Edit report at https://bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=64740&edit=1

 ID:                 64740
 Updated by:         [email protected]
 Reported by:        RQuadling at GMail dot com
 Summary:            Gender ignores country for some names.
 Status:             Analyzed
 Type:               Bug
 Package:            PECL
 Operating System:   Centos
 PHP Version:        Irrelevant
 Assigned To:        ab
 Block user comment: N
 Private report:     N

 New Comment:

Chris i mean, not Chis :)


Previous Comments:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
[2013-05-19 20:42:15] [email protected]

Richard,

could you please check the current trunk. I made a change to the library which 
should allow the lookup in a single country only. Tested also with the names 
like 

Jan, Val, Chis, Brynn, Carol, Fran, Ronny, Gene, Rene

If you have some more ambiguous names in mind, please test them too.

Thanks.

------------------------------------------------------------------------
[2013-05-19 20:39:22] [email protected]

Automatic comment from SVN on behalf of ab
Revision: http://svn.php.net/viewvc/?view=revision&revision=330297
Log: Fixed bug #64740 Gender ignores country for some names.

------------------------------------------------------------------------
[2013-05-19 17:18:31] RQuadling at GMail dot com

But even if the name is a nickname, it is still a MALE nickname in England. The 
country option isn't doing it's job.

------------------------------------------------------------------------
[2013-05-18 21:45:54] [email protected]

But that means that were the full name, what I mean it's a nickname, though I'm 
not a native speaker :) Looking at here

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ben
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daniel_(name)

any person I click evaluates to one of Benjamin or Daniel. Is it so, that the 
short variant can be really given as a full name, like in the birth certificate?

There are two terms in the ext - nick name and full name. The difference is 
that 
if you type literally 'Dan', the library thinks that you're looking for the 
full 
name Dan, not for Daniel. As Dan is recorded as a term of endearment for 
Daniel. 
The further handling of course not correct, as for me it should say 'not found' 
and not try to evaluate all the countries.

Why I ask is that the quality of the data is important, if you as a native 
speaker are sure the shorter variant can be a full name, I should correct the 
data. Otherwise I'd prefer to implement it the way i've mentioned, checking if 
that's a nick name, getting the full name and working with it instead. Because 
there are cases where the same nick name can point to either male or female 
full 
name, changing the library behavior in this case were wrong.

Thanks.

------------------------------------------------------------------------
[2013-05-18 20:54:38] RQuadling at GMail dot com

The issue for me that even if the name is female in one country, it is a single 
country that I'm asking for. Dan, in England, _IS_ a male name. And the data 
does 
show this.

As things stand, supplying the country is redundant.

------------------------------------------------------------------------


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    https://bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=64740


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