Another option is to use Shapely (a Python library based on GEOS, the engine for PostGIS) and Fiona (which is basically for reading/writing files):
import fiona
import shapely
with fiona.open("path/to/shapefile.shp") as fiona_collection:
# In this case, we'll assume the shapefile only has one record/layer (e.g., the shapefile
# is just for the borders of a single country, etc.).
shapefile_record = fiona_collection.next()
# Use Shapely to create the polygon
shape = shapely.geometry.asShape( shapefile_record['geometry'] )
point = shapely.geometry.Point(32.398516, -39.754028) # longitude, latitude
# Alternative: if point.within(shape)
if shape.contains(point):
print "Found shape for point."
Note that doing point-in-polygon tests can be expensive if the polygon is large/complicated (e.g., shapefiles for some countries with extremely irregular coastlines). In some cases it can help to use bounding boxes to quickly rule things out before doing the more intensive test:
minx, miny, maxx, maxy = shape.bounds
bounding_box = shapely.geometry.box(minx, miny, maxx, maxy)
if bounding_box.contains(point):
...
Lastly, keep in mind that it takes some time to load and parse large/irregular shapefiles (unfortunately, those types of polygons are often expensive to keep in memory, too).
与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…