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Regexp::Common::zip(3)User Contributed Perl DocumentatioRegexp::Common::zip(3)

NAME
       Regexp::Common::zip -- provide regexes for postal codes.

SYNOPSIS
	   use Regexp::Common qw /zip/;

	   while (<>) {
	       /^$RE{zip}{Netherlands}$/   and	print "Dutch postal code\n";
	   }

DESCRIPTION
       Please consult the manual of Regexp::Common for a general description
       of the works of this interface.

       Do not use this module directly, but load it via Regexp::Common.

       This module offers patterns for zip or postal codes of many different
       countries. They all have the form "$RE{zip}{Country}[{options}]".

       The following common options are used:

       "{-prefix=[yes|no|allow]}" and "{-country=PAT}".

       Postal codes can be prefixed with a country abbreviation. That is, a
       dutch postal code of 1234 AB can also be written as NL-1234 AB.	By
       default, all the patterns will allow the prefixes. But this can be
       changed with the "-prefix" option. With "-prefix=yes", the returned
       pattern requires a country prefix, while "-prefix=no" disallows a pre-
       fix. Any argument that doesn't start with a "y" or a "n" allows a coun-
       try prefix, but doesn't require them.

       The prefixes used are, unfortunally, not always the same. Officially,
       ISO country codes need to be used, but the usage of CEPT codes (the
       same ones as used on cars) is common too. By default, each postal code
       will recognize a country prefix that's either the ISO standard or the
       CEPT code. That is, German postal codes may prefixed with either "DE"
       or "D". The recognized prefix can be changed with the "-country"
       option, which takes a (sub)pattern as argument. The arguments "iso" and
       "cept" are special, and indicate the language prefix should be the ISO
       country code, or the CEPT code.

       Examples:
	/$RE{zip}{Netherlands}/;
		  # Matches '1234 AB' and 'NL-1234 AB'.
	/$RE{zip}{Netherlands}{-prefix => 'no'}/;
		  # Matches '1234 AB' but not 'NL-1234 AB'.
	/$RE{zip}{Netherlands}{-prefix => 'yes'}/;
		  # Matches 'NL-1234 AB' but not '1234 AB'.

	/$RE{zip}{Germany}/;
		  # Matches 'DE-12345' and 'D-12345'.
	/$RE{zip}{Germany}{-country => 'iso'}/;
		  # Matches 'DE-12345' but not 'D-12345'.
	/$RE{zip}{Germany}{-country => 'cept'}/;
		  # Matches 'D-12345' but not 'DE-12345'.
	/$RE{zip}{Germany}{-country => 'GER'}/;
		  # Matches 'GER-12345'.

       "{-sep=PAT}"

       Some countries have postal codes that consist of two parts. Typically
       there is an official way of separating those parts; but in practise
       people tend to use different separators. For instance, if the official
       way to separate parts is to use a space, it happens that the space is
       left off. The "-sep" option can be given a pattern as argument which
       indicates what to use as a separator between the parts.

       Examples:
	/$RE{zip}{Netherlands}/;
		  # Matches '1234 AB' but not '1234AB'.
	/$RE{zip}{Netherlands}{-sep => '\s*'}/;
		  # Matches '1234 AB' and '1234AB'.

       $RE{zip}{Australia}

       Returns a pattern that recognizes Australian postal codes. Australian
       postal codes consist of four digits; the first two digits, which range
       from '10' to '97', indicate the state. Territories use '02' or '08' as
       starting digits; the leading zero is optional. '0909' is the only
       postal code starting with '09' (the leading zero is optional here as
       well) - this is the postal code for the Nothern Territory University).
       The (optional) country prefixes are AU (ISO country code) and AUS (CEPT
       code).  Regexp::Common 2.107 and before used $RE{zip}{Australia}. This
       is still supported.

       If "{-keep}" is used, the following variables will be set:

       $1  The entire postal code.

       $2  The country code prefix.

       $3  The postal code without the country prefix.

       $4  The state or territory.

       $5  The last two digits.

       $RE{zip}{Belgium}

       Returns a pattern than recognizes Belgian postal codes. Belgian postal
       codes consist of 4 digits, of which the first indicates the province.
       The (optional) country prefixes are BE (ISO country code) and B (CEPT
       code).

       If "{-keep}" is used, the following variables will be set:

       $1  The entire postal code.

       $2  The country code prefix.

       $3  The postal code without the country prefix.

       $4  The digit indicating the province.

       $5  The last three digits of the postal code.

       $RE{zip}{Denmark}

       Returns a pattern that recognizes Danish postal codes. Danish postal
       codes consist of four numbers; the first digit (which cannot be 0),
       indicates the distribution region, the second the distribution dis-
       trict. The (optional) country prefix is DK, which is both the ISO coun-
       try code and the CEPT code.

       If "{-keep}" is used, the following variables will be set:

       $1  The entire postal code.

       $2  The country code prefix.

       $3  The postal code without the country prefix.

       $4  The digit indicating the distribution region.

       $5  The digit indicating the distribution district.

       $6  The last two digits of the postal code.

