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Geospatial - Flutter SDK

On this page

  • Geospatial Data Types
  • GeoPoint
  • GeoCircle
  • GeoBox
  • Persist Geospatial Data
  • Create a GeoJSON-Compatible Class
  • Use the Embedded Class
  • Query Geospatial Data

New in version 1.6.0.

Geospatial data, or "geodata", specifies points and geometric objects on the Earth's surface. With the geodata types, you can create queries that check whether a given point is contained within a shape. For example, you can find all coffee shops within 15 km of a specified point.

Flutter SDK v1.6.1 and later adds support for geospatial data in Atlas Device Sync. This allows you to subscribe to geospatial queries in a synced database. If you try to subscribe to a geospatial query with an older version of the SDK, you will receive a server error with a compensating write. For more information about managing your Sync subscriptions, refer to Manage Sync Subscriptions - Flutter SDK.

For more information on querying geospatial data with Device Sync, refer to Geospatial Data in the App Services documentation.

The Flutter SDK supports geospatial queries using the following data types:

  • GeoPoint

  • GeoCircle

  • GeoBox

The SDK provides these geospatial data types to simplify querying geospatial data. You cannot persist these data types directly.

For information on how to persist geospatial data, refer to the Persist Geospatial Data section on this page.

A GeoPoint defines a specific location on the Earth's surface. All of the geospatial data types use GeoPoints to define their location.

A GeoPoint is an object with two required properties:

  • lat: a double value

  • lon: a double value

A GeoPoint is used only as a building block of the other shapes: GeoCircle and GeoBox. These shapes, and the GeoPoint type, are used in queries, not for persistance.

To save geospatial data to the database, refer to Persist Geospatial Data.

A GeoCircle defines a circle on the Earth's surface. You define a GeoCircle by providing:

  • A GeoPoint for the center of the circle

  • A GeoDistance for the distance (radius) of the circle

The radius distance uses radians as the unit of measure, implemented as a double in the SDK. The SDK provides convenience methods to create a GeoDistance from other units of measure:

The following code shows two examples of creating a circle:

final smallCircle =
GeoCircle(GeoPoint(lon: -121.9, lat: 47.3), 0.25.degrees);
final largeCircleCenter = GeoPoint(lon: -122.6, lat: 47.8);
// The SDK provides convenience methods to convert measurements to radians.
final radiusFromKm = GeoDistance.fromKilometers(44.4);
final largeCircle = GeoCircle(largeCircleCenter, radiusFromKm);
Two GeoCircles
click to enlarge

A GeoBox defines a rectangle on the Earth's surface. You define the rectangle by specifying the bottom left (southwest) corner and the top right (northeast) corner.

The following example creates 2 boxes:

final largeBox = GeoBox(
GeoPoint(lon: -122.7, lat: 47.3), GeoPoint(lon: -122.1, lat: 48.1));
final smallBoxSouthWest = GeoPoint(lon: -122.4, lat: 47.5);
final smallBoxNorthEast = GeoPoint(lon: -121.8, lat: 47.9);
final smallBox = GeoBox(smallBoxSouthWest, smallBoxNorthEast);
2 GeoBoxes
click to enlarge

Important

Cannot Persist Geospatial Data Types

Currently, you can only persist geospatial data. Geospatial data types cannot be persisted directly. For example, you can't declare a property that is of type GeoBox.

These types can only be used as arguments for geospatial queries.

If you want to persist geospatial data, it must conform to the GeoJSON spec.

To create a class that conforms to the GeoJSON spec, you:

  1. Create an embedded object. For more information about embedded objects, refer to Embedded Objects.

  2. At a minimum, add the two fields required by the GeoJSON spec:

    • A field of type double[] that maps to a "coordinates" (case sensitive) property in the schema.

    • A field of type string that maps to a "type" property. The value of this field must be "Point".

The following example shows an embedded class named MyGeoPoint that is used to persist geospatial data:

// To store geospatial data, create an embedded object with this structure.
// Name it whatever is most convenient for your application.
@RealmModel(ObjectType.embeddedObject)
class _MyGeoPoint {
// These two properties are required to persist geo data.
final String type = 'Point';
final List<double> coordinates = const [];
// You can optionally implement convenience methods to simplify
// creating and working with geospatial data.
double get lon => coordinates[0];
set lon(double value) => coordinates[0] = value;
double get lat => coordinates[1];
set lat(double value) => coordinates[1] = value;
GeoPoint toGeoPoint() => GeoPoint(lon: lon, lat: lat);
}

You then use the custom MyGeoPoint class in your data model, as shown in the following example:

// Use the GeoJSON-compatible class as a property in your model.
@RealmModel()
class _Company {
@PrimaryKey()
late ObjectId id;
_MyGeoPoint? location;
}

You add instances of your class to the database just like any other model.

final realm =
Realm(Configuration.local([MyGeoPoint.schema, Company.schema]));
realm.write(() {
realm.addAll([
Company(
firstCompanyID,
location: MyGeoPoint(coordinates: [-122.35, 47.68]),
),
Company(
secondCompanyID,
location: MyGeoPoint(coordinates: [-121.85, 47.9]),
)
]);
});

The following image shows the results of creating these two company objects.

2 GeoPoints
click to enlarge

To query against geospatial data, you can use the geoWithin operator with RQL. The geoWithin operator takes the "coordinates" property of an embedded object that defines the point we're querying, and one of the geospatial shapes to check if that point is contained within the shape.

Note

The format for querying geospatial data is the same, regardless of the shape of the geodata region.

The following examples show querying against various shapes to return a list of companies within the shape:

GeoCircle

final companiesInSmallCircle =
realm.query<Company>("location geoWithin \$0", [smallCircle]);
final companiesInLargeCircle =
realm.query<Company>("location geoWithin \$0", [largeCircle]);
Querying a GeoCircle example.
click to enlarge

GeoBox

final companiesInLargeBox =
realm.query<Company>("location geoWithin \$0", [largeBox]);
final companiesInSmallBox =
realm.query<Company>("location geoWithin \$0", [smallBox]);
Querying a GeoBox example.
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