From 898c827ced45ea3b8c8f2541677377cc0e06e8f4 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Rhonda Glennon Date: Wed, 30 Sep 2015 08:01:12 -0700 Subject: [PATCH] Revert "Fix image links" --- search.md | 12 ++++++------ 1 file changed, 6 insertions(+), 6 deletions(-) diff --git a/search.md b/search.md index 9947d8b..d2dd3c3 100644 --- a/search.md +++ b/search.md @@ -17,7 +17,7 @@ All Mapzen Search requests share the same format: ## Search the world -![](/images/world_all.png) +![](/getting-started/images/world_all.png) In the simplest search, you can provide only one parameter, the text you want to match in any part of the location details. To accomplish this, build a query where the `text` parameter is set to the item you want to find. @@ -61,7 +61,7 @@ If you are looking for places in a particular region, or country, or only want t ### Search within a particular country -![](/images/world_country.png) +![](/getting-started/images/world_country.png) Sometimes your work might require that all the search results be from a particular country. To do this, you can set the `boundary.country` parameter value to the alpha-2 or alpha-3 [ISO-3166 country code](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_3166-1). @@ -107,7 +107,7 @@ Results in the United States: ### Search within a rectangular region -![](/images/world_rect.png) +![](/getting-started/images/world_rect.png) To specify the boundary using a rectangle, you need latitude, longitude coordinates for two diagonals of the bounding box (the minimum and the maximum latitude, longitude). @@ -139,7 +139,7 @@ For example, to find a YMCA within the state of Texas, you can set the `boundary ### Search within a circular region -![](/images/world_circle.png) +![](/getting-started/images/world_circle.png) Sometimes you don't have a rectangle to work with, but rather you have a point on earth—for example, your location coordinates—and a maximum distance within which acceptable results can be located. @@ -168,14 +168,14 @@ You can see the results have fewer than the standard 10 items because there are If you're going to attempt using multiple boundary types in a single search request, be aware that the results will come from the intersection of all the boundaries. So if you provide regions that don't overlap, you'll be looking at an empty set of results. You've been warned. Here's an image of how it works: -![](/images/overlapping_boundaries.gif) +![](/getting-started/images/overlapping_boundaries.gif) ## Prioritize results by proximity Many use cases call for the ability to promote nearby results to the top of the list, while still allowing important matches from farther away to be visible. Mapzen Search allows you to prioritize results within geographic boundaries, including around a point, within a country, or within a region. ### Prioritize around a point -![](/images/focus_point.png) +![](/getting-started/images/focus_point.png) By specifying a `focus.point`, nearby places will be scored higher depending on how close they are to the `focus.point` so that places with higher scores will appear higher in the results list. The effect of this scoring boost diminishes to zero after 100 kilometers away from the `focus.point`. After all the nearby results have been found, additional results will come from the rest of the world, without any further location-based prioritization.