       $RE{zip}{France}

       Returns a pattern that recognizes French postal codes. French postal
       codes consist of five numbers; the first two numbers, which range from
       '01' to '98', indicate the department. The (optional) country prefixes
       are FR (ISO country code) and F (CEPT code).  Regexp::Common 2.107 and
       before used $RE{zip}{French}. This is still supported.

       If "{-keep}" is used, the following variables will be set:

       $1  The entire postal code.

       $2  The country code prefix.

       $3  The postal code without the country prefix.

       $4  The department.

       $5  The last three digits.

       $RE{zip}{Germany}

       Returns a pattern that recognizes German postal codes. German postal
       codes consist of five numbers; the first number indicating the distri-
       bution zone, the second the distribution region, while the latter three
       indicate the distribution district and the postal town.	The (optional)
       country prefixes are DE (ISO country code) and D (CEPT code).  Reg-
       exp::Common 2.107 and before used $RE{zip}{German}. This is still sup-
       ported.

       If "{-keep}" is used, the following variables will be set:

       $1  The entire postal code.

       $2  The country code prefix.

       $3  The postal code without the country prefix.

       $4  The distribution zone.

       $5  The distribution region.

       $6  The distribution district and postal town.

       $RE{zip}{Greenland}

       Returns a pattern that recognizes postal codes from Greenland.  Green-
       land, being part of Denmark, uses Danish postal codes.  All postal
       codes of Greenland start with 39.  The (optional) country prefix is DK,
       which is both the ISO country code and the CEPT code.

       If "{-keep}" is used, the following variables will be set:

       $1  The entire postal code.

       $2  The country code prefix.

       $3  The postal code without the country prefix.

       $4  39, being the distribution region and distribution district for
	   Greenland.

       $5  The last two digits of the postal code.

       $RE{zip}{Italy}

       Returns a pattern recognizing Italian postal codes. Italian postal
       codes consist of 5 digits. The first digit indicates the region, the
       second the province. The third digit is odd for province capitals, and
       even for the province itself. The fourth digit indicates the route, and
       the fifth a place on the route (0 for small places, alphabetically for
       the rest).

       The country prefix is either IT (the ISO country code), or I (the CEPT
       code).

       If "{-keep}" is used, the following variables will be set:

       $1  The entire postal code.

       $2  The country code prefix.

       $3  The postal code without the country prefix.

       $4  The region.

       $5  The province.

       $6  Capital or province.

       $7  The route.

       $8  The place on the route.

       $RE{zip}{Netherlands}

       Returns a pattern that recognizes Dutch postal codes. Dutch postal
       codes consist of 4 digits and 2 letters, separated by a space.  The
       separator can be changed using the "{-sep}" option, as discussed above.
       The (optional) country prefix is NL, which is both the ISO country code
       and the CEPT code. Regexp::Common 2.107 and earlier used
       $RE{zip}{Dutch}. This is still supported.

       If "{-keep}" is used, the following variables will be set:

       $1  The entire postal code.

       $2  The country code prefix.

       $3  The postal code without the country prefix.

       $4  The digits part of the postal code.

       $5  The separator between the digits and the letters.

       $6  The letters part of the postal code.

       $RE{zip}{Norway}

       Returns a pattern that recognizes Norwegian postal codes. Norwegian
       postal codes consist of four digits.

       The country prefix is either NO (the ISO country code), or N (the CEPT
       code).

       If "{-keep}" is used, the following variables will be set:

       $1  The entire postal code.

       $2  The country code prefix.

       $3  The postal code without the country prefix.

       $RE{zip}{Spain}

       Returns a pattern that recognizes Spanish postal codes. Spanish postal
       codes consist of 5 digits. The first 2 indicate one of Spains fifties
       provinces (in alphabetical order), starting with 00. The third digit
       indicates a main city or the main delivery rounds. The last two digits
       are the delivery area, secondary delivery route or a link to rural
       areas.

       The country prefix is either ES (the ISO country code), or E (the CEPT
       code).

       If "{-keep}" is used, the following variables will be set:

       $1  The entire postal code.

       $2  The country code prefix.

       $3  The postal code without the country prefix.

       $4  The two digits indicating the province.

       $5  The digit indicating the main city or main delivery route.

       $6  The digits indicating the delivery area, secondary delivery route
	   or a link to rural areas.

       $RE{zip}{US}{-extended => [yes|no|allow]}

       Returns a pattern that recognizes US zip codes. US zip codes consist of
       5 digits, with an optional 4 digit extension. By default, extensions
       are allowed, but not required. This can be influenced by the
       "-extended" option. If its argument starts with a "y", extensions are
       required; if the argument starts with a "n", extensions will not be
       recognized. If an extension is used, a dash is used to separate the
       main part from the extension, but this can be changed with the "-sep"
       option.

       The country prefix is either US (the ISO country code), or USA (the
       CEPT code).

       If "{-keep}" is being used, the following variables will be set:

       $1  The entire postal code.

       $2  The country code prefix.

       $3  The postal code without the country prefix.

       $4  The first 5 digits of the postal code.

       $5  The first three digits of the postal code, indicating a sectional
	   center or a large city. New in Regexp::Common 2.119.

