Drawing a route in MapKit in iOS
The following viewDidLoad
will (1) set two locations, (2) remove all the previous annotations, and (3) call user defined helper functions (to get route points and draw the route).
-(void)viewDidLoad
{
[super viewDidLoad];
// Origin Location.
CLLocationCoordinate2D loc1;
loc1.latitude = 29.0167;
loc1.longitude = 77.3833;
Annotation *origin = [[Annotation alloc] initWithTitle:@"loc1" subTitle:@"Home1" andCoordinate:loc1];
[objMapView addAnnotation:origin];
// Destination Location.
CLLocationCoordinate2D loc2;
loc2.latitude = 19.076000;
loc2.longitude = 72.877670;
Annotation *destination = [[Annotation alloc] initWithTitle:@"loc2" subTitle:@"Home2" andCoordinate:loc2];
[objMapView addAnnotation:destination];
if(arrRoutePoints) // Remove all annotations
[objMapView removeAnnotations:[objMapView annotations]];
arrRoutePoints = [self getRoutePointFrom:origin to:destination];
[self drawRoute];
[self centerMap];
}
The following is the MKMapViewDelegate
method, which draws overlay (iOS 4.0 and later).
/* MKMapViewDelegate Meth0d -- for viewForOverlay*/
- (MKOverlayView*)mapView:(MKMapView*)theMapView viewForOverlay:(id <MKOverlay>)overlay
{
MKPolylineView *view = [[MKPolylineView alloc] initWithPolyline:objPolyline];
view.fillColor = [UIColor blackColor];
view.strokeColor = [UIColor blackColor];
view.lineWidth = 4;
return view;
}
The following function will get both the locations and prepare URL to get all the route points. And of course, will call stringWithURL.
/* This will get the route coordinates from the Google API. */
- (NSArray*)getRoutePointFrom:(Annotation *)origin to:(Annotation *)destination
{
NSString* saddr = [NSString stringWithFormat:@"%f,%f", origin.coordinate.latitude, origin.coordinate.longitude];
NSString* daddr = [NSString stringWithFormat:@"%f,%f", destination.coordinate.latitude, destination.coordinate.longitude];
NSString* apiUrlStr = [NSString stringWithFormat:@"http://maps.google.com/maps?output=dragdir&saddr=%@&daddr=%@", saddr, daddr];
NSURL* apiUrl = [NSURL URLWithString:apiUrlStr];
NSError *error;
NSString *apiResponse = [NSString stringWithContentsOfURL:apiUrl encoding:NSUTF8StringEncoding error:&error];
NSString* encodedPoints = [apiResponse stringByMatching:@"points:\\\"([^\\\"]*)\\\"" capture:1L];
return [self decodePolyLine:[encodedPoints mutableCopy]];
}
The following code is the real magic (decoder for the response we got from the API). I would not modify that code unless I know what I am doing :)
- (NSMutableArray *)decodePolyLine:(NSMutableString *)encodedString
{
[encodedString replaceOccurrencesOfString:@"\\\\" withString:@"\\"
options:NSLiteralSearch
range:NSMakeRange(0, [encodedString length])];
NSInteger len = [encodedString length];
NSInteger index = 0;
NSMutableArray *array = [[NSMutableArray alloc] init];
NSInteger lat=0;
NSInteger lng=0;
while (index < len) {
NSInteger b;
NSInteger shift = 0;
NSInteger result = 0;
do {
b = [encodedString characterAtIndex:index++] - 63;
result |= (b & 0x1f) << shift;
shift += 5;
} while (b >= 0x20);
NSInteger dlat = ((result & 1) ? ~(result >> 1) : (result >> 1));
lat += dlat;
shift = 0;
result = 0;
do {
b = [encodedString characterAtIndex:index++] - 63;
result |= (b & 0x1f) << shift;
shift += 5;
} while (b >= 0x20);
NSInteger dlng = ((result & 1) ? ~(result >> 1) : (result >> 1));
lng += dlng;
NSNumber *latitude = [[NSNumber alloc] initWithFloat:lat * 1e-5];
NSNumber *longitude = [[NSNumber alloc] initWithFloat:lng * 1e-5];
printf("\n[%f,", [latitude doubleValue]);
printf("%f]", [longitude doubleValue]);
CLLocation *loc = [[CLLocation alloc] initWithLatitude:[latitude floatValue] longitude:[longitude floatValue]];
[array addObject:loc];
}
return array;
}
This function will draw a route and will add an overlay.
