We have had good success with postGIS for storing various spatial data sets 
(polygons, points and lines).

They can be found at <http://postgis.refractions.net/>.

We store our data in lat/long but postGIS has many different spatial reference 
systems defined and I would suspect that minutes/seconds exists. You may want 
to subscribe to and post your question on the postGIS mailing list.

There are windows-ready compiled versions which seem to work well, although 
I've only played with them for prototypes (our real database servers are all 
linux so I can't be of any help on the Windoze front).

In general support for this extension of postgres is quite helpful, so I would 
suggest asking on their general list.

HTH,

Greg Williamson
DBA
GlobeXplorer LLC

-----Original Message-----
From:   [EMAIL PROTECTED] on behalf of John Tregea
Sent:   Sun 6/11/2006 11:18 PM
To:     pgsql-general@postgresql.org
Cc:     
Subject:        [GENERAL] Help with storing spatial (map coordinates) data?

Hi,

I have recently switched to PostgreSQL and had no problem bringing our 
existing (my)SQL databases and data into the environment. I am now 
extending the functionality of our databases and want to start storing 
spatial information.

The information is made up of latitude and longitude coordinates that 
define a point or location on the earth's surface. e.g. degrees, minutes 
and seconds north/south and degrees, minutes and seconds east/west.

I have read up on custom data types (with input and output functions) in 
the docs but am not sure if that is the best way to go. Can anyone point 
me to a simple, workable implementation of storing and managing this 
type of data or advise me on how to structure a series of fields that 
could combine to the required string?

I am running postgreSQL 8.1.4 under WinXP Pro and currently evaluating 
an X-Talk front end called Revolution for the GUI development and have 
only some general experience with SQL.

Thanks in advance

John Tregea

---------------------------(end of broadcast)---------------------------
TIP 6: explain analyze is your friend

!DSPAM:448d0905111031804284693!





---------------------------(end of broadcast)---------------------------
TIP 1: if posting/reading through Usenet, please send an appropriate
       subscribe-nomail command to [EMAIL PROTECTED] so that your
       message can get through to the mailing list cleanly

Reply via email to