At 2012-08-15 09:32, Paul_Koning@Dell.com wrote:
That's a perfectly valid wish but it's a UI matter, and it belongs in systems that have the space for such databases.
We could draw an arbitrary line to keep the number small. For example, there are (I think) about 540 existing IDs in the database, including all the links. If you draw that line at population 500,000, there are a little over 1000 cities that qualify, probably meaning (rough guess) the addition of 700-800 links - less than 80KB. I can't imagine that's an issue for any current embedded system, is it? Here's a sampling of the (mostly-not-well-known) cities on the 500K "bubble": Denpasar, Indonesia Lipetsk, Russia Dengta, China Tuxtla Gutiérrez, Mexico Songkhla, Thailand Mariupol, Ukraine Danjiangkou, China Chiclayo, Peru COPENHAGEN, Denmark Penglai, China Oaxaca de Juárez, Mexico Aba, Nigeria Astrakhan, Russia MACAO, China : Macao SAR Eskisehir, Turkey Shishi, China Kannur, India Ananindeua, Brazil Bokaro Steel City, India SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador Kolhapur, India Xinzhou, China Joinville, Brazil Dangyang, China Londrina, Brazil There might be cause to add some others below that line, like capital/commercial capital status, top "n" within a country (depending on area maybe), etc. It could also be completely or partially optional (e.g. 500k+, 100-500k, 50-100k pop files), allowing the specific implementation to choose to include as much or as little as they have room for. Include specific support for a "local" file that can override the stock database, and the implementation and user can do whatever they want. -- Alan Mintz <Alan_Mintz+TZ_IANA@Earthlink.net>