- (void)drawRoute
{
int numPoints = [arrRoutePoints count];
if (numPoints > 1)
{
CLLocationCoordinate2D* coords = malloc(numPoints * sizeof(CLLocationCoordinate2D));
for (int i = 0; i < numPoints; i++)
{
CLLocation* current = [arrRoutePoints objectAtIndex:i];
coords[i] = current.coordinate;
}
self.objPolyline = [MKPolyline polylineWithCoordinates:coords count:numPoints];
free(coords);
[objMapView addOverlay:objPolyline];
[objMapView setNeedsDisplay];
}
}
The following code will center align the map.
- (void)centerMap
{
MKCoordinateRegion region;
CLLocationDegrees maxLat = -90;
CLLocationDegrees maxLon = -180;
CLLocationDegrees minLat = 90;
CLLocationDegrees minLon = 180;
for(int idx = 0; idx < arrRoutePoints.count; idx++)
{
CLLocation* currentLocation = [arrRoutePoints objectAtIndex:idx];
if(currentLocation.coordinate.latitude > maxLat)
maxLat = currentLocation.coordinate.latitude;
if(currentLocation.coordinate.latitude < minLat)
minLat = currentLocation.coordinate.latitude;
if(currentLocation.coordinate.longitude > maxLon)
maxLon = currentLocation.coordinate.longitude;
if(currentLocation.coordinate.longitude < minLon)
minLon = currentLocation.coordinate.longitude;
}
region.center.latitude = (maxLat + minLat) / 2;
region.center.longitude = (maxLon + minLon) / 2;
region.span.latitudeDelta = maxLat - minLat;
region.span.longitudeDelta = maxLon - minLon;
[objMapView setRegion:region animated:YES];
}
I hope this would help someone.
This is a tricky one. There is no way to do that with MapKit: it's easy enough to draw lines when you know the coordinates, but MapKit won't give you access to the roads or other routing information. I'd say you need to call an external API to get your data.
I've been playing with cloudmade.com API. The vector stream server should return what you need, and then you can draw that over your map. However, discrepancies between the Google maps and the OSM maps used by cloudmade may make you want to use cloudmade maps all the way: they have an equivalent to MapKit.
P.S.: Other mapping providers - Google, Bing, etc. may also provide equivalent data feeds. I've just been looking at OSM/Cloudmade recently.
P.P.S.: None of this is trivial newbie stuff! Best of luck!
Andiih's got it right. MapKit won't let you do that. Unfortunately, Google won't let you do what you want to do either.
When Apple announced MapKit and all, they also explicitly stated that any navigational applications would be BYOM: Bring Your Own Maps, so any navigation application uses their own set of mapping tools.
Google's Terms of Service restrict you from even displaying routes on top of their maps:
http://code.google.com/intl/de/apis/maps/iphone/terms.html
License Restrictions:
10.9 use the Service or Content with any products, systems, or applications for or in connection with:
(a) real time navigation or route guidance, including but not limited to turn-by-turn route guidance that is synchronized to the position of a user's sensor-enabled device;
(b) any systems or functions for automatic or autonomous control of vehicle behavior; or
(c) dispatch, fleet management, business asset tracking, or similar enterprise applications (the Google Maps API can be used to track assets (such as cars, buses or other vehicles) as long as the tracking application is made available to the public without charge. For example, you may offer a free, public Maps API Implementation that displays real-time public transit or other transportation status information.
Sadly, this includes what you would like to do. Hopefully one day MapKit will be expanded to allow such features... although unlikely.
Good luck.