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Another reason to proper case the names etc is that it is much easier to
uppercase them when needed than to try to make them mixed case when
needed.

hth

Dave B

booth@xxxxxxxxxxxx 08/30/2006 4:38:43 PM >>>
Some where along the line some one enters the name.  Going forward, it

could be entered correctly at the time of entry.  The idea of an 
auxiliary file for properly cased name and address seems like an 
on-going burden.  It would seem reasonable at some point to make a 
decision to proper-case names & addresses. including street, city, & 
state.  There are a lot of reasons for making a change-over, and very 
few that I can think of to stay with the constraints of a 132-hammer 
printer.

I say this because of always finding that in the end, solving it 
programatically never really solved the headache.  Some day the boss's

wife's mother's best friend is going to be insulted, and that is not 
going to ever be a good day.



Alan Shore wrote:
Unfortunately Booth - it is NOT a one time deal. Our customer base
grows in
leaps and bounds day by day.



Alan Shore

NBTY, Inc
(631) 244-2000 ext. 5019
AShore@xxxxxxxx 

midrange-l-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx wrote on 08/30/2006 04:41:19 PM:

How many total names in the file, and is this a one-time
change-over?

It is amazing how fast a good operator can go through a thousand
names,
if you present them for her/him to read & change easily on the
screen.

If its a one time deal, a brute force solution may be a lot cheaper
and
quicker in the end.



Scott Klement wrote:
Thanks for your reply Tommy, but the main problem I am going to
have
is
with the names like O'Donnell McGuyver etc where the name
contains
more
than one upper case character.
Even worse is something  like "Herman Van der Staey".  In that case
the

last name is 3 words, and one of them isn't capitalized, but the
others

are.  I can't think of an algorithm that would understand how to
properly
capitalize all names.

The truth is, names don't follow a set pattern for capitalization.
You
have to deall with them on a case-by-case basis.  So you'd almost
need
a
database of every possible name and how it's capitalized....  or
at
least
a database of the ones that don't follow the rule of "first letter
of
every word."   This wouldn't be a minor undertaking.

I suggest looking for a commercial package unless a "close enough"
routine
is acceptable.
--
-----------------------------
Booth Martin
www.martinvt.com 
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