Locator role fields

Each locator role has fields that are used to store the information that is necessary for searching and displaying geocoding results. Below is a table of these fields with additional information about what they are used for, such as whether the field is used during the search process, for display purposes only, for displaying results on the map, or for prioritizing similar matches.

Locator role field usage

Field nameUsed for searchDescription

Place Join ID

JoinID to link alternate place names for a point of interest (POI) locator.

Place Name

Used for search

The formal name of a geocode match candidate, such as Paris or Starbucks.

Place Category

Used for search

The high-level category associated with a place, such as Food or Education.

Note:

Geocoding results can be filtered by these values.

Place Subcategory

Used for search

The lower-level category associated with a place, such as American food for the Food category or College for the Education category.

Note:

Geocoding results can be filtered by these values.

Address Join ID

JoinID to link alternate house numbers. Also used to collapse duplicate features in the reference data if features have been duplicated and given the same ID number.

House Number

Used for search

The house number associated with an address. Either House Number, House Number From, and House Number To or Building Name is required.

House Number From

Used for search

A value representing the beginning number of a range. It is not always the smallest number in the range. Either House Number, House Number From and House Number To, or Building Name is required.

House Number To

Used for search

A value representing the ending number of a range. It is not always the largest number in the range. Either House Number, House Number From and House Number To, or Building Name is required.

Parity

The parity of the house number range. The supported values are: Not applicable, NA, N/A, 0, D; Even, E, 1; Odd, O, 2; Mixed, M, Both, B, and 3.

Note:
  • When Even is specified, only even numbered house numbers will match to the record.
  • When Odd is specified, only odd numbered house numbers will match to the record.
  • If Mixed or Both are specified, all house numbers in the range will match for the record.

Distance

Used for search

This is the input field used with the Distance Marker role to specify distance values for each distance marker. This is not the same as the distance output field, which indicates how far the result is from the location that is passed in when geocoding.

Distance From

Used for search

A value representing the beginning number of a distance range. It is not always the smallest number in the range. This value is at the starting point of the digitized line.

Distance To

Used for search

A value representing the ending number of a distance range. It is not always the largest number in the range. This value is at the end point of the digitized line.

Distance Unit

Used for search

The distance unit associated with the distance value. The supported values are: KM, Kilometers, MI, Miles, M, and Meters.

Building Name

Used for search

The building name associated with an address. Either House Number, House Number From and House Number To, or Building Name is required.

Parcel Join ID

JoinID used to link Parcel records to PointAddress records to minimize duplicate geocoding results.

Parcel Name

Used for search

The value that represents the Parcel Identification Number (PIN), for example 17 011100120063.

Street Join ID

JoinID to link alternate street names. Also used to link PointAddress records to StreetAddress records to minimize duplicate geocoding results.

Prefix Direction

Used for search

The prefix direction of the address, such as East, West, North, or South.

Prefix Type

Used for search

The leading type of a street in an address, for example, the Spanish term Avenida in Avenida Central.

Street Name

Used for search

The street name of the address.

Suffix Type

Used for search

The trailing type of a street in an address, such as St, Blvd, or Ave.

Suffix Direction

Used for search

The suffix direction of the address, such as East, West, North, or South.

Full Street Name

The full street name of the address. This value is used for display purposes and is part of the output label unless it is not used. In the case where it is not used, the street components are concatenated together with spaces for the output label.

Note:

Applies to countries where street types are concatenated, such as Germany.

Unit

Used for search

The unit value of the address, such as 201 in an address that contains Unit 201.

Unit From

Used for search

The unit starting value for the range associated with an address.

Unit To

Used for search

The unit ending value for the range associated with an address.

Unit Type

Used for search

The unit type of the address, such as Apartment or Suite.

Level

Used for search

The level of the address, such as Mezzanine or 2 in Floor 2.

Level Type

Used for search

The level type of the address, such as Floor in Floor 2.

Building Unit

Used for search

The building unit of the address, such as M in building M.

Building Unit Type

Used for search

The building unit type of the address, such as building in building M.

Side

The side of the street that the address is on, such as L or R in the USA.

Block Join ID

JoinID to link alternate block names.

Block

Used for search

The name of the block-level administrative division for a candidate. A block is the smallest administrative area for a country. It can be described as a subdivision of a sector or neighborhood, or a named city block. Not commonly used.

Sector Join ID

JoinID to link to alternate sector names.

Sector

Used for search

The name of the sector-level administrative division for a candidate. A sector is a subdivision of a neighborhood or district, or represents a collection of blocks. Not commonly used.

Neighborhood Join ID

JoinID to link alternate neighborhood names.

Neighborhood

Used for search

The name of the neighborhood-level administrative division for a candidate. A neighborhood is a subsection of a city or district.

