The history of PROJ dates back to the late 1970s,[3] and the first release of PROJ was developed by Gerald Evenden in the early 1980s as a Ratfor program.[4] It was based on the General Cartographic Transformation Package or GCTP, which consisted of Fortran subroutines that could be used to project geographic data. The second release of PROJ from 1985 was rewritten in C to run on UNIX systems.[5] The third release of PROJ from 1990, was expanded to support approximately 70 cartographic projections.[2] Evenden further developed a fourth release in 1994, named PROJ.4. The last version maintained by Evenden was 4.3, released on September 24, 1995.
After over four years of inactivity, Frank Warmerdam became the new maintainer and released version 4.4 on March 21, 2000. As of May 2008, PROJ became part of the MetaCRS project, a confederation of coordinate systems related projects under incubation with OSGeo.
With the release of version 5.0 in February 2018, the software was renamed to PROJ, removing version four (".4") from the name. With the acquisition of the proj.org domain name in June 2019, the project was also renamed as PROJ.
Ports
The string format that PROJ uses to describe coordinate systems and transformations, proj string or proj.4 string, is widely used beyond PROJ proper. A wide variety of ports or bindings in other programming languages have been developed.
Bindings based on the PROJ library (libproj) exist for Python, Ruby, Rust, Golang, Julia, TCL, MySQL, Excel, Visual Basic, and Fortran.[6] PROJ.4 additionally had bindings for R and Perl.[7][8]
Proj4JS (JavaScript) and Proj4J (Java) are ports of PROJ into different programming languages now managed under MetaCRS.[9]
^Kresse, W.; Danko, D.M. (2011). Springer Handbook of Geographic Information. Springer Handbook of Geographic Information. Springer Verlag. p. 948. ISBN978-3-540-72678-4. Retrieved 5 June 2019. PROJ and CS-Map are coordinate reference system and coordinate transformation libraries. ... The history of PROJ.4 starts in the late 1970s, when Gerald Evenden was involved in the development of map plotting software, at the Atlantic Geology branch of the United States Geological Survey (USGS).
^Evenden, Gerald I.; Botbol, J.M. (1985). User's manual for MAPGEN (UNIX version); a method of transforming digital cartographic data to a map. Open-File Report 85-706. U.S. Geological Survey. p. 140. doi:10.3133/ofr85706.