MySQL 9.3 Reference Manual Including MySQL NDB Cluster 9.3
A LineString
consists of
Point
values. You can extract particular
points of a LineString
, count the number of
points that it contains, or obtain its length.
Some functions in this section also work for
MultiLineString
values.
Unless otherwise specified, functions in this section handle their geometry arguments as follows:
If any argument is NULL
or any geometry
argument is an empty geometry, the return value is
NULL
.
If any geometry argument is not a syntactically well-formed
geometry, an
ER_GIS_INVALID_DATA
error
occurs.
If any geometry argument is a syntactically well-formed
geometry in an undefined spatial reference system (SRS), an
ER_SRS_NOT_FOUND
error
occurs.
Otherwise, the return value is non-NULL
.
These functions are available for obtaining linestring properties:
Returns the Point
that is the endpoint of
the LineString
value
ls
.
ST_EndPoint()
handles its
arguments as described in the introduction to this section.
mysql>SET @ls = 'LineString(1 1,2 2,3 3)';
mysql>SELECT ST_AsText(ST_EndPoint(ST_GeomFromText(@ls)));
+----------------------------------------------+ | ST_AsText(ST_EndPoint(ST_GeomFromText(@ls))) | +----------------------------------------------+ | POINT(3 3) | +----------------------------------------------+
For a LineString
value
ls
,
ST_IsClosed()
returns 1 if
ls
is closed (that is, its
ST_StartPoint()
and
ST_EndPoint()
values are the
same).
For a MultiLineString
value
ls
,
ST_IsClosed()
returns 1 if
ls
is closed (that is, the
ST_StartPoint()
and
ST_EndPoint()
values are the
same for each LineString
in
ls
).
ST_IsClosed()
returns 0 if
ls
is not closed, and
NULL
if ls
is
NULL
.
ST_IsClosed()
handles its
arguments as described in the introduction to this section,
with this exception:
If the geometry has an SRID value for a geographic
spatial reference system (SRS), an
ER_NOT_IMPLEMENTED_FOR_GEOGRAPHIC_SRS
error occurs.
mysql>SET @ls1 = 'LineString(1 1,2 2,3 3,2 2)';
mysql>SET @ls2 = 'LineString(1 1,2 2,3 3,1 1)';
mysql>SELECT ST_IsClosed(ST_GeomFromText(@ls1));
+------------------------------------+ | ST_IsClosed(ST_GeomFromText(@ls1)) | +------------------------------------+ | 0 | +------------------------------------+ mysql>SELECT ST_IsClosed(ST_GeomFromText(@ls2));
+------------------------------------+ | ST_IsClosed(ST_GeomFromText(@ls2)) | +------------------------------------+ | 1 | +------------------------------------+ mysql>SET @ls3 = 'MultiLineString((1 1,2 2,3 3),(4 4,5 5))';
mysql>SELECT ST_IsClosed(ST_GeomFromText(@ls3));
+------------------------------------+ | ST_IsClosed(ST_GeomFromText(@ls3)) | +------------------------------------+ | 0 | +------------------------------------+
Returns a double-precision number indicating the length of
the LineString
or
MultiLineString
value
ls
in its associated spatial
reference system. The length of a
MultiLineString
value is equal to the sum
of the lengths of its elements.
ST_Length()
computes a result
as follows:
If the geometry is a valid LineString
in a Cartesian SRS, the return value is the Cartesian
length of the geometry.
If the geometry is a valid
MultiLineString
in a Cartesian SRS,
the return value is the sum of the Cartesian lengths of
its elements.
If the geometry is a valid LineString
in a geographic SRS, the return value is the geodetic
length of the geometry in that SRS, in meters.
If the geometry is a valid
MultiLineString
in a geographic SRS,
the return value is the sum of the geodetic lengths of
its elements in that SRS, in meters.
ST_Length()
handles its
arguments as described in the introduction to this section,
with these exceptions:
If the geometry is not a LineString
or MultiLineString
, the return value
is NULL
.
If the geometry is geometrically invalid, either the result is an undefined length (that is, it can be any number), or an error occurs.
