great-circle-map | mapping great circle paths between airports using google | Map library
kandi X-RAY | great-circle-map Summary
kandi X-RAY | great-circle-map Summary
Great Circle Map is a tool for visualizing flight routes and calculating the distance between airports. A great circle path (also known as a geodesic path) is the shortest possible route between two points on the surface of earth or any other sphere. The map uses the Mercator projection by default. On this type of map, great circle paths tend to look curved even though they are in fact straight. As an alternative, the website also features a 3D globe view which doesn’t have that problem. Projecting a 3-dimensional sphere onto a 2-dimensional screen always creates distortions. Most world maps use the Mercator projection or something similar. These projections tend to have large distortions around the polar regions. Distances look bigger than they really are near the poles, and relatively smaller around the equator. People tend to be particularly confused by how the shortest route between two cities like Dubai and Los Angeles goes via the north pole, despite the fact that both of these cities are situated pretty far south. It makes a lot more sense when you look at an orthographic projection. The distances calculated are the shortest possible distances. However, airlines often don’t follow the shortest route exactly for a variety of reasons. Airspace reserved for military purposes and areas of conflict for example. The earth is not a perfect sphere, which is taken into account in the distance calculations. It is best approximated by an ellipsoid which is widest around the equator. If you found a bug or have a suggestion, please contact me at markus.s.englund@gmail.com or file an issue on Github.
Support
Quality
Security
License
Reuse
Top functions reviewed by kandi - BETA
- Transforms the route codes to an array of directions
- Checks for an invalid character .
- Returns the state of the airport data .
- Returns the string representation of the route .
- Returns the color for the given route .
great-circle-map Key Features
great-circle-map Examples and Code Snippets
Community Discussions
Trending Discussions on Map
QUESTION
I have been using github actions for quite sometime but today my deployments started failing. Below is the error from github action logs
...ANSWER
Answered 2022-Mar-16 at 07:01First, this error message is indeed expected on Jan. 11th, 2022.
See "Improving Git protocol security on GitHub".
January 11, 2022 Final brownout.
This is the full brownout period where we’ll temporarily stop accepting the deprecated key and signature types, ciphers, and MACs, and the unencrypted Git protocol.
This will help clients discover any lingering use of older keys or old URLs.
Second, check your package.json
dependencies for any git://
URL, as in this example, fixed in this PR.
As noted by Jörg W Mittag:
For GitHub Actions:There was a 4-month warning.
The entire Internet has been moving away from unauthenticated, unencrypted protocols for a decade, it's not like this is a huge surprise.Personally, I consider it less an "issue" and more "detecting unmaintained dependencies".
Plus, this is still only the brownout period, so the protocol will only be disabled for a short period of time, allowing developers to discover the problem.
The permanent shutdown is not until March 15th.
As in actions/checkout issue 14, you can add as a first step:
QUESTION
In the current stable Rust, is there a way to write a function equivalent to BTreeMap::pop_last?
The best I could come up with is:
...ANSWER
Answered 2022-Mar-15 at 16:55Is there a way to work around this issue without imposing additional constraints on map key and value types?
It doesn't appear doable in safe Rust, at least not with reasonable algorithmic complexity. (See Aiden4's answer for a solution that does it by re-building the whole map.)
But if you're allowed to use unsafe, and if you're determined enough that you want to delve into it, this code could do it:
QUESTION
I've built my React Native app and tested and troubleshooted with my iOS devices for months. Now I'm trying to built and test the app on Android for the first time. The thing is, that I keep getting errors trying to run the Android-version of my app. After hours of debugging and troubleshooting, I tried to create a new RN project and see if that could run on my emulator and device. I got that part working and then I wanted to copy/paste the files of my existing app project into the new project.
I pasted my existing assets, styles, the source JS-files and the package.json file into the new project, ran npm install
and then I ended up with the exact same error message as I had in the original project when I run react-native run-android
.
The full error message is here:
...ANSWER
Answered 2021-Aug-21 at 13:43I've hit this same issue and have temporarily resolved it by uninstalling react-native-video (npm uninstall --save react-native-video). That's not a great answer as I need that component, but I don't have a full solution yet. I think somehow com.yqritc:android-scalablevideoview:1.0.4. is required by react-native-video but has gotten lost or removed. Other thoughts are welcome.
