I responded to a not unrelated question on QGIS forum earlier:
It would depend on which CRS you are using. All coordinate systems warp reality in one way or another. they either warp the graphic depiction so that measurement is localized and more accurate for a "smallish" area, or they warp the measurement so that we like what we see. As in the US48 albers is a common "picture" of the US with a nice curve on canadian border, and Maine bigger than Texas, curve nicely centered somewhere in the midwest. However there is a relatively small area (in the center) where measurements can be made accurately. UTM and Stateplane are made for the US to localize and allow accurate measurement. Yes the geodetic measurement will always be different than the object length unless you build the object with 3d measures. I am not familiar with qgis measurement methods but you would want to use a geodetic measurment as the accurate one. It will come closest (understand that the coordinate system you are using utilizes an approximation of the ellipse of the earth where you are, and that could have quite a bit of + or - built in) to being the same measurement as the real world. Hope this helps Also don't forget that lat long is not a coordinate system, it is an angular system (thus deg units)
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when I calculate the length of a polyline with the field-calculator, the value is different from the one measured with the measurement-tool. I think that this is a problem with the geodetic differenze between the real length, and the flat projected lenth.
My question now is: Wich of the two values is the exact one?
Using the ESPG website you should be able to locate a local system that will give both graphic quality and measurement usability.Spatial reference
EPSG dot Org
Futher discussion on lat,lon should follow now...Lat Lon wiki
I have given the example that you take a basketball and hold a dowel (stick) pointing straight to the center (of the basketball). when you imagine the stick crossing through the center of the earth and through the intersection of equator/greenwich mean median that would be lat 0, lon 0. Moving the dowel to the east or west increases the angle from 0,0 either by positive numbers or in the case of the western hemisphere by - or negative numbers -100 lon, 52 lat. this is 100 degrees measured from the center of the earth west of greenwich mean median, and 52 degrees north of the equator (median). Take a basketball and a rod and do it yourself. It is really helpful to understand lat lon.
