PostGIS
Synopsis
geometry +`*`+ST_Point
*(`float `x
, float y`
)`;
geometry +`*`+ST_Point
*(`float `x
, float y
, integer
srid=unknown`
)`;
Description
Returns a Point with the given X and Y coordinate values. This is the SQL-MM equivalent for ST_MakePoint that takes just X and Y.
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Enhanced: 3.2.0 srid as an extra optional argument was added. Older installs require combining with ST_SetSRID to mark the srid on the geometry.
This method implements the SQL/MM specification. SQL-MM 3: 6.1.2
Examples: Geometry
SELECT ST_Point( -71.104, 42.315);
SELECT ST_SetSRID(ST_Point( -71.104, 42.315),4326);
New in 3.2.0: With SRID specified
SELECT ST_Point( -71.104, 42.315, 4326);
Examples: Geography
Pre-PostGIS 3.2 syntax
SELECT CAST( ST_SetSRID(ST_Point( -71.104, 42.315), 4326) AS geography);
3.2 and on you can include the srid
SELECT CAST( ST_Point( -71.104, 42.315, 4326) AS geography);
PostgreSQL also provides the ::
short-hand for casting
SELECT ST_Point( -71.104, 42.315, 4326)::geography;
If the point coordinates are not in a geodetic coordinate system (such as WGS84), then they must be reprojected before casting to a geography. In this example a point in Pennsylvania State Plane feet (SRID 2273) is projected to WGS84 (SRID 4326).
SELECT ST_Transform(ST_SetSRID( ST_Point( 3637510, 3014852 ), 2273), 4326)::geography;
See Also
Section 4.3, “Geography Data Type”, ST_MakePoint, ST_SetSRID, ST_Transform, ST_PointZ, ST_PointM, ST_PointZM
ST_MakePolygon |
ST_PointZ |