[Wish List entry 602] Type-ahead for place-names to ignore leading commas and white spaces
Posted: 01 Jun 2023 13:27
Background - some users of FH organise their place-names to put all countries, etc. in the same "column" (where a column is defined by commas). When I tried this, I immediately ran into problems trying to enter a place-name of "Australia" (say) against an event because I could never remember whether the leading commas were space-comma-space-comma-space at the front or comma-space-comma-space or ...
Proposal - that the type-ahead facility when entering a place-name against an event or attribute or anywhere else that a place-name is needed, disregards any leading spaces or leading commas for matching purposes. For instance, if a place-name of ", , Australia" is already on file, then typing "Austra" (say) - without the leading spaces or commas - should offer up ", , Australia" as soon as it matches the "payload" characters.
Similarly, if I get the space / comma combo wrong, then typing " ,,Austra" (say) should offer up ", , Australia" as soon as it matches the "payload" characters.
Advantages - ease of entry; consistent data.
PS - I don't actually use leading commas and spaces myself - partly (but only partly) because of my inability to program my muscle memory to remember the correct combination of commas and spaces.
Proposal - that the type-ahead facility when entering a place-name against an event or attribute or anywhere else that a place-name is needed, disregards any leading spaces or leading commas for matching purposes. For instance, if a place-name of ", , Australia" is already on file, then typing "Austra" (say) - without the leading spaces or commas - should offer up ", , Australia" as soon as it matches the "payload" characters.
Similarly, if I get the space / comma combo wrong, then typing " ,,Austra" (say) should offer up ", , Australia" as soon as it matches the "payload" characters.
Advantages - ease of entry; consistent data.
PS - I don't actually use leading commas and spaces myself - partly (but only partly) because of my inability to program my muscle memory to remember the correct combination of commas and spaces.