I've been looking at the example on:
http://code.google.com/apis/maps/documentation/javascript/examples/places-autocomplete.html
and have decided to incorporate it into my site.
Is it possible to limit the addresses to UK addresses only?
Try this:
var input = document.getElementById('searchTextField');
var options = {
types: ['(cities)'],
componentRestrictions: {country: 'tr'}//Turkey only
};
var autocomplete = new google.maps.places.Autocomplete(input,options);
You can't strictly/hard limit the locations that it finds, although there is a feature request in the system to do so, but you can set a 'bias' on the results. It's passed in as an argument to the autocomplete method as a google maps bounds object. Autocomplete will then favor locations within those boundaries. Note, however, that since this isn't a hard boundary, if there are matches for the search outside the boundaries it will return those.
From my usage it seems a bit buggy and can use some improvement - especially considering that anything outside your boundary is not tagged by proximity at all, so something one block outside the boundary is just as likely to show as something 1000 miles outside, so make sure you play around with getting the boundaries working right.
You can intercept the JSONP results that are returned by the google.maps.places.Autocomplete functionality and use them as you see fit, such as to limit by country and display the results.
Basically you redefine the appendChild method on the head element, and then monitor the javascript elements that the Google autocomplete code inserts into the DOM for JSONP. As javascript elements are added, you override the JSONP callbacks that Google defines in order to get access to the raw autocomplete data.
It's a bit of a hack, here goes (I'm using jQuery but it's not necessary for this hack to work):
//The head element, where the Google Autocomplete code will insert a tag
//for a javascript file.
var head = $('head')[0];
//The name of the method the Autocomplete code uses to insert the tag.
var method = 'appendChild';
//The method we will be overriding.
var originalMethod = head[method];
head[method] = function () {
if (arguments[0] && arguments[0].src && arguments[0].src.match(/GetPredictions/)) { //Check that the element is a javascript tag being inserted by Google.
var callbackMatchObject = (/callback=([^&]+)&|$/).exec(arguments[0].src); //Regex to extract the name of the callback method that the JSONP will call.
var searchTermMatchObject = (/\?1s([^&]+)&/).exec(arguments[0].src); //Regex to extract the search term that was entered by the user.
var searchTerm = unescape(searchTermMatchObject[1]);
if (callbackMatchObject && searchTermMatchObject) {
var names = callbackMatchObject[1].split('.'); //The JSONP callback method is in the form "abc.def" and each time has a different random name.
var originalCallback = names[0] && names[1] && window[names[0]] && window[names[0]][names[1]]; //Store the original callback method.
if (originalCallback) {
var newCallback = function () { //Define your own JSONP callback
if (arguments[0] && arguments[0][3]) {
var data = arguments[0][4]; //Your autocomplete results
//SUCCESS! - Limit results here and do something with them, such as displaying them in an autocomplete dropdown.
}
}
//Add copy all the attributes of the old callback function to the new callback function. This prevents the autocomplete functionality from throwing an error.
for (name in originalCallback) {
newCallback[name] = originalCallback[name];
}
window[names[0]][names[1]] = newCallback; //Override the JSONP callback
}
}
//Insert the element into the dom, regardless of whether it was being inserted by Google.
return originalMethod.apply(this, arguments);
};
James Alday is correct:
http://code.google.com/apis/maps/documentation/javascript/places.html#places_autocomplete
var defaultBounds = new google.maps.LatLngBounds(
new google.maps.LatLng(49.00, -13.00),
new google.maps.LatLng(60.00, 3.00));
var acOptions = {
bounds: defaultBounds,
types: ['geocode']
};
it is somewhat annoying as searching for Durham gives Durham, North Carolina as the second result, regardless of how you try to persuade it to region bias - you can set it to viewport map bounds and it'll still try to suggest NC state... The jQuery solution can be found here, but doesn't seem to give as many results as the v3 API.
http://code.google.com/p/geo-autocomplete/
The best way you would go about doing this, is to query the places api yourself and appending the queried string with your country. Or, of course, use the geo-autocomplete jQuery plugin.
Just change the google domain for the maps to your country domain and it will automatically search within your country only:
So:
http://maps.google.com/maps/api/geocode/xml?address={0}&sensor=false&language=en
To:
http://maps.google.nl/maps/api/geocode/xml?address={0}&sensor=false&language=nl
Try something like this.
