NAME
   Geography::Countries - 2-letter, 3-letter, and numerical codes for
   countries.

SYNOPSIS
       use Geography::Countries;

       $country = country 'DE';  # 'Germany'
       @list    = country  666;  # ('PM', 'SPM', 666,
                                 #  'Saint Pierre and Miquelon', 1)

DESCRIPTION
   This module maps country names, and their 2-letter, 3-letter and
   numerical codes, as defined by the ISO-3166 maintenance agency [1], and
   defined by the UNSD.

 The "country" subroutine.
   This subroutine is exported by default. It takes a 2-letter, 3-letter or
   numerical code, or a country name as argument. In scalar context, it
   will return the country name, in list context, it will return a list
   consisting of the 2-letter code, the 3-letter code, the numerical code,
   the country name, and a flag, which is explained below. Note that not
   all countries have all 3 codes; if a code is unknown, the undefined
   value is returned.

   There are 3 categories of countries. The largest category are the
   current countries. Then there is a small set of countries that no longer
   exist. The final set consists of areas consisting of multiple countries,
   like *Africa*. No 2-letter or 3-letter codes are available for the
   second two sets. (ISO 3166-3 [3] defines 4 letter codes for the set of
   countries that no longer exist, but the author of this module was unable
   to get her hands on that standard.) By default, "country" only returns
   countries from the first set, but this can be changed by giving
   "country" an optional second argument.

   The module optionally exports the constants "CNT_F_REGULAR",
   "CNT_F_OLD", "CNT_F_REGION" and "CNT_F_ANY". These constants can also be
   important all at once by using the tag ":FLAGS". "CNT_F_ANY" is just the
   binary or of the three other flags. The second argument of "country"
   should be the binary or of a subset of the flags "CNT_F_REGULAR",
   "CNT_F_OLD", and "CNT_F_REGION" - if no, or a false, second argument is
   given, "CNT_F_REGULAR" is assumed. If "CNT_F_REGULAR" is set, regular
   (current) countries will be returned; if "CNT_F_OLD" is set, old, no
   longer existing, countries will be returned, while "CNT_F_REGION" is
   used in case a region (not necessarely) a country might be returned. If
   "country" is used in list context, the fifth returned element is one of
   "CNT_F_REGULAR", "CNT_F_OLD" and "CNT_F_REGION", indicating whether the
   result is a regular country, an old country, or a region.

   In list context, "country" returns a 5 element list. To avoid having to
   remember which element is in which index, the constants "CNT_I_CODE2",
   "CNT_I_CODE3", "CNT_I_NUMCODE", "CNT_I_COUNTRY" and "CNT_I_FLAG" can be
   imported. Those constants contain the indices of the 2-letter code, the
   3-letter code, the numerical code, the country, and the flag explained
   above, respectively. All index constants can be imported by using the
   ":INDICES" tag.

 The "code2", "code3", "numcode" and "countries" routines.
   All known 2-letter codes, 3-letter codes, numerical codes and country
   names can be returned by the routines "code2", "code3", "numcode" and
   "countries". None of these methods is exported by default; all need to
   be imported if one wants to use them. The tag ":LISTS" imports them all.
   In scalar context, the number of known codes or countries is returned.

REFERENCES
   The 2-letter codes come from the ISO 3166-1:1997 standard [2]. ISO 3166
   bases its list of country names on the list of names published by the
   United Nations. This list is published by the Statistical Division of
   the United Nations [4]. The UNSD uses 3-letter codes, and numerical
   codes [5]. The information about old countries [6] and regions [7] also
   comes from the United Nations.

   In a few cases, there was a conflict between the way how the United
   Nations spelled a name, and how ISO 3166 spells it. In most cases, is
   was word order (for instance whether *The republic of* should preceed
   the name, or come after the name. A few cases had minor spelling
   variations. In all such cases, the method in which the UN spelled the
   name was choosen; ISO 3166 claims to take the names from the UN, so we
   consider the UN authoritative.

   [1] ISO Maintenance Agency (ISO 3166/MA)
       *http://www.din.de/gremien/nas/nabd/iso3166ma/index.html*.

   [2] *Country codes*,
       *http://www.din.de/gremien/nas/nabd/iso3166ma/codlstp1.html*, 7
       September 1999.

   [3] ISO 3166-3, *Code for formerly used country names*.
       *http://www.din.de/gremien/nas/nabd/iso3166ma/info_pt3.html*.

   [4] United Nations, Statistics Division.
       *http://www.un.org/Depts/unsd/statdiv.htm*.

   [5] *Country or area codes in alphabetical order*.
       *http://www.un.org/Depts/unsd/methods/m49alpha.htm*, 26 August 1999.

   [6] *Codes added or changed*.
       *http://www.un.org/Depts/unsd/methods/m49chang.htm*, 26 August 1999.

   [7] *Geographical regions*.
       *http://www.un.org/Depts/unsd/methods/m49regin.htm*, 26 August 1999.

BUGS
   Looking up information using country names is far from perfect. Except
   for case and the amount of white space, the exact name as it appears on
   the list has to be given. *USA* will not return anything, but *United
   States* will.

DEVELOPMENT
   The current sources of this module are found on github,
   <git://github.com/Abigail/geography--countries.git>.

AUTHOR
   Abigail <mailto:[email protected]>.

COPYRIGHT and LICENSE
   Copyright (C) 1999, 2009 by Abigail

   Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a
   copy of this software and associated documentation files (the
   "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including
   without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish,
   distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to
   permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to
   the following conditions:

   The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included
   in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.

   THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS
   OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF
   MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT.
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