In Canada suite 201 would be understood to be 2nd floor suite 1 of the
building.  Where did the name of the building come into it?  Do you have a
suggestion for Africa that is less than a very long string of latitude and
longitude remembering that any encoding system would need to be understood
by both the person creating it and the person using it?

Are you saying there is a better solution for encoding the co-ordinates?

Thanks John

On 11 July 2016 at 15:47, Lester Caine <[email protected]> wrote:

> On 11/07/16 19:43, john whelan wrote:
> > True but suite 201 followed by the location code should do the trick.  I
> > was thinking not so much of sending mail in the UK so much as providing
> > something fairly basic to countries in Africa etc. and even in the UK I
> > would at least provide a location.
>
> The use of the Open Location Code as an alternative to a postcode by
> adding a building identify is exactly against what it was designed for,
> but there is no reason that one can't directly use the latitude and
> longitude anyway, encoding them to a short form if you want. Any
> 'recoding system' for the physical location can be used to display the
> raw numbers? But for readability, just as OLC does, one uses the town
> and country and simply provide a GPS location limited to that area. A
> bit like 'national grid' in the UK
>
> > Cheerio John
> >
> > On 11 Jul 2016 2:36 pm, "Lester Caine" <[email protected]
> > <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
> >
> >     On 11/07/16 18:12, john whelan wrote:
> >     > I would basically give everyone an address in the world, its Open
> >     source
> >     > and as far as complexity goes the UK uses what is called precise
> >     or the
> >     > street number plus postcode which often is 9 characters and digits
> to
> >     > uniquely identify an address so using ten wouldn't be that much
> more
> >     > complex.
> >
> >     For a UK address, the sub building name and building name can be up
> to
> >     80 characters to fit in the Royal Mail PAF record and building
> number up
> >     to four digits. There are additional 'premises elements', and even
> some
> >     of the thoroughfare elements may be additional to the postcode
> itself,
> >     so 10 characters is never enough.
> >
> >     Open Location Code lacks the ability to handle multi-story housing.
> It
> >     only gets you to the apartment block. This is an area where OSM still
> >     needs some more work.
>
> --
> Lester Caine - G8HFL
> -----------------------------
> Contact - http://lsces.co.uk/wiki/?page=contact
> L.S.Caine Electronic Services - http://lsces.co.uk
> EnquirySolve - http://enquirysolve.com/
> Model Engineers Digital Workshop - http://medw.co.uk
> Rainbow Digital Media - http://rainbowdigitalmedia.co.uk
>
> _______________________________________________
> talk mailing list
> [email protected]
> https://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/talk
>
_______________________________________________
talk mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/talk

Reply via email to