really, any perl programmer worth hiring should be able to do this while
sleeping.
Really? Postal de-duping may be harder than you think.
What's the Reg-exp to convert or match
FIELDS CORNER, BOSTON
to
DORCHESTER
It's Not just canonicalization of abbreviations and moving Apartments
hi
( 03.08.04 17:12 -0400 ) Joel Gwynn:
we're looking for a fast, customizable de-duping solution.
I was thinking there might be some perl stuff out there,
really, any perl programmer worth hiring should be able to do this while
sleeping.
--
\js
On Tuesday, August 5, 2003, at 09:07 AM, John Saylor wrote:
hi
( 03.08.04 17:12 -0400 ) Joel Gwynn:
we're looking for a fast, customizable de-duping solution.
I was thinking there might be some perl stuff out there,
really, any perl programmer worth hiring should be able to do this
while
Tolkin, Steve mentioned On 8/5/03 11:21 AM,:
The article in question can be found at
http://www.foo.be/docs/tpj/issues/vol4_1/tpj0401-0002.html
(I had a hard time finding it via tpj.com, but Google worked.)
Unfortunately I think that the USPS site
http://www.usps.com/cgi-bin/zip4/zip4inq
needed
You may find more useful information as a registered USPS developer:
http://www.USPSPriorityMail.com/et_regcert.html
If you don't want to register before you get more answers, read
carefully through their web tools documents available here:
http://www.uspswebtools.com/
I believe the most
Actually, if I understand what Joel was asking about, removing
duplicates by address is a non-trivial task -- address data is
notoriously dirty. What makes the job interesting is that there are a
wide variety of abbreviations used in addresses -- for example:
22 Saint John Street
22 St John
On Tue, Aug 05, 2003 at 11:21:25AM -0400, Tolkin, Steve wrote:
Unfortunately I think that the USPS site
http://www.usps.com/cgi-bin/zip4/zip4inq
needed to run this script is no more.
A search there for zip4inq produced nothing.
Does anyone know of a similar page, wither by the USPS or
On Tuesday, August 5, 2003, at 09:07 AM, John Saylor wrote:
really, any perl programmer worth hiring should be able to do this while
sleeping.
No, it's quite a hard problem. All of the following UK addresses are
the same and are deliverable.
2/11 CR7 8JH
11b CR7 8JH
Flat 2, 11 Beulah Road, CR7
Unfortunately I think that the USPS site
http://www.usps.com/cgi-bin/zip4/zip4inq needed to run this script
is no more.
A search there for zip4inq produced nothing.
Does anyone know of a similar page, wither by the USPS or another
provider of (web) services?
Just follow the Find a Zip
hi
On Tuesday, August 5, 2003, at 09:07 AM, John Saylor wrote:
really, any perl programmer worth hiring should be able to do this while
sleeping.
( 03.08.05 19:21 +0100 ) David Cantrell:
No, it's quite a hard problem.
i guess it depends on the way the problem is defined by the client. as
] Postal address De-duping
On Monday, August 4, 2003, at 05:12 PM, Joel Gwynn wrote:
Hey, all. We do lots of (snail) mailings, and we're looking for a
fast,
customizable de-duping solution. We're currently taking a look at
doubletake from http://peoplesmith.com/, which
Hey, all. We do lots of (snail) mailings, and we're looking for a fast,
customizable de-duping solution. We're currently taking a look at
doubletake from http://peoplesmith.com/, which is not too expensive, but
I was thinking there might be some perl stuff out there, given perl's
text-processing
On Monday, August 4, 2003, at 05:12 PM, Joel Gwynn wrote:
Hey, all. We do lots of (snail) mailings, and we're looking for a
fast,
customizable de-duping solution. We're currently taking a look at
doubletake from http://peoplesmith.com/, which is not too expensive,
but
I was thinking there
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