Been messing with my Bing maps thing again NF and got latitude and longitude values mixed up. Clicked on place in Sussex and zoomed in on Dubai. Good thing I'm not an airline pilot.
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bloggoth
If everything isn't black and white, I say, 'Why the hell not?'
John Wayne (My guru, not to be confused with my beloved prophet Jeremy Clarkson) -
When I was at college back in the 80s, our group project was a font editor. Basically a grid which you could fill in squares to draw letters. (This was in the days when you had to code the UI) It was all nicely specced with interfaces etc - unfortunately half the developers assumed we were using x,y coordinates, and the other half up, along. So all the letters came out sideways. Fortunately we'd provided a rotate function, so managed to smoke and mirrors the demo.Originally posted by xoggoth View PostBeen messing with my Bing maps thing again NF and got latitude and longitude values mixed up. Clicked on place in Sussex and zoomed in on Dubai. Good thing I'm not an airline pilot.Comment
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I do that a lot with map stuffOriginally posted by xoggoth View PostBeen messing with my Bing maps thing again NF and got latitude and longitude values mixed up. Clicked on place in Sussex and zoomed in on Dubai. Good thing I'm not an airline pilot.
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Yeh. That's the confusing bit about Bing maps. You get clicked coordinates as (x,y) then convert to (latitude, longitude), which is vertical,horizontal.Originally posted by mudskipper View PostWhen I was at college back in the 80s, our group project was a font editor. Basically a grid which you could fill in squares to draw letters. (This was in the days when you had to code the UI) It was all nicely specced with interfaces etc - unfortunately half the developers assumed we were using x,y coordinates, and the other half up, along. So all the letters came out sideways. Fortunately we'd provided a rotate function, so managed to smoke and mirrors the demo.
When I was at UNI we only had analogue computers.
PS I'm lying, we only had abacuses. Carved out of stone.bloggoth
If everything isn't black and white, I say, 'Why the hell not?'
John Wayne (My guru, not to be confused with my beloved prophet Jeremy Clarkson)Comment
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As befits the first grand repast of this year, - steak pie, chips and peas, and very nice too
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Apart from the thing for footpaths inspections so I can mark problems, I've made another to suit my walking obsessions. I can view a grid overlaying my local area and zoom in on any section when clicked. Can post the code if you're interested in this stuff.I do that a lot with map stuffbloggoth
If everything isn't black and white, I say, 'Why the hell not?'
John Wayne (My guru, not to be confused with my beloved prophet Jeremy Clarkson)Comment
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The key is to think of the most efficient way to convert a coordinate to an address in screen memory, which inevitably leads to x increasing from left to right and y increasing from top to bottom because of how a CRT worksOriginally posted by mudskipper View PostWhen I was at college back in the 80s, our group project was a font editor. Basically a grid which you could fill in squares to draw letters. (This was in the days when you had to code the UI) It was all nicely specced with interfaces etc - unfortunately half the developers assumed we were using x,y coordinates, and the other half up, along. So all the letters came out sideways. Fortunately we'd provided a rotate function, so managed to smoke and mirrors the demo.
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Please do! I've never really used the Bing Maps API, so it would be interesting to seeOriginally posted by xoggoth View PostApart from the thing for footpaths inspections so I can mark problems, I've made another to suit my walking obsessions. I can view a grid overlaying my local area and zoom in on any section when clicked. Can post the code if you're interested in this stuff.
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2019: Year of the PieOriginally posted by BR14 View PostAs befits the first grand repast of this year, - steak pie, chips and peas, and very nice too
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This evening's epics began with "Doctor Who" (actual story, the first this season), followed by a little bit of "World War Weird" on Yesterday which I'd seen previously so now we're onto "The Dambusters Great Escape" on More4, which is about the sinking of the Tirpitz.
Poor bloody sailormen.
Now back to "World War Weird" with the pigeon guided missile.
The cat, by the way, is too dumb to use the access to the shed.
Ho very hum.Last edited by DoctorStrangelove; 1 January 2019, 21:18.When the fun stops, STOP.Comment
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