Twitter::geoReverseGeoCode
Given a latitude and a longitude, searches for up to 20 places that can be used as a place_id when updating a status.
This request is an informative call and will deliver generalized results about geography.
Signature
public function geoReverseGeoCode(float
$lat,
float
$long,
[string[optional]
$accuracy = NULL,
[string[optional]
$granularity = NULL,
[int[optional]
$maxResults = NULL]]] )
Parameters
$lat
— float- The latitude to search around. This parameter will be ignored unless it is inside the range -90.0 to +90.0 (North is positive) inclusive. It will also be ignored if there isn't a corresponding long parameter.
$long
— float- The longitude to search around. The valid ranges for longitude is -180.0 to +180.0 (East is positive) inclusive. This parameter will be ignored if outside that range, if it is not a number, if geo_enabled is disabled, or if there not a corresponding lat parameter.
$accuracy
— object- A hint on the "region" in which to search. If a number, then this is a radius in meters, but it can also take a string that is suffixed with ft to specify feet. If this is not passed in, then it is assumed to be 0m. If coming from a device, in practice, this value is whatever accuracy the device has measuring its location (whether it be coming from a GPS, WiFi triangulation, etc.).
$granularity
— object- This is the minimal granularity of place types to return and must be one of: poi, neighborhood, city, admin or country. If no granularity is provided for the request neighborhood is assumed. Setting this to city, for example, will find places which have a type of city, admin or country.
$maxResults
— object- A hint as to the number of results to return. This does not guarantee that the number of results returned will equal max_results, but instead informs how many "nearby" results to return. Ideally, only pass in the number of places you intend to display to the user here.
Returns
- array