Australia (AUS)
Custom Preferences
Australia supports the following custom preferences and output fields.
Preference | Description |
---|---|
CALCULATE_CENTERLINE_ PROJECTION_OF_POINT | Computes the closest point on the
street from the parcel point. Default = disabled.
Note: This feature requires that a point-level
geocoding dataset is installed.
|
CENTERLINE_OFFSET_UNITS | When USE_CENTERLINE_OFFSET is enabled, this specifies the unit type for the centerline offset. Valid values = feet, meters. Default = meters. Supported only in forward geocoding. |
KEY_STREET_FRONTAGE | When set to true, requests GNAF street frontage points. Default = false. |
KEY_GNAF_ORIGINAL | When set to true, returns the GNAF original point coordinates. Default = false. |
KEY_POSTAL_CODE_OVERRIDE | When set to true, a matching postal code will match even if the city/suburb does not match. Default = false. |
KEY_RETURN_STREET_TYPE_ABBREVS | When set to true, returns the abbreviated street types instead of the Australia default of fully spelled-out type. Default = false. |
Custom Output Fields
Output Field | Description |
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STREET_TYPE_ABB | The abbreviation for the street type, which is spelled out by default. |
ORIGINAL_LATITUDE | The original GNAF latitude. |
ORIGINAL_LONGITUDE | The original GNAF longitude. |
UD_ORIGINAL_LATITUDE | The original latitude returned from a point-based user dictionary. |
UD_ORIGINAL_LONGITUDE | The original longitude returned from a point-based user dictionary. |
GNAF_PARCEL_ID | The GNAF parcel identifier. |
GNAF_PID | The GNAF Persistent Identifier (GNAF PID) is a 14-character alphanumeric string that uniquely identifies each GNAF address. The PID is constructed from a combination of the major address fields of the GNAF Dictionary. An example of a GNAF PID is: GAACT718519668 |
GNAF_PRINCIPAL_PID | The Persistent Identifier of the principal address. |
GEOCONTAINMENT | This specifies whether the returned coordinates are inside or outside the address boundary. Values are YES for coordinates within, or NO for coordinates outside the boundary. |
GEOFEATURE | This field returns a geocode feature type if that was not provided in other GNAF fields. GEOFEATURE corresponds to Geocode Types (GEOCODE_TYPE_AUT Codes) that are described in the PSMA Data Product Description Version 2.7 (Aug. 2012). |
GNAF_ADDRESS_CLASS | The GNAF address classification. |
GNAF_SA1 | The GNAF Statistical Area Level 1 (SA1) identifier. |
LEVEL_NUMBER |
The number of a floor or level in a multistory building. For example, Floor 2, 17 Jones Street The GNAF database includes level information for some Australian states. Level information may be associated with unit information, but not necessarily. If the GNAF database contains multiple records with the same level, the level information is returned only if the input address contains unique content (such as a unit number). If the GNAF dictionary has level information for an address, that information is returned with the matched candidate. The correct level information is returned (when available) even if the input address did not include level information, or if the input had the wrong level information. If the input address has level information but the GNAF database does not include level information for the matching address, then the input level information is discarded since it is not validated in the GNAF data. |
LEVEL_TYPE |
The label used for a floor of a multistory building. For example, "Level" or "Floor". In this example, the level type is "Level": Suite 3 Level 7, 17 Jones Street In this example, Suite 3 is a unit. |
LOT_NUMBER | Lot numbers are returned for GNAF candidates because some rural addresses do not have adequate physical or house number information. |
MESH_BLOCK_ID | A Meshblock is the smallest geographic unit for which statistical data is collected by the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS). Meshblocks usually contain a minimum of 20 to 50 households. This is about one fifth the size of a Collection District (CD). You can use the Meshblock ID to do additional attributions against your own data. |