UPDATE: Resolved! In your build.gradle in your Android folder you need to add the repository "jcenter()" in allprojects (not in build dependencies) like this...
QUESTION
Apparently throwError(error)
is now deprecated. The IntelliSense of VS Code suggests throwError(() => new Error('error')
. new Error(...)
accepts only strings. What's the correct way to replace it without breaking my HttpErrorHandlerService
?
ANSWER
Answered 2021-Aug-04 at 19:08Instead of this:
QUESTION
I have this error in my terminal:
TypeError: Cannot read properties of undefined (reading 'id')
I'm trying to test the call to an API, but the error appears.
My function:
...ANSWER
Answered 2021-Oct-17 at 15:15What is happening:
The function itemToForm()
is being called before the this.item
is ready.
There are many strategies to avoid this error. A very simple one is to add a catcher at the beginning of the function, like this:
QUESTION
I know that compiler is usually the last thing to blame for bugs in a code, but I do not see any other explanation for the following behaviour of the following C++ code (distilled down from an actual project):
...ANSWER
Answered 2022-Feb-01 at 15:49The evaluation order of A = B
was not specified before c++17, after c++17 B
is guaranteed to be evaluated before A
, see https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/language/eval_order rule 20.
The behaviour of valMap[val] = valMap.size();
is therefore unspecified in c++14, you should use:
QUESTION
This is a React web app. When I run
...ANSWER
Answered 2021-Nov-13 at 18:36I am also stuck with the same problem because I installed the latest version of Node.js (v17.0.1).
Just go for node.js v14.18.1
and remove the latest version just use the stable version v14.18.1
QUESTION
So, I'm using Flutter and on running the App, I receive errors like these in the debug console:
...ANSWER
Answered 2021-Jul-31 at 19:43It not happen becuase of you have two build-tools version installed. It happens because of caches so on android studio just invalidating caches and restarting will fix this.
QUESTION
I got a large list of JSON objects that I want to parse depending on the start of one of the keys, and just wildcard the rest. A lot of the keys are similar, like "matchme-foo"
and "matchme-bar"
. There is a builtin wildcard, but it is only used for whole values, kinda like an else
.
I might be overlooking something but I can't find a solution anywhere in the proposal:
https://docs.python.org/3/whatsnew/3.10.html#pep-634-structural-pattern-matching
Also a bit more about it in PEP-636:
https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0636/#going-to-the-cloud-mappings
My data looks like this:
...ANSWER
Answered 2021-Dec-17 at 10:43You can use a guard:
QUESTION
I am trying to run a project on the Xcode13, after running a pod cache clean --all, deleting the derived data, and running a pod update. When I clean the project and build it the following error appears:
...ANSWER
Answered 2021-Oct-05 at 16:33Edited: For people who use Cocoapods, this answer might be useful: https://stackoverflow.com/a/69384358/587609
I also faced this issue, and it seems that there is a known issue on Xcode 13 as mentioned in this document: https://developer.apple.com/documentation/Xcode-Release-Notes/xcode-13-release-notes
Swift libraries depending on Combine may fail to build for targets including armv7 and i386 architectures. (82183186, 82189214)
Workaround: Use an updated version of the library that isn’t impacted (if available) or remove armv7 and i386 support (for example, increase the deployment target of the library to iOS 11 or higher).
If your app is for iOS 11 or higher, one of the libraries should be modified to target iOS 11 or higher (e.g., my app is for iOS 12 or higher).
For example, I am using GRDB.swift, and its minimum iOS version is 10.0. There was a discussion as an issue of this repo, and I followed that comment to solve this issue as follows:
- Fork the repository
- Change Package.swift to modify the minimum iOS version like:
Community Discussions, Code Snippets contain sources that include Stack Exchange Network
Vulnerabilities
No vulnerabilities reported
Install great-circle-map
Install Node.js 8 (newer versions will not work)
Run npm run build in the project directory
Run node server
Open the browser at 127.0.0.1:3000
Support
Reuse Trending Solutions
Find, review, and download reusable Libraries, Code Snippets, Cloud APIs from over 650 million Knowledge Items
Find more librariesStay Updated
Subscribe to our newsletter for trending solutions and developer bootcamps
Share this Page