this post was submitted on 10 Aug 2023
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Repost from Reddit: https://www.reddit.com/r/dataisbeautiful/comments/8qt94a/endianess_of_date_and_address_formats_in_europe/

On the reddit comments some user wrote the address format for Russia is wrong on this map, they use big-endian as well.

Also Hungary is the only country in Europe where we use big endianness in names, aka Eastern name order: surname first, firstname second.

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[โ€“] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

In the Dutch example above, it's house numbers 2-34 in one particular street.

Amsterdam, population 1 million, is divided into roughly 100 4 digit postal numbers (1000, 1001, etc.), that's the same as Budapest and many places.

But I think at one point they then added on the additional postal code letters (AA, AB, ..., ZZ). By adding two letters you can potentially further divide each of the 4 digit postal numbers. 100 x 26 x 26 = 67600 possible postcodes.

In theory, Budapest could easily transition to that. Everyone keeps their existing 4 digit postal number, just add 2 or 3 letters. I googled and Budapest has 200 postcodes. So 200 x 26 x 26 x 22 = 3.5 million postcodes. No need to write the street, number or town anymore. Just a postal code.

I don't know how UK postcodes work, but I think they have an older/mixed system where the city or area is abbreviated. So in the above example for the BBC, the postcode starts with SW because London is in the South West.

[โ€“] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago

On the UK post codes, you're pretty close to correct.

In the first part of the code, you've got 1-2 letters, which is the postcode area and usually based on a city name (W is West London in the BBC example). After the letters you've got 1-2 numbers (or a number followed by a letter, as in W1A). This gives a more granular division of the area, so it'll often refer to smaller towns.

The second part is used to narrow it down to a small group of actual addresses, although the number and area it covers varies.

I went down a bit of a Wikipedia rabbit hole while checking a couple of bits about the format, and learnt that there are actually a few special cases/non-geographic post codes, including the postcode XMA 5HQ, which is specifically for letters to Santa.