NAME

Business::ISIN - validate International Securities Identification Numbers

VERSION

0.12

SYNOPSIS

    use Business::ISIN;

    my $isin = new Business::ISIN 'US459056DG91';

    if ( $isin->is_valid ) {
	print "$isin is valid!\n";
	# or: print $isin->get() . " is valid!\n";
    } else {
	print "Invalid ISIN: " . $isin->error() . "\n";
	print "The check digit I was expecting is ";
	print Business::ISIN::check_digit('US459056DG9') . "\n";
    }

REQUIRES

Perl5, Locale::Country, Carp

DESCRIPTION

Business::ISIN is a class which validates ISINs (International Securities Identification Numbers), the codes which identify shares in much the same way as ISBNs identify books. An ISIN consists of two letters, identifying the country of origin of the security according to ISO 3166, followed by nine characters in [A-Z0-9], followed by a decimal check digit.

The new() method constructs a new ISIN object. If you give it a scalar argument, it will use the argument to initialize the object's value. Here, no attempt will be made to check that the argument is valid.

The set() method sets the ISIN's value to a scalar argument which you give. Here, no attempt will be made to check that the argument is valid. The method returns the object, to allow you to do things like $isin->set("GB0004005475")->is_valid.

The get() method returns a string, which will be the ISIN's value if it is syntactically valid, and undef otherwise. Interpolating the object reference in double quotes has the same effect (see the synopsis).

The is_valid() method returns true if the object contains a syntactically valid ISIN. (Note: this does not guarantee that a security actually exists which has that ISIN.) It will return false otherwise, i.e. if one of the following is true:

  • The string does not consist of two letters followed by nine characters in [A-Z0-9] followed by one decimal digit (but case is unimportant);

  • The two letters are not a legal ISO 3166 country code (but case is unimportant);

  • The check digit does not correspond to the other eleven characterrs.

If the string was not a syntactically valid ISIN, then the error() method will return a string explaining why not, i.e. which is the first of the above reasons that applied. Otherwise, error() will return undef.

check_digit() is an ordinary subroutine and not a class method. It takes a string of the first eleven characters of an ISIN as an argument (e.g. "US459056DG9"), and returns the corresponding check digit, calculated using the so-called 'double-add-double' algorithm.

DIAGNOSTICS

check_digit() will croak with the message 'Invalid data' if you pass it an unsuitable argument.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

Thanks to Peter Dintelmann (Peter.Dintelmann@Dresdner-Bank.com) for help debugging this module.

AUTHOR

David Chan <david@sheetmusic.org.uk>

COPYRIGHT

Copyright (C) 2001, David Chan. All rights reserved. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.