A PHP library to use the what3words REST API.
The what3words PHP wrapper gives you programmatic access to
- convert a 3 word address to coordinates
- convert coordinates to a 3 word address
- autosuggest functionality which takes a slightly incorrect 3 word address, and suggests a list of valid 3 word addresses
- obtain a section of the 3m x 3m what3words grid for a bounding box.
- determine the currently support 3 word address languages.
To use this library you’ll need to obtain an API key, please visit https://what3words.com/select-plan and sign up for an account.
To use this library in your project, place the following line in your composer.json:
"what3words/w3w-php-wrapper": "3.*"
To manually include this file, place Geocoder.php into your project, and require_once("Geocoder.php")
use What3words\Geocoder\Geocoder;
use What3words\Geocoder\AutoSuggestOption;
$api = new Geocoder("<Secret API Key>");
Convert a 3 word address to a position, expressed as coordinates of latitude and longitude.
This function takes the words parameter as a string of 3 words 'table.book.chair'
The returned payload from the convertToCoordinates
method is described in the what3words REST API documentation.
$result = $api->convertToCoordinates("index.home.raft");
print_r($result);
Convert coordinates, expressed as latitude and longitude to a 3 word address.
The returned payload from the convertTo3wa
method is described in the what3words REST API documentation.
$result = $api->convertTo3wa(51.432393,-0.348023);
print_r($result);
This function returns the currently supported languages. It will return the two letter code (ISO 639), and the name of the language both in that language and in English.
The returned payload from the convertTo3wa
method is described in the what3words REST API documentation
$result = $api->availableLanguages();
print_r($result);
Returns a section of the 3m x 3m what3words grid for a given area. The requested box must not exceed 4km from corner to corner, or a BadBoundingBoxTooBig error will be returned. Latitudes must be >= -90 and <= 90, but longitudes are allowed to wrap around 180. To specify a bounding-box that crosses the anti-meridian, use longitude greater than 180. Example value: 50.0, 179.995, 50.01, 180.0005.
The returned payload from the gridSection
function is described in the what3words REST API documentation
$result = $api->gridSection(39.903795, 116.384550, 39.902718, 116.383122);
print_r($result);
Returns a list of 3 word addresses based on user input and other parameters.
This method provides corrections for the following types of input error:
- typing errors
- spelling errors
- misremembered words (e.g. singular vs. plural)
- words in the wrong order
The autoSuggest
method determines possible corrections to the supplied 3 word address string based on the probability of the input errors listed above and returns a ranked list of suggestions. This method can also take into consideration the geographic proximity of possible corrections to a given location to further improve the suggestions returned.
You will only receive results back if the partial 3 word address string you submit contains the first two words and at least the first character of the third word; otherwise an error message will be returned.
We provide various clip
policies to allow you to specify a geographic area that is used to exclude results that are not likely to be relevant to your users. We recommend that you use the clipping to give a more targeted, shorter set of results to your user. If you know your user’s current location, we also strongly recommend that you use the focus
to return results which are likely to be more relevant.
In summary, the clip policy is used to optionally restrict the list of candidate AutoSuggest results, after which, if focus has been supplied, this will be used to rank the results in order of relevancy to the focus.
The returned payload from the autosuggest
method is described in the what3words REST API documentation.
The first parameter is the partial three words, or voice data. It is followed by an array of AutoSuggestOption objects. The last parameter is the completion block. The AutoSuggestOption objects in the array are created using static convenience functions of the form:
AutoSuggestOption::fallbackLanguage("de");
AutoSuggestOption::focus($latitude, $longitude);
$result = $api->autosuggest("fun.with.code");
print_r($result);
Focus on (51.4243877,-0.34745) and look for 6 results.
$result = $api->autosuggest("fun.with.code", [AutoSuggestOption::focus(51.4243877,-0.34745), AutoSuggestOption::numberResults(6)]);
print_r($result);
Validate what3words
$result = $api->isPossible3wa("filled.count.soap");
print_r($result); // yields 1
$result = $api->isPossible3wa("not a 3wa");
print_r($result); // yields 0
$result = $api->findPossible3wa('from "index.home.raft" to " "filled.count.soap"');
print_r(implode(", ", $result)); // yields "index.home.raft, filled.count.soap"
$result = $api->isValid3wa('filled.count.soapp');
print_r($result ? $result : 'invalid'); // yields 'invalid'
All the functions will return an stdClass Object containing the requested data, or on failure, they will return false
. If false
is returned, call get_error()
, and it will return an associative array containing a code
value and a message
value.
print_r($api->getError());
Error values are listed in the what3words REST API documentation.
You can see w3w-php-wrapper
in action by running docker compose watch
(make sure you're running this from the development
directory) and open http://localhost:9000 on your browser. Any changes you make to the source code will be reloaded as you refresh your browser, just ensure you have loaded your environment variable named: W3W_API_KEY
by running export W3W_API_KEY=<YOUR_API_KEY>
.
$ export W3W_API_KEY=KEYFROMW3W
$ docker compose watch
[+] Building 0.6s (18/18) FINISHED
[+] Running 1/1
✔ Container php-server Started 0.0s
Watch configuration for service "server":
- Action sync for path "/w3w-php-wrapper/development/src"
- Action sync for path "/w3w-php-wrapper/src"
- Action sync for path "/w3w-php-wrapper/tests"
Once you've spin up the container, you can run docker exec php-server /var/www/html/vendor/bin/phpunit
to execute the unit tests.
$ docker exec php-server /var/www/html/vendor/bin/phpunit
PHPUnit 5.5.4 by Sebastian Bergmann and contributors.
...................... 22 / 22 (100%)
Time: 1.57 seconds, Memory: 3.25MB
OK (22 tests, 25 assertions)