I can't explain this anomaly, and I await enlightenment from those who
can.

But I still wonder why, if there is a finite list of restaurants that
you represent, you geocode them on the fly with each query.  Why don't
you geocode them once and capture the coordinates in your database?



On Oct 22, 5:02 pm, wb <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I'm building a web page for a user to submit his address and distance
> he's willing to travel, and the page will return a list of all the
> restaurants that we represent within that specified distance radius.
> These restaurants' locations are plotted on a Google map. Depending on
> the user's input, that list can be 40 to 50 restaurants, and we
> provide this service to both North America and Europe.
>
> Now the problem I have is that there are always some addresses that
> the GClientGeocoder can't locate. Even when I submit the same address
> and distance and the same list of restaurants are returned, the
> addresses that can't be found are not consistent. One time the
> Geocoder can't locate the address of restaurants 1, 2 & 3, while
> another time restaurants 3, 4, 5 couldn't be located. And when I
> tested those individual addresses on maps.google.com, none of them has
> problem.
>
> Is this problem cause by our submitting too many addresses to the
> Geocoder in one go? How can this be resolved?
>
> Also, how can I determine what zoom level to set based on the radius
> the user specified?
>
> Thanks,
> wb
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