You can not select more than 25 topics Topics must start with a letter or number, can include dashes ('-') and can be up to 35 characters long.
rmglennon 24a8bf2d41 copy section on sources 8 years ago
images crop image 8 years ago
.gitignore Stop tracking OSX .DS_Store files 9 years ago
.lgtm Add LGTM config 9 years ago
LICENSE.md Changes license from MIT (which applies to code only) to CC-BY-4.0 to apply to creative works 9 years ago
README.md 🔭 experiment to see if our README can be a symlink 9 years ago
add-search-to-a-map.md copy section on sources 8 years ago
api-keys-rate-limits.md update pelias link 8 years ago
autocomplete.md update user experience pitfalls 8 years ago
data-sources.md add street layer to OSM data source 8 years ago
glossary.md update docs 8 years ago
http-status-codes.md Retext Simplified Documentation 9 years ago
index.md update docs 8 years ago
installing.md Whitespace 8 years ago
place.md add unified keys 8 years ago
release-notes.md Release notes 2016-09-19 8 years ago
response.md add unified keys 8 years ago
reverse.md add unified keys 8 years ago
search.md add unified keys 8 years ago
transition-from-beta.md add unified keys 8 years ago
transition.md Another symlink, so we don't break old inbound links to transition.md 9 years ago
use-cors.md fix copy/paste issue, change key to generic mapzen (considering keyless access) 8 years ago

README.md

Mapzen Search is a modern, geographic search service based entirely on open-source tools and powered entirely by open data. To start integrating Mapzen Search to your apps, you need a Mapzen developer API key. Through a process known as geocoding, Mapzen Search allows you to use natural language to find a particular place by entering an address or the name of a landmark or business, and then translates the result in to the geographic coordinates used by computers.

Mapzen Search accesses global databases of place names and locations, but you can receive more locally relevant search results by limiting the search to a particular radius around a location (such as a cell phone), region, or country. With text autocompletion capabilities, you can search for places and match against Mapzen Search data in real-time.

Mapzen Search also enables the opposite workflow, known as reverse geocoding, to transform latitude and longitude values in to a list of places. This process attempts to find the name and address of the place nearest a longitude and latitude pair. For example, you can click a position on the map to learn which business is located there.