diff --git a/reverse.md b/reverse.md index 0fc561c..31ee508 100644 --- a/reverse.md +++ b/reverse.md @@ -1,6 +1,6 @@ # Reverse geocoding -Reverse geocoding is used for finding places or addresses near a latitude,longitude pair&mdashlike clicking on a map to see what's there when the map doesn't show it otherwise. For example, picture a map showing building outlines but no labels, then clicking on a building and being shown the name of the business. That's reverse geocoding. +Reverse geocoding is used for finding places or addresses near a latitude, longitude pair—like clicking on a map to see what's there when the map doesn't show it otherwise. For example, picture a map showing building outlines but no labels, then clicking on a building and being shown the name of the business. That's reverse geocoding. With reverse geocoding with Mapzen Search, you can look up all sorts of information about points on a map, including: @@ -12,7 +12,7 @@ With reverse geocoding with Mapzen Search, you can look up all sorts of informat * postal areas * countries -To get started with reverse geocoding, you need a [free, developer API key](https://mapzen.com/developers) and a latitude,longitude pair in decimal degrees specified with the parameters `point.lat` and `point.lon`, respectively. For example, the Eiffel Tower in Paris, France, is located at `48.858268,2.294471`. The reverse geocode query for this would be: +To get started with reverse geocoding, you need a [free, developer API key](https://mapzen.com/developers) and a latitude, longitude pair in decimal degrees specified with the parameters `point.lat` and `point.lon`, respectively. For example, the Eiffel Tower in Paris, France, is located at `48.858268,2.294471`. The reverse geocode query for this would be: >[/v1/reverse?api_key=search-XXXXXXX&___point.lat=48.858268___&___point.lon=2.294471___](https://search.mapzen.com/v1/reverse?api_key=search-XXXXXXX&point.lat=48.858268&point.lon=2.294471)