If the length computation result is
+inf
, an
ER_DATA_OUT_OF_RANGE
error occurs.
If the geometry has a geographic SRS with a longitude or latitude that is out of range, an error occurs:
If a longitude value is not in the range
(−180, 180], an
ER_GEOMETRY_PARAM_LONGITUDE_OUT_OF_RANGE
error occurs.
If a latitude value is not in the range [−90,
90], an
ER_GEOMETRY_PARAM_LATITUDE_OUT_OF_RANGE
error occurs.
Ranges shown are in degrees. The exact range limits deviate slightly due to floating-point arithmetic.
ST_Length()
permits an
optional unit
argument that
specifies the linear unit for the returned length value.
These rules apply:
If a unit is specified but not supported by MySQL, an
ER_UNIT_NOT_FOUND
error
occurs.
If a supported linear unit is specified and the SRID is
0, an
ER_GEOMETRY_IN_UNKNOWN_LENGTH_UNIT
error occurs.
If a supported linear unit is specified and the SRID is not 0, the result is in that unit.
If a unit is not specified, the result is in the unit of the SRS of the geometries, whether Cartesian or geographic. Currently, all MySQL SRSs are expressed in meters.
A unit is supported if it is found in the
INFORMATION_SCHEMA
ST_UNITS_OF_MEASURE
table. See
Section 28.3.39, “The INFORMATION_SCHEMA ST_UNITS_OF_MEASURE Table”.
mysql>SET @ls = ST_GeomFromText('LineString(1 1,2 2,3 3)');
mysql>SELECT ST_Length(@ls);
+--------------------+ | ST_Length(@ls) | +--------------------+ | 2.8284271247461903 | +--------------------+ mysql>SET @mls = ST_GeomFromText('MultiLineString((1 1,2 2,3 3),(4 4,5 5))');
mysql>SELECT ST_Length(@mls);
+-------------------+ | ST_Length(@mls) | +-------------------+ | 4.242640687119286 | +-------------------+ mysql>SET @ls = ST_GeomFromText('LineString(1 1,2 2,3 3)', 4326);
mysql>SELECT ST_Length(@ls);
+-------------------+ | ST_Length(@ls) | +-------------------+ | 313701.9623204328 | +-------------------+ mysql>SELECT ST_Length(@ls, 'metre');
+-------------------------+ | ST_Length(@ls, 'metre') | +-------------------------+ | 313701.9623204328 | +-------------------------+ mysql>SELECT ST_Length(@ls, 'foot');
+------------------------+ | ST_Length(@ls, 'foot') | +------------------------+ | 1029205.9131247795 | +------------------------+
Returns the number of Point
objects in
the LineString
value
ls
.
ST_NumPoints()
handles its
arguments as described in the introduction to this section.
mysql>SET @ls = 'LineString(1 1,2 2,3 3)';
mysql>SELECT ST_NumPoints(ST_GeomFromText(@ls));
+------------------------------------+ | ST_NumPoints(ST_GeomFromText(@ls)) | +------------------------------------+ | 3 | +------------------------------------+
Returns the N
-th
Point
in the
Linestring
value
ls
. Points are numbered beginning
with 1.
ST_PointN()
handles its
arguments as described in the introduction to this section.
mysql>SET @ls = 'LineString(1 1,2 2,3 3)';
mysql>SELECT ST_AsText(ST_PointN(ST_GeomFromText(@ls),2));
+----------------------------------------------+ | ST_AsText(ST_PointN(ST_GeomFromText(@ls),2)) | +----------------------------------------------+ | POINT(2 2) | +----------------------------------------------+
Returns the Point
that is the start point
of the LineString
value
ls
.
ST_StartPoint()
handles its
arguments as described in the introduction to this section.
mysql>SET @ls = 'LineString(1 1,2 2,3 3)';
mysql>SELECT ST_AsText(ST_StartPoint(ST_GeomFromText(@ls)));
+------------------------------------------------+ | ST_AsText(ST_StartPoint(ST_GeomFromText(@ls))) | +------------------------------------------------+ | POINT(1 1) | +------------------------------------------------+