District Join ID

JoinID to link alternate district names.

District

Used for search

The name of the district-level administrative division for a candidate. A subdivision of a city.

City Join ID

JoinID to link alternate city names.

City

Used for search

The name of the city-level administrative division for a candidate. A city is a subdivision of a subregion or region.

Metro Area Join ID

JoinID to link alternate metro names.

Metro Area

Used for search

The name of the metropolitan area-level administrative division for a candidate. An urban area consisting of a large city and the smaller cities surrounding it. Can potentially intersect multiple subregions or regions. An example is Kolkata Metropolitan Area in India.

Subregion Join ID

JoinID to link alternate subregion names.

Subregion

Used for search

The name of the subregion-level administrative division for a candidate. A subregion is a subdivision of a region.

Region Join ID

JoinID to link alternate region names.

Region

Used for search

The name of the region-level administrative division for a candidate. This is a subdivision of a country or territory. Typically, the largest administrative area for a country if the Territory administrative division is not used. These values are used to apply regional geocoding logic, for example, to help create different forms of state highways that are specific to each region or state. For example, CA-38 is equal to STHY 38 in the state of California. The region abbreviation in this example is CA.

Region Abbreviation

Used for search

An abbreviated region name, such as CA for California.

Territory Join ID

JoinID to link alternate territory names.

Territory

Used for search

The name of the territory-level administrative division for a candidate. Subdivision of country. Not commonly used. The Sudeste macroregion of Brazil, which encompasses the states of Espírito Santo, Minas Gerais, Rio de Janeiro and São Paulo, is an example.

Zone Join ID

JoinID to link alternate zone names.

Zone

Used for search

Any administrative area that doesn't fit into the above administrative hierarchy.

Postal Join ID

JoinID to link alternate postal values.

Postal

Used for search

An alphanumeric address element defining the primary postal code, for example, V7M 2B4 for a Canadian postal code and 92374 for a USA postal code.

Postal Extension Join ID

JoinID used for deduplicating geometry.

Postal Extension

Used for search

An alphanumeric address element defining the postal code extension, for example, 8110 in USA postal code 92373-8110.

Country Join ID

JoinID to link alternate country names.

Country

Used for search

The name of the highest administrative division for a candidate. This is the country name.

Country Code

Used for search

A three-character code for a country, such as CAN for Canada. A list of supported countries and codes is available in the Geocode coverage map.

Language Code

Used for search

A three-character language code representing the language of the address, such as ENG for English.

Rank

A floating-point number value indicating the importance of a result relative to other results with the same name. For example, there are cities in France and Texas named Paris. Paris, France, has a greater population than Paris, Texas, so it has a higher rank. The smaller numbers represent higher-ranked features. Rank is used to sort results for ambiguous queries such as Lincoln, where no additional information (state) is available. Rank values are based on population or feature type.

Display X

For PointAddress, Parcel, and POI locators, this value represents the actual location of the address (that is, the building or parcel centroid). It differs from the x-value, which is derived from a location along the street or the street entry for an address. For all other locators, this value is equal to the x-value. Values should be in the same coordinate system as the primary reference data’s geometry.

Display Y

For PointAddress, Parcel, and POI locators, this value represents the actual location of the address (that is, the building or parcel centroid). It differs from the y-value, which is derived from a location along the street or the street entry for an address. For all other locators, this value is equal to the y-value. Values should be in the same coordinate system as the primary reference data’s geometry.

Min X

The Min X, Max X, Min Y, and Max Y values can be combined to set the map extent for displaying a geocode result. Values should be in the same coordinate system as the primary reference data’s geometry.

Max X

The Min X, Max X, Min Y, and Max Y values can be combined to set the map extent for displaying a geocode result. Values should be in the same coordinate system as the primary reference data’s geometry.

Min Y

The Min X, Max X, Min Y, and Max Y values can be combined to set the map extent for displaying a geocode result. Values should be in the same coordinate system as the primary reference data’s geometry.

Max Y

The Min X, Max X, Min Y, and Max Y values can be combined to set the map extent for displaying a geocode result. Values should be in the same coordinate system as the primary reference data’s geometry.

Phone

The primary phone number of a place. For other searches, such as address, intersection, and postal code, the field is empty. For example, for Knott's Berry Farm, Phone is (714)220-5200.

URL

The URL of the primary website for a place. For other searches, such as address, intersection, and postal code, the field is empty. For example, for the University of Georgia, URL is http://www.uga.edu/.

Primary Name Indicator

Used for search

If the reference data is normalized and the primary table does not contain name values, but the alternate name table does, the Primary Name Indicator field can be mapped to a field in the alternate name table that contains a value indicating whether the record is the primary name. The supported values are: true, Y, Yes, 1, false, N, No, or 0.

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