The flexpolyline R package provides a binding to the C++ implementation of the flexible polyline encoding by HERE. The flexible polyline encoding is a lossy compressed representation of a list of coordinate pairs or coordinate triples. The encoding is achieved by: (1) Reducing the decimal digits of each value; (2) encoding only the offset from the previous point; (3) using variable length for each coordinate delta; and (4) using 64 URL-safe characters to display the result. The flexible polyline encoding is a variant of the Encoded Polyline Algorithm Format by Google.
Note:
sf
objects, without reordering the columns.Install the released version of flexpolyline from CRAN:
Or get the development version from GitHub:
Encoding and decoding in R is straight forward by using encode()
and decode()
. These functions are binding to the flexpolyline C++ implementation and reflect the arguments and return values of their counterparts (hf::encode_polyline
and hf::decode_polyline
):
line <- matrix(
c(8.69821, 50.10228, 10,
8.69567, 50.10201, 20,
8.69150, 50.10063, 30,
8.68752, 50.09878, 40),
ncol = 3, byrow = TRUE
)
encode(line)
decode("BlBoz5xJ67i1BU1B7PUzIhaUxL7YU")
A common way to deal with spatial data in R is the sf package, which is built on the concept of simple features. The functions encode_sf()
and decode_sf()
provide an interface that support the encoding of sf objects:
sfg <- sf::st_linestring(line, dim = "XYZ")
encode_sf(sfg)
decode_sf("BlBoz5xJ67i1BU1B7PUzIhaUxL7YU")