// Change Bangalore, India to your cities boundary.
var bangaloreBounds = new google.maps.LatLngBounds(
new google.maps.LatLng(12.864162, 77.438610),
new google.maps.LatLng(13.139807, 77.711895));
var autocomplete = new google.maps.places.Autocomplete(this, {
bounds: bangaloreBounds,
strictBounds: true,
});
autocomplete.addListener('place_changed', function () {
});
I find that if you set the map to roughly where you want then set bounds to it, the search finds places in that area first. You do not to physically show the map.
It works better than giving random overseas addresses first, setting to country does not work.
The code for autocomplete to get latln is:
<div id="map_canvas"></div>
<input type="text" name="location" id="location" placeholder="Type location...">
<input type="text" name="loc_latitude" id="latitude">
<input type="text" name="loc_longitude" id="longitude">
and the JS is:
$(document).ready(function () {
var mapOptions = {
center: new google.maps.LatLng(52.41041560, -1.5752999),
zoom: 13,
mapTypeId: google.maps.MapTypeId.ROADMAP
};
var map = new google.maps.Map(document.getElementById('map_canvas'),
mapOptions);
var autocomplete;
autocomplete = new google.maps.places.Autocomplete((document.getElementById(searchInput)), {
types: ['geocode'],
});
autocomplete.bindTo('bounds', map);
google.maps.event.addListener(autocomplete, 'place_changed', function () {
var near_place = autocomplete.getPlace();
document.getElementById('latitude').value = near_place.geometry.location.lat();
document.getElementById('longitude').value = near_place.geometry.location.lng();
});
});
$(document).on('change', '#'+searchInput, function () {
document.getElementById('latitude').value = '';
document.getElementById('longitude').value = '';
});
Not exactly what you asked for but it works for me.
Related
I want to know if I can set the google API to display Washington state only
I tried to use setComponentRestriction function but it only works for setting country only.
this is the code that I used:
inputName.setComponentRestrictions({'country': ['us']});
I guess you're using Google Places Autocomplete?
You can't restrict by state.
You can bias the autocomplete results to favor a location or area (bounds) and use the strictBounds option to restrict the results only to this given bounds.
var washingtonStateBounds = new google.maps.LatLngBounds(
new google.maps.LatLng(45.575378, -123.967677),
new google.maps.LatLng(49.006015, -116.790674));
var input = document.getElementById('pac-input');
var options = {
bounds: washingtonStateBounds,
strictBounds: true,
componentRestrictions: {
'country': ['us']
}
}
var autocomplete = new google.maps.places.Autocomplete(input, options);
see a sample here:
https://jsfiddle.net/woosmap/895pq7nu/
I'm looking to use Google Place Autocomplete on one of my Meteor App Input.
When I initialize a session, I have an InvalidValueError: not an instance of HTMLInputElement, but when I refresh the page one time, the autocomplete works well.
What do I need to change on my code in order to have autocomplete working on first session?
My code:
if (Meteor.isClient) {
window.onload = function() {
var autocomplete = new google.maps.places.Autocomplete(
(document.getElementById('autocomplete')),{types:['geocode']}
);
google.maps.event.addListener(autocomplete,'place_changed',function(){
var place = autocomplete.getPlace();
});
};
}
Thanks for your help.
Call below code on-focus of input element.
var autocomplete = new google.maps.places.Autocomplete(
(document.getElementById('autocomplete')),{types:['geocode']}
);
You should try using Template instance:
Template.autocomplete.onRendered(function() {
// Your autocomplete function
// var autocomplete = ...
});
My template name is "autocomplete" in this example.
So I am trying to add the search bar of https://developers.google.com/maps/documentation/javascript/examples/places-autocomplete-addressform to my Meteor app.
First I needed to load the Google Places library. That link however also attempts to directly write to the DOM to grab another link. Meteor doesn't allow that so I decided to load the two js files like this.
Template.listingSubmit.rendered = function(){
if (!this.rendered){
var script = document.createElement("script");
script.type = "text/javascript";
script.src = "https://maps.googleapis.com/maps/api/js?v=3.exp&libraries=places";
document.body.appendChild(script);
var script = document.createElement("script");
script.type = "text/javascript";
script.src = "https://maps.gstatic.com/cat_js/maps-api-v3/api/js/17/13/%7Bmain,places%7D.js";
document.body.appendChild(script);
this.rendered = true;
}
};
Does that work?