       $6  The last 2 digits of the 5 digit part of the postal code, indicat-
	   ing a post office facility or delivery area. New in Regexp::Common
	   2.119.

       $7  The separator between the 5 digit part and the 4 digit part. Up to
	   Regexp::Common 2.118, this used to be $5.

       $8  The 4 digit part of the postal code (if any). Up to Regexp::Common
	   2.118, this used to be $6.

       $9  The first two digits of the 4 digit part of the postal code, indi-
	   cating a sector, or several blocks. New in Regexp::Common 2.119.

       $10 The last two digits of the 4 digit part of the postal code, indi-
	   cating a segment or one side of a street. New in Regexp::Common
	   2.119.

       You need at least version 5.005_03 to be able to use US postal codes.
       Older versions contain a bug that let the pattern match invalid US
       postal codes.

       Questions

       o   Can the 5 digit part of the zip code (in theory) start with 000?

       o   Can the 5 digit part of the zip code (in theory) end with 00?

       o   Can the 4 digit part of the zip code (in theory) start with 00?

       o   Can the 4 digit part of the zip code (in theory) end with 00?

HISTORY
	$Log: zip.pm,v $
	Revision 2.112	2005/01/01 16:34:04  abigail
	- Modified the -keep captures for US zip codes. Both the 5 and 4 digit parts
	  of the zip codes can be dissected into 2 parts.
	- Updated the copyright notice.

	Revision 2.111	2004/12/14 23:15:13  abigail
	Disable '-prefix' for Danish postal codes for pre-5.00503 perls.

	Revision 2.110	2004/06/09 21:44:13  abigail
	- Norway, Italy, Spain.
	- References.
	- POD nits.

	Revision 2.109	2003/07/04 13:34:05  abigail
	Fixed assignment to

	Revision 2.108	2003/06/24 23:23:14  abigail
	Australia currently has a postal code '0909' (or '909') for the
	Northern Territory University; this is the only postal code starting
	with '09'. $RE{zip}{Australia} now accepts '0909', and rejects all
	other postal codes starting with '09'. (Ron Savage).

	Revision 2.107	2003/03/25 23:46:58  abigail
	Added RCS Id: tag

	Revision 2.106	2003/02/09 21:31:16  abigail
	Postal codes for Denmark and Greenland

	Revision 2.105	2003/02/09 12:41:31  abigail
	Added Belgian postal codes

	Revision 2.104	2003/02/01 22:55:31  abigail
	Changed Copyright years

	Revision 2.103	2003/02/01 22:49:25  abigail
	Added Australian postal codes

	Revision 2.102	2003/01/23 02:18:42  abigail
	Added French postal codes

	Revision 2.101	2003/01/22 17:23:26  abigail
	German postal codes added.

	Revision 2.100	2003/01/21 23:19:40  abigail
	The whole world understands RCS/CVS version numbers, that 1.9 is an
	older version than 1.10. Except CPAN. Curse the idiot(s) who think
	that version numbers are floats (in which universe do floats have
	more than one decimal dot?).
	Everything is bumped to version 2.100 because CPAN couldn't deal
	with the fact one file had version 1.10.

	Revision 1.5  2003/01/16 11:06:27  abigail
	Typo fix.

	Revision 1.4  2003/01/16 11:02:17  abigail
	For US zip codes, version needs to be at least 5.005_03; older 5.005
	versions seem to have a bug in the regex machine, creating false
	positives.

	Revision 1.3  2003/01/13 21:45:01  abigail
	Complete redoing of Dutch & US postal codes. Documented them.

	Revision 1.2  2003/01/01 15:09:47  abigail
	Added US zip codes.

	Revision 1.1  2002/12/31 02:01:33  abigail
	First version

SEE ALSO
       Regexp::Common for a general description of how to use this interface.

       <http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/postal.html>
	   Frank's compulsive guide to postal addresses.

       <http://www.upu.int/post_code/en/addressing_formats_guide.shtml>
	   Postal addressing systems.

       <http://www.uni-koeln.de/~arcd2/33e.htm>
	   Postal code information.

       <http://www.grcdi.nl/linkspc.htm>
	   Links to Postcode Pages.

       <http://www1.auspost.com.au/postcodes/>
	   Information about Australian postal codes.

       <http://hdusps.esecure-
       care.net/cgi-bin/hdusps.cfg/php/enduser/std_adp.php?p_faqid=1014>
	   Information about US postal codes.

       <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Postal_code>

AUTHORS
       Damian Conway (damian@conway.org) and Abigail (regexp-common@abi-
       gail.nl).

MAINTAINANCE
       This package is maintained by Abigail (regexp-common@abigail.nl).

BUGS AND IRRITATIONS
       Zip codes for most countries are missing.  Send them in to regexp-com-
       mon@abigail.nl.

COPYRIGHT
	  Copyright (c) 2001 - 2005, Damian Conway and Abigail. All Rights
	Reserved. This module is free software. It may be used, redistributed
	    and/or modified under the terms of the Perl Artistic License
		  (see http://www.perl.com/perl/misc/Artistic.html)

perl v5.8.8			  2003-03-23		Regexp::Common::zip(3)
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