It's a bit off topic but the thing that drives me mad is when Internet sites require a postcode when you are registering - I was trying to sign up for Flikr a while back and the site wouldn't accept 'n/a'; 'na' etc
Have you told Halifax? I guess that might be the first step in getting it sorted.It infuriates me that certain company websites don't allow users with apostrophies in their names to enter the name correctly! Just signed up for a Halifax credit card and the online application would not accept the apostrophe in my surname. So, assuming I'm approved, do I end up with a credit card that reflects my name incorrectly because I had to enter it without my beloved apostrophe!?
There may be valid reasons for not allowing apostrophes. I work with databases and have seen apostrophies cause issues around such areas as data matching, transformation rules and XML incompatibilities.
You'll see these data standards applied more in healthcare and finance systems than anywhere else.
[FONT="]Is nobody on this thread capable of configuring the character set on his or her computer? Have you never heard of ISO 8859-1 or ISO 10646? Or are you all still playing around with 7 bit jobs or doing proprietary encoding? There should not be any problem with letters with diacritic marks for either data processing or interoperability. An immense amount of work has gone into this in the standards area, so just follow international standards, and you should have no problems (or your problems should be significantly reduced).[/FONT]Systems can't deal with the apostrophe....Might collapse completely trying to deal with a fada!
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