My next question is how do I initialize the autocomplete text field?
The html in the corresponding template is simple.
<div id="locationField">
<input id="autocomplete" placeholder="Enter your address" type="text">
</div>
Now do I tried adding
var autocomplete = new google.maps.places.Autocomplete(
(document.getElementById('autocomplete')),{types: ['geocode'] }
);
to the Template.listingSubmit.rendered but nothing happens. I get a google not defined error. What went wrong?
I've been dealing with the same problem and just came across a solution. Here's what I did.
First, add the following package to your project with:
`mrt add googlemaps`
or, if you're using meteor >= 0.9:
meteor add mrt:googlemaps
Next, create the following file: /client/lib/googlePlaces.js
Place the following code inside this js file:
GoogleMaps.init({
'sensor': false, //optional
'key': 'your api key here!', //optional
'language': 'en', //optional
'libraries': 'places'
});
Obviously replace the api key with your key! This code will initiate the call to the google api and download the places script to the client.
Now, to answer your question about how to get the autocomplete to work. Your HTML and js look fine, except for one thing. You need to wrap your js in a window.onload function so that it will wait for the google api script to be downloaded!
HTML
<div id="locationField">
<input id="autocomplete" placeholder="Enter your address" type="text">
</div>
JS
window.onload = function() {
var autocomplete = new google.maps.places.Autocomplete(
(document.getElementById('autocomplete')),{types: ['geocode'] }
);
};
I haven't tested your HTML/JS but it looks very similar to mine.
Thought I'd share what finally worked for me
The package stays the same, but the js changed:
Template.myTemplateName.rendered = function () {
window.onload = function() {
input = document.getElementById('autocomplete');
autocomplete = new google.maps.places.Autocomplete(input);
// When the user selects an address from the dropdown,
google.maps.event.addListener(autocomplete, 'place_changed', function() {
// Get the place details from the autocomplete object.
var place = autocomplete.getPlace();
console.log("place: " + JSON.stringify(place) );
});
};
};
This is the solution that finally worked for me: I added the mrt:googlemaps package.
Then I setup the googlePlaces.js like so:
GoogleMaps.init({
'sensor': true, //optional
'key': '***my api key***', //optional
'language': 'en', //optional
'libraries': 'places'
});
Then I set up a variable for each input field that was going to use the autocomplete API, and set the template.render equal to that, like so:
var initAutoCompleteProfile = function() {
var autocomplete = new google.maps.places.Autocomplete(
(document.getElementById('autocomplete')),{types: ['geocode'] }
);
};
var initAutoCompletePost = function() {
var autocomplete = new google.maps.places.Autocomplete(
(document.getElementById('autocomplete')),{types: ['geocode'] }
);
};
Template.userUpdate.rendered = initAutoCompleteProfile;
Template.postSubmit.rendered = initAutoCompletePost;
The element ID was "autocomplete" for each element that was going to use it, but what really matters most is that you make a variable for each element that is going to use it for each template, and then set that template's rendered equal to that variable.
Question/Solution here:
Meteor Google Maps Autocomplete only works once on multiple templates
I am using google.maps.places.API to provide a location search to the user.
When the user types and selects a location, I am catching the location coordinates in a variable(center hidden element) and using it for processing. However when the user is not satisfied, they may want to blank out the location input element manually and try to search by other options. In this case I want to clear of the lat and lng variables location input and thus the center input element values. I have tried to capture the onBlur event of the location search box, but not able to clear these variables it.
<script>
var autocomplete;
function initialize() {
var input = (document.getElementById('location'));
var options = {
types: ['(cities)']
};
autocomplete = new google.maps.places.Autocomplete(input,options);
google.maps.event.addListener(autocomplete, 'place_changed', function() {
fillInAddress();
});
}
function fillInAddress() {
// Get the place details from the autocomplete object.
var place = autocomplete.getPlace();
var val = place.geometry.location;
document.getElementById('center').value = val;
}
google.maps.event.addDomListener(window, 'load', initialize);
</script>
Please advice how do I clear of the input element location( and thus element center ). Or am I missing a vital point in the code.
My requirement is to get google places autocomplete suggestion only for Bangalore places, but I am not getting places only for Bangalore or within mention latitude longitude.
I want to retireve only below image places in autocomplete textfield.
can someone plz suggest how to achieve the same and where I am going wrong.
