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uk_postcode

UK postcode parsing and validation for Ruby for writing friendly software.

Features:

Note: There's a distinction between validity and existence. This library validates the format of a postcode, but not whether it actually currently refers to a location.

By analogy, name@somedomainthatdoesnotexist.com is a valid email address in terms of format, but you can't successfully deliver an email to it.

Usage

require "uk_postcode"

Parse and extract sections of a full postcode:

pc = UKPostcode.parse("W1A 2AB")
pc.valid?      # => true
pc.full?       # => true
pc.full_valid? # => true
pc.outcode     # => "W1A"
pc.incode      # => "2AB"
pc.area        # => "W"
pc.district    # => "1A"
pc.sector      # => "2"
pc.unit        # => "AB"

Or of a partial postcode:

pc = UKPostcode.parse("W1A")
pc.valid?      # => true
pc.full?       # => false
pc.full_valid? # => false
pc.outcode     # => "W1A"
pc.incode      # => nil
pc.area        # => "W"
pc.district    # => "1A"
pc.sector      # => nil
pc.unit        # => nil

Postcodes are converted to a normal or canonical form:

pc = UKPostcode.parse("w1a1aa")
pc.valid?      # => true
pc.area        # => "W"
pc.district    # => "1A"
pc.sector      # => "1"
pc.unit        # => "AA
pc.to_s        # => "W1A 1AA"

And mistakes with I/1 and O/0 are corrected:

pc = UKPostcode.parse("WIA OAA")
pc.valid?      # => true
pc.area        # => "W"
pc.district    # => "1A"
pc.sector      # => "0"
pc.unit        # => "AA
pc.to_s        # => "W1A 0AA"

Invalid postcodes:

pc = UKPostcode.parse("Not Valid")
pc.valid?      # => false
pc.full?       # => false
pc.full_valid? # => false
pc.area        # => nil
pc.to_s        # => "Not valid"

Tips for Rails

You can normalise postcodes on assignment by overriding a setter method (this assumes that you have a postcode field on the model):

def postcode=(str)
  super UKPostcode.parse(str).to_s
end

Invalid postcodes are parsed to instances of InvalidPostcode, whose #to_s method gives the original input, so an invalid postcode will be presented back to the user as originally entered.

To validate, use something like this:

class PostcodeValidator < ActiveModel::EachValidator
  def validate_each(record, attribute, value)
    ukpc = UKPostcode.parse(value)
    unless ukpc.full_valid?
      record.errors.add(attribute, "not recognised as a UK postcode")
    end
  end
end

class Address
  validates :postcode, presence: true, postcode: true
end

For users of version 1.x

The interface has changed significantly, so code that worked with version 1.x will not work with version 2.x without changes.

Specifically:

As a gem

In your Gemfile:

gem "uk_postcode", "~> 2.1.0"

Testing

To run the test suite:

$ rake

The full list of UK postcodes is not included in the repository due to its size, but will be fetched automatically from mySociety.

If you are running an automatic build process, please find a way to cache these files between runs.

Occasionally asked questions

Does it support Father Christmas's postcode?

No. The old postcode was SAN TA1; the current one is XM4 5HQ. (XMAS HQ, geddit?) For most people, these probably aren't useful, as they don't correspond to actual locations, and are only used by Royal Mail internally.

See "Adding additional formats" if you'd like to support this.

Does it support BFPO?

No. They're not really postcodes, though they serve a similar purpose. Some of them are abroad; some of them are on boats that move around; some of them are ephemeral and exist only for particular operations. This library has been designed with the assumption that most people won't want to handle BFPO codes, and that those that do can do so explicitly.

See "Adding additional formats" if you'd like to support them.

The new BF1 format postcodes can be parsed, although their location is always unknown.

Adding additional formats

Parsing is implemented via the ParserChain class, which attempts to parse the supplied text via each parser in turn. The UKPostcode.parse method is effectively a thin wrapper that does this:

ParserChain.new(GiroPostcode, GeographicPostcode, InvalidPostcode)
  .parse(str)

Each class passed to ParserChain.new must implement a class method parse(str) and return either a postcode object (see AbstractPostcode) or nil. The first non-nil object is returned.

InvalidPostcode is at the end of the chain to ensure that a postcode object is always returned.

To add an additional class, subclass AbstractPostcode, implement the abstract methods, and instantiate your own ParserChain.

Licensing

You may use this library according to the terms of the MIT License; see COPYING.txt for details.