Quizzes & Puzzles1 min ago
Postcode problem
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Just had a debate with two colleagues who both claim that every individual house has it's own individual postcode...i was under the impression that postcodes where distributed to entire streets (or sometimes one street would have two post codes if it was exceptionally long). I'm aware that some cxompanies and schools have their own codes but they claim that each house in a street has its own code...who is right?
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Every house in the country is uniquely identifiable by its 'full' postcode. This is the combination of the house number (or name) and the code for that area. ('Area', here, may mean one street or part of one street).
So, while an entire street in Anytown might have the postcode AT2 4PQ, the 'full' postcode of house number 26 in that street is 26AT2 4PQ. (If I post a package, I always put my return address in this simple form, e.g. "Sender = 26AT24PQ". Whenever someone has moved without telling me, the packages have always found their way back to me).
Chris
So, while an entire street in Anytown might have the postcode AT2 4PQ, the 'full' postcode of house number 26 in that street is 26AT2 4PQ. (If I post a package, I always put my return address in this simple form, e.g. "Sender = 26AT24PQ". Whenever someone has moved without telling me, the packages have always found their way back to me).
Chris
You're definitely right and u can prove it to them here:
http://www.allies-computing.co.uk/onlinetrial.html
you want to "complete the address from a postcode"
http://www.allies-computing.co.uk/onlinetrial.html
you want to "complete the address from a postcode"
Yes it does vary. A single code may cover one half of an entire street, or a single detached residence in a remote area.
It could even cover a single (or part) of a floor in a building (commercial premises for example, such as an office block) - especially if it's a company that receives alot of mail. (I remember when I used to be with First Direct many years ago - they had their own postcode for all correspondence, it was LS-something (a Leeds district) 1FD (as in First Direct)
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