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Full Discussion: Where have you been?
The Lounge What is on Your Mind? Where have you been? Post 302152983 by blowtorch on Sunday 23rd of December 2007 12:57:51 AM
Old 12-23-2007
Where have you been?

Found this site where you can check boxes for countries where you've been and draws a map for you. It doesn't mean that you've seen the length and breadth of a country, though. Just being to a single city is enough to mark the whole country as 'visited'.

This is what my map looks like:
Image

Last edited by blowtorch; 01-03-2008 at 08:56 AM.. Reason: visited a new country!
 
URI::Heuristic(3)					User Contributed Perl Documentation					 URI::Heuristic(3)

NAME
URI::Heuristic - Expand URI using heuristics SYNOPSIS
use URI::Heuristic qw(uf_uristr); $u = uf_uristr("perl"); # http://www.perl.com $u = uf_uristr("www.sol.no/sol"); # http://www.sol.no/sol $u = uf_uristr("aas"); # http://www.aas.no $u = uf_uristr("ftp.funet.fi"); # ftp://ftp.funet.fi $u = uf_uristr("/etc/passwd"); # file:/etc/passwd DESCRIPTION
This module provides functions that expand strings into real absolute URIs using some built-in heuristics. Strings that already represent absolute URIs (i.e. that start with a "scheme:" part) are never modified and are returned unchanged. The main use of these functions is to allow abbreviated URIs similar to what many web browsers allow for URIs typed in by the user. The following functions are provided: uf_uristr($str) Tries to make the argument string into a proper absolute URI string. The "uf_" prefix stands for "User Friendly". Under MacOS, it assumes that any string with a common URL scheme (http, ftp, etc.) is a URL rather than a local path. So don't name your volumes after common URL schemes and expect uf_uristr() to construct valid file: URL's on those volumes for you, because it won't. uf_uri($str) Works the same way as uf_uristr() but returns a "URI" object. ENVIRONMENT
If the hostname portion of a URI does not contain any dots, then certain qualified guesses are made. These guesses are governed by the following environment variables: COUNTRY The two-letter country code (ISO 3166) for your location. If the domain name of your host ends with two letters, then it is taken to be the default country. See also Locale::Country. HTTP_ACCEPT_LANGUAGE, LC_ALL, LANG If COUNTRY is not set, these standard environment variables are examined and country (not language) information possibly found in them is used as the default country. URL_GUESS_PATTERN Contains a space-separated list of URL patterns to try. The string "ACME" is for some reason used as a placeholder for the host name in the URL provided. Example: URL_GUESS_PATTERN="www.ACME.no www.ACME.se www.ACME.com" export URL_GUESS_PATTERN Specifying URL_GUESS_PATTERN disables any guessing rules based on country. An empty URL_GUESS_PATTERN disables any guessing that involves host name lookups. COPYRIGHT
Copyright 1997-1998, Gisle Aas This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. perl v5.16.3 2012-02-11 URI::Heuristic(3)
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