50468
Since our postal codes are order like this (letter, number, letter) (number, letter, number) the result would be 26x10x26x10x26x10=17,576,000. There are 17,576,000 POSSIBLE postal codes in Canada.
Postal Codes in Canada are of the form LDLDLD where "L" represents a letter (A-Z) and "D" represents a digit (0-9). For example, Brigus has postal code A0A1K0.
Canada does not have "zip" codes. Canada uses a "postal code" system. A postal code contains three letters and three single digit numbers. First there is a letter, followed by a single digit number, followed by a letter. Then there is a space. Following the space is a single digit number, followed by a letter, followed by a single digit number. The genius of the postal code is that it allows mail to be sorted right to the individual street block or, in many cases, right to the individual building. As such, the Province of Ontario would have hundreds of thousands, perhaps over a million postal codes. All postal codes in Ontario, Canada, begin with the letters K, L, M, N, or P. Postal codes beginning with M are exclusively within the city of Toronto.
ZIP Codes are only for places in the United States. Many other countries, including India, have their own systems of postal codes. See the related question.
There is a different postal code for each town, and in big town like Paris there are several postal codes. One way of finding it is to run a quick search on google.fr, (enter the place name + "code postal"). This should return the postcode (a five-digit number). Another way is to enter the name and town of the person you are looking for in an online phone directory, like the "pages jaunes" (follow link for that one). The person has to be listed in the phone directory. The answer will include the full postal address including the zip code.
1820
1943
172
There are many countries with 5-digit postal codes, and 09327 could be in any of them.
Since our postal codes are order like this (letter, number, letter) (number, letter, number) the result would be 26x10x26x10x26x10=17,576,000. There are 17,576,000 POSSIBLE postal codes in Canada.
Postal Codes in Canada are of the form LDLDLD where "L" represents a letter (A-Z) and "D" represents a digit (0-9). For example, Brigus has postal code A0A1K0.
Many countries have postal codes in various formats, but Papua New Guinea, Madagascar, Iceland, the Faroe Islands, and Lesotho are the only places with three-digit postal codes.
Depending on the building number, the postal code on that street ranges from 4231701 to 4231730. Israel now uses a seven-digit postal code.
Canada does not have "zip" codes. Canada's mail coding system uses a "postal code" system. A postal code contains three letters and three single digit numbers. First there is a letter, followed by a single digit number, followed by a letter. Then there is a space. Following the space is a single digit number, followed by a letter, followed by a single digit number. The genius of the postal code is that it allows mail to be sorted right to the individual street block or, in many cases, right to the individual building. As such, Scarborough would have thousands of postal codes.
You would put in the postal code of the town you live. If you live in Lebanon, you will enter the postal code of your city for your Apple ID. There are 4 digit codes and also 8 digit codes.
Canada does not have "zip" codes. Canada uses a "postal code" system. A postal code contains three letters and three single digit numbers. First there is a letter, followed by a single digit number, followed by a letter. Then there is a space. Following the space is a single digit number, followed by a letter, followed by a single digit number. The genius of the postal code is that it allows mail to be sorted right to the individual street block or, in many cases, right to the individual building. As such, the Province of Ontario would have hundreds of thousands, perhaps over a million postal codes. All postal codes in Ontario, Canada, begin with the letters K, L, M, N, or P. Postal codes beginning with M are exclusively within the city of Toronto.
There are no 9-digit telephone area codes, anywhere in the world. If you mean your 9-digit U.S. ZIP Code (postal code), try the related link.