At the risk of interjection here on Russ' response-
Yes MS word does understand the structure of the "street address". In short
it correctly handles the <CR><LF> characters that any "current mailing
house" should also do. When the address field is "exported" (format is
irrelevant for this discussion) - it is exported as a single field with the
correct line break characters for a target that can deal with a single field
that has multiple lines. Even in Excel these will appear as a single line
unless you format the cell correctly, same in MS Access etc etc (you just
need to know what to do)
In the case of your direct mail house - some things you may want to check
#1 - Do they support "multi-line" fields for any of the fields (if they do -
you have should have absolutely nothing to worry about) OR......
#2 - Are they what I would call "old school" and expect a separate line for
every address line (which to be honest was a standard practice back in the
70's+ when I even architected some applications like that since it made
sense at the time in the mainframe/mini world)
If your mailing house are of the #2 category, then I'd suspect that they
have a finite limit of address lines (typically 3 or 4) that they will
accept and if they are any good at what they do - take the steps to delete
empty lines <within> a multi-line/multi-field "street address". You will
have to ask what happens for the address lines that exceed whatever the
limit is and what do they do when they encounter <CR> <LF> characters within
a single field. Outlook will allow you to create a very large "multi-line"
street address if one was so inclined (in fact Outlook allows a user to do a
number of things that don't make any sense at all in a conventional database
envirnoment under the auspices of being "user-friendly" when you try to
migrate Outlook data outside of Outlook - another issue for another day)
In short - in this case - may I respectfully suggest that neither Outlook or
your "mailing house" are "incorrect" in how items are treated - just may not
be talking the "same language" so one could ask - who needs to adapt to whom
in the grand scheme of things? (for what it's worth - in the next 2-3 weeks
we hope to have a comprehensive "ContactGenie Exporter" in beta that among
many other things deals with the issue of splitting address lines to a
user-defined number of lines for those locations that "have to have"
separate address line fields) .
Karl
__________________________________________
Karl Timmermans - The Claxton Group
ContactGenie - Importer 1.3 / DataPorter 2.0
"Power contact importers for MS Outlook '2000/2003"
http://www.contactgenie.com