Javascript:
<script type="text/javascript">
function initialize1() {
var southWest = new google.maps.LatLng( 12.97232, 77.59480 );
var northEast = new google.maps.LatLng( 12.89201, 77.58905 );
var bangaloreBounds = new google.maps.LatLngBounds( southWest, northEast );
var options = {
bounds: bangaloreBounds,
types: ['(cities)'],
componentRestrictions: {country: 'in'}
};
var input = document.getElementById('searchTextFieldTo');
var autocomplete = new google.maps.places.Autocomplete(input, options);
}
google.maps.event.addDomListener(window, 'load', initialize1);
</script>
TextField:
<input type="text" id="searchTextFieldTo" class="ui-timepicker-hour" style="width:350px;text-align:left;font-style:italic;" placeholder="Enter To location" autocomplete="on" />
Google Provides two ways to achieve this. If you are not satisfied because in countries like India it do not work well, because states and provisions here do not have rectangular or structure boundaries.
1.LatLngBounds (LatLng southwest, LatLng northeast): Where you can give latitude and longitude to form an rectangle.
2. Location (Lat,Lng) & Radius: Where you can give latitude and longitude to form a circle.
But the problem with these approaches they do not provide expected results if you are from countries like India, where states and provisions are not in structured shapes (Rectangular) as in USA.
If you are facing same issue than there is an hack.
With jQuery/Jacascript, you can attach functions which will consistently maintain city name in text input which is bounded with Autocomplete object of Places API.
Here it is:
<script>
$(document).ready(function(){
$("#locality").val(your-city-name) //your-city-name will have city name and some space to seperate it from actual user-input for example: “Bengaluru | ”
});
$("#locality").keydown(function(event) { //locality is text-input box whixh i supplied while creating Autocomplete object
var localeKeyword = “your-city-name”
var localeKeywordLen = localeKeyword.length;
var keyword = $("#locality").val();
var keywordLen = keyword.length;
if(keywordLen == localeKeywordLen) {
var e = event || window.event;
var key = e.keyCode || e.which;
if(key == Number(46) || key == Number(8) || key == Number(37)){
e.preventDefault();
}//Here I am restricting user to delete city name (Restricting use of delete/backspace/left arrow) if length == city-name provided
if(keyword != localeKeyword) {
$("#locality").val(localeKeyword);
}//If input-text does not contain city-name put it there
}
if(!(keyword.includes(localeKeyword))) {
$("#locality").val(localeKeyword);
}//If keyworf not includes city name put it there
});
</script>
(Image:) Before This Hack
(Image:) After This hack
As mentioned in my answer here:
It is currently not possible to restrict results to a specific locality. You can use bounds as you have done so above to bias results towards, but not restricted to places contained within the specified bounds.
If you believe restriction by locality would be a useful feature please file a Places API - Feature Request.
EDIT:
As per 2018-07 it's possible to define the types of places to be retrieved, like cities (which are locality or administrative_area3 according to the API). Check out full answer here.
I think you can try this.
var bangaloreBounds = new google.maps.LatLngBounds(
new google.maps.LatLng(12.864162, 77.438610),
new google.maps.LatLng(13.139807, 77.711895));
var autocomplete = new google.maps.places.Autocomplete(this, {
bounds: bangaloreBounds,
strictBounds: true,
});
autocomplete.addListener('place_changed', function () {
});
Note form xomena:
strictBounds option was added in version 3.27 of Maps JavaScript API which is currently (January 2017) the experimental version.
function initialize() {
var bangaloreBounds = new google.maps.LatLngBounds(
new google.maps.LatLng(12.864162, 77.438610),
new google.maps.LatLng(13.139807, 77.711895));
var options = {
bounds: bangaloreBounds,
componentRestrictions: {country: 'in'},
strictBounds: true,
};
var input = document.getElementById('autocomplete');
var autocomplete = new google.maps.places.Autocomplete(input, options);
}
google.maps.event.addDomListener(window, 'load', initialize);
As in the current documentation for Google javascript Places API here, you can define an array of types of places to be retrieved. In the example below, I set it to retrieve only cities (which are, according to the API, locality or administrative_area3). You can set it retrieve regions, addresses, establishments and geocodes as well.
function initMap() {
var input = document.getElementById('my-input');
var options = {
types: ['(cities)']
};
var autocomplete = new google.maps.places.Autocomplete(input, options);
// the rest of the code ...
}