Address

Address is a Go library that validates and formats addresses using data generated from Google's Address Data Service.
Installation
Install the library using Go modules. For example: go get -u github.com/Boostport/address
.
Creating Addresses
To create a new address, use New()
. If the address is invalid, an error will be returned.
package main
import (
"errors"
"log"
"github.com/Boostport/address"
)
func main() {
addr, err := address.NewValid(
address.WithCountry("AU"),
address.WithName("John Citizen"),
address.WithOrganization("Some Company Pty Ltd"),
address.WithStreetAddress([]string{
"525 Collins Street",
}),
address.WithLocality("Melbourne"),
address.WithAdministrativeArea("VIC"),
address.WithPostCode("3000"),
)
if err != nil {
if errors.Is(err, address.ErrInvalidCountryCode) {
log.Fatalf("Invalid country code")
}
}
}
A note about administrative areas, localities and dependent localities
An address may contain the following subdivisions:
- Administrative areas, such as a state, province, island, etc.
- Localities such as cities.
- Dependent localities such as districts, suburbs, etc.
When creating an address, certain countries have a pre-defined list of administrative areas, localities and dependent localities.
In these cases, you MUST use the appropriate key when calling WithAdministrativeArea()
, WithLocality()
and WithDependentLocality()
,
otherwise, the address will fail validation.
In terms of the keys, for administrative areas we use the ISO 3166-2 subdivision codes from Google's data set where possible. If there is no
ISO 3166-2 code available, we use the key defined in Google's data set. In these cases, the key is a unicode string (could be in languages other than
English).
For localities and dependent localities, there are generally no ISO codes, so we use the key defined in Google's data set. The key is a unicode string
and can be in a language other than English.
The reason for doing this is that when storing an address into a database, we need to store the values in a canonical form. Since these keys are
very stable (in general), they are safe to store. If we need to provide a visual representation of the address, we can then use the key and a language
to choose the appropriate display names.
This also allows us to do things such as rendering Canadian addresses both in French and English using a canonical address.
The library contains helpers where you can access these keys and the display names in different languages. More information available below.
Formatting Addresses
There are 2 formatters, the DefaultFormatter
and a PostalLabelFormatter
.
In addition, there 2 outputters, the StringOutputter
and the HTMLOutputter
. The outputter takes the formatted
address from the formatters and turn them into their respective string or HTML representations. The Outputter
is
an interface, so it's possible to implement your own version of the outputter if desired.
In some countries such as China, the address is formatted as major-to-minor (i.e. country -> administrative division -> locality ...).
It's possible to format it using a latinized format (address -> dependent locality -> locality ...) by setting the Latinize
field in
the formatter to true
.
This example shows the difference between the 2 formatters and outputters (error checking omitted for brevity):
package main
import (
"fmt"
"github.com/Boostport/address"
)
func main() {
addr, _ := address.NewValid(
address.WithCountry("AU"),
address.WithName("John Citizen"),
address.WithOrganization("Some Company Pty Ltd"),
address.WithStreetAddress([]string{
"525 Collins Street",
}),
address.WithLocality("Melbourne"),
address.WithAdministrativeArea("VIC"),
address.WithPostCode("3000"),
)
defStringFormatter := address.DefaultFormatter{
Output: address.StringOutputter{},
}
defHTMLFormatter := address.DefaultFormatter{
Output: address.HTMLOutputter{},
}
postalStringFormatter := address.PostalLabelFormatter{
Output: address.StringOutputter{},
OriginCountryCode: "FR",
}
postalHTMLFormatter := address.PostalLabelFormatter{
Output: address.HTMLOutputter{},
OriginCountryCode: "FR",
}
lang := "en"
fmt.Println(defStringFormatter.Format(addr, lang))
fmt.Println(defHTMLFormatter.Format(addr, lang))
fmt.Println(postalStringFormatter.Format(addr, lang))
fmt.Println(postalHTMLFormatter.Format(addr, lang))
}
Zones
Zones are useful for calculating things like shipping costs or tax rates. A Zone
consists of multiple territories, with
each Territory
equivalent to a rule.
Territories are able to match addresses based on their Country
, AdministrativeArea
, Locality
, DependentLocality
and PostCode
.
Note that the Country
must be an ISO 3166-1 country code, and if there are pre-defined lists of AdministrativeArea
s, Locality
, and DependentLocality
for the country, the key must be used.
A quick example:
package main
import (
"fmt"
"github.com/Boostport/address"
)
func main() {
addr, _ := address.NewValid(
address.WithCountry("AU"),
address.WithName("John Citizen"),
address.WithOrganization("Some Company Pty Ltd"),
address.WithStreetAddress([]string{
"525 Collins Street",
}),
address.WithLocality("Melbourne"),
address.WithAdministrativeArea("VIC"),
address.WithPostCode("3000"),
)
freeShippingToQLDAndNSW := address.Zone{
{
Country: "AU",
AdministrativeArea: "NSW",
},
{
Country: "AU",
AdministrativeArea: "QLD",
},
}
fmt.Println(freeShippingToQLDAndNSW.Contains(addr))
victorianPostCodesExceptCarltonGetDiscount := address.Zone{
{
Country: "AU",
IncludedPostCodes: address.ExactMatcher{
Ranges: []address.PostCodeRange{
{
Start: 3000,
End: 3996,
},
{
Start: 8000,
End: 8873,
},
},
},
ExcludedPostCodes: address.ExactMatcher{
Matches: []string{"3053"},
},
},
}
fmt.Println(victorianPostCodesExceptCarltonGetDiscount.Contains(addr))
}
Address Data Format
In a lot of cases, you might need to display a form to the user to enter their address.
There is the ListCountries()
method to get a list of available countries in your chosen language
and the GetCountry()
method to get detailed address format information for a given country.
GetCountry()
returns a struct like so:
type CountryData struct {
Format string
LatinizedFormat string
Required []Field
Allowed []Field
DefaultLanguage string
AdministrativeAreaNameType FieldName
LocalityNameType FieldName
DependentLocalityNameType FieldName
PostCodeNameType FieldName
PostCodeRegex PostCodeRegexData
AdministrativeAreas map[string][]AdministrativeAreaData
}
The Format
and LatinizedFormat
fields are in Google's original formats (ex: %O%n%N%n%A%n%C %S %Z
for Australia).
A description of what the tokens represent is available here.
Required
and Allowed
represent fields that are required and allowed (not all allowed fields are required). The Field
type
can be converted to Google's token name by calling the Key()
method.
For administrative areas, the map contains a list of administrative areas grouped by the language they are in (the map's key).
Each list is sorted according to the language they are in. Administrative areas may contain localities, and localities
may contain dependent localities. In all cases, each element would have an ID that you should use when creating an address or a zone.
There may also be post code validation regex. There may be further structs nested inside to validate post codes for an administrative area,
locality or dependent locality. These are keyed using the appropriate ID from the list of administrative areas.
Generating Data
Directly in your environment
Install stringer: go get -u golang.org/x/tools/cmd/stringer
.
To generate the data and generate the String()
functions for the constants, simply run go generate
from the root of the project.
This will run stringer and the generator which will download the data from Google and convert the data into Go code.
Using docker
Run docker compose run generate
License
This library is licensed under the Apache 2 License.