Measurement Objects¶
The django.contrib.gis.measure module contains objects that allow
for convenient representation of distance and area units of measure. [1]
Specifically, it implements two objects, Distance and
Area – both of which may be accessed via the
D and A convenience aliases, respectively.
Example¶
Distance objects may be instantiated using a keyword argument indicating the
context of the units.  In the example below, two different distance objects are
instantiated in units of kilometers (km) and miles (mi):
>>> from django.contrib.gis.measure import D, Distance
>>> d1 = Distance(km=5)
>>> print(d1)
5.0 km
>>> d2 = D(mi=5) # `D` is an alias for `Distance`
>>> print(d2)
5.0 mi
For conversions, access the preferred unit attribute to get a converted distance quantity:
>>> print(d1.mi) # Converting 5 kilometers to miles
3.10685596119
>>> print(d2.km) # Converting 5 miles to kilometers
8.04672
Moreover, arithmetic operations may be performed between the distance objects:
>>> print(d1 + d2) # Adding 5 miles to 5 kilometers
13.04672 km
>>> print(d2 - d1) # Subtracting 5 kilometers from 5 miles
1.89314403881 mi
Two Distance objects multiplied together will yield an Area
object, which uses squared units of measure:
>>> a = d1 * d2 # Returns an Area object.
>>> print(a)
40.2336 sq_km
To determine what the attribute abbreviation of a unit is, the unit_attname
class method may be used:
>>> print(Distance.unit_attname('US Survey Foot'))
survey_ft
>>> print(Distance.unit_attname('centimeter'))
cm
Supported units¶
| Unit Attribute | Full name or alias(es) | 
|---|---|
| km | Kilometre, Kilometer | 
| mi | Mile | 
| m | Meter, Metre | 
| yd | Yard | 
| ft | Foot, Foot (International) | 
| survey_ft | U.S. Foot, US survey foot | 
| inch | Inches | 
| cm | Centimeter | 
| mm | Millimetre, Millimeter | 
| um | Micrometer, Micrometre | 
| british_ft | British foot (Sears 1922) | 
| british_yd | British yard (Sears 1922) | 
| british_chain_sears | British chain (Sears 1922) | 
| indian_yd | Indian yard, Yard (Indian) | 
| sears_yd | Yard (Sears) | 
| clarke_ft | Clarke’s Foot | 
| chain | Chain | 
| chain_benoit | Chain (Benoit) | 
| chain_sears | Chain (Sears) | 
| british_chain_benoit | British chain (Benoit 1895 B) | 
| british_chain_sears_truncated | British chain (Sears 1922 truncated) | 
| gold_coast_ft | Gold Coast foot | 
| link | Link | 
| link_benoit | Link (Benoit) | 
| link_sears | Link (Sears) | 
| clarke_link | Clarke’s link | 
| fathom | Fathom | 
| rod | Rod | 
| furlong | Furlong, Furrow Long | 
| nm | Nautical Mile | 
| nm_uk | Nautical Mile (UK) | 
| german_m | German legal metre | 
Measurement API¶
Distance¶
- 
class Distance(**kwargs)[source]¶
- To initialize a distance object, pass in a keyword corresponding to the desired unit attribute name set with desired value. For example, the following creates a distance object representing 5 miles: - >>> dist = Distance(mi=5) - 
__getattr__(unit_att)¶
 - Returns the distance value in units corresponding to the given unit attribute. For example: - >>> print(dist.km) 8.04672 - 
classmethod unit_attname(unit_name)¶
 - Returns the distance unit attribute name for the given full unit name. For example: - >>> Distance.unit_attname('Mile') 'mi' 
- 
Area¶
- 
class Area(**kwargs)[source]¶
- To initialize an area object, pass in a keyword corresponding to the desired unit attribute name set with desired value. For example, the following creates an area object representing 5 square miles: - >>> a = Area(sq_mi=5) - 
__getattr__(unit_att)¶
 - Returns the area value in units corresponding to the given unit attribute. For example: - >>> print(a.sq_km) 12.949940551680001 - 
classmethod unit_attname(unit_name)¶
 - Returns the area unit attribute name for the given full unit name. For example: - >>> Area.unit_attname('Kilometer') 'sq_km' 
- 
Footnotes
| [1] | Robert Coup is the initial author of the measure objects, and was inspired by Brian Beck’s work in geopy and Geoff Biggs’ PhD work on dimensioned units for robotics. | 
 
          