# Functions for Working with Geographical Coordinates {#geographical-coordinates}
## greatCircleDistance {#greatcircledistance}
Calculates the distance between two points on the Earth’s surface using [the great-circle formula](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great-circle_distance).
Similar to `greatCircleDistance` but calculates the distance on WGS-84 ellipsoid instead of sphere. This is more precise approximation of the Earth Geoid.
The performance is the same as for `greatCircleDistance` (no performance drawback). It is recommended to use `geoDistance` to calculate the distances on Earth.
Technical note: for close enough points we calculate the distance using planar approximation with the metric on the tangent plane at the midpoint of the coordinates.
Calculates the central angle between two points on the Earth’s surface using [the great-circle formula](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great-circle_distance).
Checks whether the point belongs to the polygon on the plane.
``` sql
pointInPolygon((x, y), [(a, b), (c, d) ...], ...)
```
**Input values**
-`(x, y)` — Coordinates of a point on the plane. Data type — [Tuple](../../../sql-reference/data-types/tuple.md) — A tuple of two numbers.
-`[(a, b), (c, d) ...]` — Polygon vertices. Data type — [Array](../../../sql-reference/data-types/array.md). Each vertex is represented by a pair of coordinates `(a, b)`. Vertices should be specified in a clockwise or counterclockwise order. The minimum number of vertices is 3. The polygon must be constant.
- The function also supports polygons with holes (cut out sections). In this case, add polygons that define the cut out sections using additional arguments of the function. The function does not support non-simply-connected polygons.
**Returned values**
`1` if the point is inside the polygon, `0` if it is not.
If the point is on the polygon boundary, the function may return either 0 or 1.
**Example**
``` sql
SELECT pointInPolygon((3., 3.), [(6, 0), (8, 4), (5, 8), (0, 2)]) AS res