You can alter the client code to remove this check, but it's checked at
the server level anyway. The way our system is designed , there must be
an alpha character.
Just having a number lacks context - hence the required text. See an
address like the following:
10 Example Lane
3985
... means little. Is that Suite 3985? Apartment 3985? PO BOX 3985? A
typo?
It's mainly for clarity. We place the logic that's ALSO done on the
server side to help prevent problems like this from arising - and it also
places some of the checking CPU time on the client side :)
"J. Scott Schiller" wrote:
>
> Dev types-
>
> Is it a requirement of the Shared Registry System that
> Address 2 have one alpha character? I understand that
> I can edit the way my Perl/(XML) scripts accept or deny,
> but I have a compulsion toward the neat and tidy and prefer
> to keep things exactly as intended by the people who
> architected the system.
>
> What is with the alpha? I never use one when offering an apartment/condo
> suite/whatever number.
>
> Just curious,
>
> S
>
> J. Scott Schiller
> VP
> GIA Web Services, Inc.
> Bellevue, WA
>
> <><>< Simple|Easy|Fast ><><>
> ---http://domainalchemy.com---
> <><><><><> $15 <><><><><>
--Charles Daminato OpenSRS Support Manager chuck@opensrs.org
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