328,AUTHORITY["EPSG","9122"]],AUTHORITY["EPSG","4269"]],UNIT["metre",1,AUTHORITY["EPSG","9001"]],PROJECTION["Lambert_Conformal_Conic_2SP"],PARAMETER["standard_parallel_1",42.68333333333333],PARAMETER["standard_parallel_2",41.71666666666667],PARAMETER["latitude_of_origin",41],PARAMETER["central_meridian",-71.5],PARAMETER["false_easting",200000],PARAMETER["false_northing",750000],AUTHORITY["EPSG","26986"],AXIS["X",EAST],AXIS["Y",NORTH]]';
var secondProjection = "+proj=gnom +lat_0=90 +lon_0=0 +x_0=6300000 +y_0=6300000 +ellps=WGS84 +datum=WGS84 +units=m +no_defs";
//I'm not going to redefine those two in latter examples.
proj4(firstProjection,secondProjection,[2,5]);
// [-2690666.2977344505, 3662659.885459918]
If only 1 projection is given then it is assumed that it is being projected from WGS84 (fromProjection is WGS84).
proj4(firstProjection,[-71,41]);
// [242075.00535055372, 750123.32090043]
If no coordinates are given an object with two methods is returned, its methods are forward
which projects from the first projection to the second and inverse
which projects from the second to the first.
proj4(firstProjection,secondProjection).forward([2,5]);
// [-2690666.2977344505, 3662659.885459918]
proj4(secondProjection,firstProjection).inverse([2,5]);
// [-2690666.2977344505, 3662659.885459918]
and as above if only one projection is given, it's assumed to be coming from wgs84
proj4(firstProjection).forward([-71,41]);
// [242075.00535055372, 750123.32090043]
proj4(firstProjection).inverse([242075.00535055372, 750123.32090043]);
//[-71, 40.99999999999986]
//the floating points to answer your question
If you prefer to define a projection as a string and reference it that way, you may use the proj4.defs method which can be called 2 ways, with a name and projection:
proj4.defs('WGS84', "+title=WGS 84 (long/lat) +proj=longlat +ellps=WGS84 +datum=WGS84 +units=degrees");
or with an array
proj4.defs([
[
'EPSG:4326',
'+title=WGS 84 (long/lat) +proj=longlat +ellps=WGS84 +datum=WGS84 +units=degrees'],
[
'EPSG:4269',
'+title=NAD83 (long/lat) +proj=longlat +a=6378137.0 +b=6356752.31414036 +ellps=GRS80 +datum=NAD83 +units=degrees'
]
]);
you can then do
proj4('EPSG:4326');
instead of writing out the whole proj definition, by default proj4 has the following projections predefined:
- 'EPSG:4326', which has the following alias
- 'WGS84'
- 'EPSG:4269'
- 'EPSG:3857', which has the following aliases
- 'EPSG:3785'
- 'GOOGLE'
- 'EPSG:900913'
- 'EPSG:102113'
defined projections can also be accessed through the proj4.defs function (proj4.defs('EPSG:4326')
).
proj4.defs can also be used to define a named alias:
proj4.defs('urn:x-ogc:def:crs:EPSG:4326', proj4.defs('EPSG:4326'));
##Developing
to set up build tools make sure you have node and grunt-cli installed and then run npm install
to do the complete build and browser tests run
grunt
to run node tests run
npm test
to run node tests with coverage run
node test --coverage
to create a build with only default projections (latlon and Mercator) run
grunt build
to create a build with only custom projections include a comma separated list of projections codes (the file name in 'lib/projections' without the '.js') after a colon, e.g.
grunt build:tmerc
#includes transverse Mercator
grunt build:lcc
#includes lambert conformal conic
grunt build:omerc,moll
#includes oblique Mercator and Mollweide