| Subject: | Very clever, very smart, does what... |  
| Summary: | Package rating comment |  
| Messages: | 5 |  
| Author: | Richard Keizer |  
| Date: | 2008-12-19 18:36:35 |  
| Update: | 2009-01-28 19:35:52 |  
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Richard Keizer rated this package as follows:
| Utility:  | Good | 
| Consistency:  | Good | 
| Examples:  | Good | 
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  Richard Keizer - 2008-12-19 18:36:35  
Very clever, very smart, does what it's supposed to do 
  
  Richard Keizer - 2008-12-19 18:42:05 -  In reply to message 1 from Richard Keizer 
Very good job on the nameparser, take notice on the fact that a person can have multiple titles. 
dr. prof. John Doe won't parse right... shouldn't be that hard to implement.. 
again: very good job on this one 
  
  rishi kapoor - 2008-12-20 19:07:10 -  In reply to message 1 from Richard Keizer 
go to hell 
  
  G. Miernicki - 2008-12-22 21:29:35 -  In reply to message 2 from Richard Keizer 
Thanks for the positive feedback Keizer. I will consider recoding the algorithm to allow for multiple titles in v1.1. 
 
Best Regards, 
 
G 
  
  G. Miernicki - 2009-01-28 19:35:52 -  In reply to message 2 from Richard Keizer 
After more thought, I've concluded that a person usually only has at most ONE title prefixes their name. Other occurrences where a professor is a doctor denote this by calling them: 
 
Professor John Doe, M.D. 
 
not 
 
Professor Doctor John Doe. 
 
Not only would the second case be hard to day but it would be gramatically incorrect. 
  
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