In message <YL89iirxN8Q9SlXS@hydra.ck.polsl.pl>, Piotr Strzyzewski <Piotr.Strzyzewski@polsl.pl> wrote:
On Mon, Jun 07, 2021 at 04:48:38PM -0700, Ronald F. Guilmette via db-wg wrote:
inetnum: A1.B1.C1.D1 - A2.B2.C2.D2
My parser wasn't expecting THAT!
That says a lot about the parser, as this is well described in documentation:
Although it may have escaped your attention, as a general matter, reality frequently diverges from documentation. In any case, it is easily possible to parse WHOIS records sufficiently well to do a multitude of useful things without consulting any documentation of the format. It can be done just by eyeballing what is fundamentally a rather simple syntax. Furthermore, as I noted, there are literally hundreds of thousands of objects in the APNIC data base. Of these only a single one had an inetnum: field that was splattered, needlessly, and for no apparently good reason, across multiple lines. (I hope to soon find out whether such pointless oddities are present also in the RIPE data base.) Regards, rfg