Many navigation apps are compatible with what3words, meaning you can find a what3words address in the what3words app and then use it in your favourite navigation app with just one tap. Simply follow these steps .

A location pin is impossible to describe over the phone or radio, to write down, or to enter into a speech recognition system. what3words offers a more flexible way to pass location information between people and machines or devices, online or offline.


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To share a what3words address over the phone or in a text message you need phone signal. To load maps, or share in other apps or social media, you need a data connection. 

 Watch our CEO Chris explain how what3words works offline here .

What3words (stylized as what3words) is a proprietary geocode system designed to identify any location on the surface of Earth with a resolution of about 3 metres (9.8 ft). It is owned by What3words Limited, based in London, England. The system encodes geographic coordinates into three permanently fixed dictionary words. For example, the front door of 10 Downing Street in London is identified by ///slurs.this.shark.[2]

What3words differs from most location encoding systems in that it uses words rather than strings of numbers or letters, and the pattern of this mapping is not obvious; the algorithm mapping locations to words is copyrighted.[3]

Founded by Chris Sheldrick, Jack Waley-Cohen, Mohan Ganesalingam and Michael Dent, What3words was launched in July 2013.[4][5] Sheldrick and Ganesalingam conceived the idea when Sheldrick, working as an event organizer, struggled to get bands and equipment to music venues using inadequate address information.[6] Sheldrick tried using GPS coordinates to locate the venues, but decided that words were better than numbers after a one-digit error led him to the wrong location. He credits a mathematician friend for the idea of dividing the world into 3-metre (10 ft) squares, and the linguist Jack Waley-Cohen with using memorable words.[7] The company was incorporated in March 2013[8] and a patent application for the core technology filed in April 2013.[9] In November 2013, What3words raised US$500,000 of seed funding.[10]

What3words originally sold "OneWord" addresses, which were stored in a database for a yearly fee,[5] but this offering was discontinued[11] as the company switched to a business-to-business model.[12] In 2015, the company was targeting logistics companies, post offices, and couriers.[7]

Since 2019, What3words has seen adoption by emergency services, who can use it for free[17] and participate in media campaigns provided by What3Words[18] to promote the app.[19][20][21] By September 2021, more than 85 percent of British emergency services teams used What3words, including the Metropolitan Police and London Fire Brigade.[22][23] Support has also been added to the Australian Government's Triple Zero Emergency Plus App.[24]

What3words divides the world into a grid of 57 trillion 3-by-3-metre (10 ft  10 ft) squares, each of which has a three-word address. The company says they do their best to remove homophones and spelling variations;[33] however, at least 32 pairs of English near-homophones still remain.[34]

Wordlists are available in 50 languages,[35] each of which uses a list of 25,000 words (except for English, which uses 40,000 to cover sea as well as land).[36] Translations are not direct, as direct translations to some languages could produce more than three words. Rather, territories are localised "considering linguistic sensitivities and nuances".[37] Densely populated areas have strings of short words to aid more frequent usage; while less populated areas, such as the North Atlantic, use more complex words.[37][7]

In a 2019 blog, open standards advocate and technology expert Terence Eden questioned the cultural neutrality of using words rather than the numbers generated by map coordinates. "Numbers are (mostly) culturally neutral." he said, "Words are not. Is mile.crazy.shade a respectful name for a war memorial? How about tribes.hurt.stumpy for a temple?"[23]

What3words state that similar addresses are spaced as far apart as possible to avoid confusion,[38] and that similarly sounding codes have a 1 in 2.5 million chance of pointing to locations near each other.[39]

However, security researcher Andrew Tierney calculates that 75% of What3words addresses contain plural words that also exist in singular form (or the reverse).[34] Co-founder and CEO Sheldrick responded that "Whilst the overwhelming proportion of similar-sounding three-word combinations will be so far apart that an error is obvious, there will still be cases where similar sounding word combinations are nearby."[39]

In September 2022, the Department for Culture, Media and Sport used What3words to direct mourners to the end of the queue to view the Queen lying in state in London. Of the first five codes published, four led to the wrong place,[41] including a suburb of London some 15 miles from the real end of the queue.[42] Officials later moved to an automated system to generate the identifiers, as they realised having people involved in the process resulted in typos.[41]

The company has pursued a policy of issuing copyright claims against individuals and organisations that have hosted or published files of the What3words algorithm or reverse-engineered code that replicates the service's functionality, such as the free and open source implementation WhatFreeWords; the whatfreewords.org website was taken down following a Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) take-down notice issued by What3words.[46] This policy has extended to removing comments on social media which refer to unauthorised versions. In late April 2021, a security researcher who had offered on Twitter to share WhatFreeWords software was contacted by What3Words's law firm, requiring him to delete the tweets and the software, and implying that legal action might follow non-compliance.[47]

If you have POSIX class support, you can use [[:alpha:]] for \w, [^[:alpha:]] for \W, [[:space:]] for \s, etc. But if we suppose that whitespace will always be a space and you want to extract the first three tokens between spaces, you don't really need even that.

matches three tokens separated by runs of spaces. (I put the spaces in brackets to make them stand out, and easy to extend if you want to include other characters than just a single regular ASCII space in the token separator set. For example, if your regex dialect accepts \t for tab, or you are able to paste a regular tab in its place, you could extend this to

Because of the way regular expressions work, the first three is easy because a regular expression engine will always return the first possible match on a line. If you want three tokens starting from the second, you have to put in a skip expression. Adapting the sed script above, that would be

I initially thought her approach was a bit out there, but I decided to see if it would help my young children think about what they say and how they say it. A few months in, I have to admit that this new system has led to a bit of enlightenment in my household. My 8-year-old now can express why she may not have chosen the right words. And she does seem to share fewer unnecessary (ahem: correcting-people) stories.

Another way to arrive at your three words is to use the approach outlined by Micah Daigle in which he explains how Asana (a project management tool) rebranded itself. While this article covers many aspects of rebranding, I adore and often refer to the part about how Asana came up with the words it considers to be the guiding star for its brand: empowering, purposeful, quirky, and approachable.

It was the wrong answer. Last year, something happened that dramatically changed my perspective. I wrote a book about these styles, and I started to hear from readers. As a new author, nothing was more gratifying than learning that my words mattered to someone else. Given the topic, I expected to hear some stories about giving. I was completely unprepared, though, for what rolled in from some readers:

I had planned to give this to our God-daughter, but did not once it arrived.

 The first page put me off. It was the "Christmas in three words". A good idea, but then the 3 words were not punchy and prevented me from wanting to read on.

Now that I have read on in order to review it, I think that the words are very well chosen. I want to send it to our God-daughter in retrospect, with an apology for page 1.

I think you need to think of a different title from "Christmas in 3 words", because "Historical, joyful and essential" just don't pack a punch. They are fine, though, as sub-headings for the text.

Good front cover and illustrations.

These three words describe the job description of those who serve as pastors. We are not only talking about those who serve as the pastor of local churches, but all of those who serve as spiritual leaders of groups of believers.

I tried searching online but most solutions are related to removing characters or removing 1st and last word in a text string or remove everything before or after a particular word (like "of", as in the last example, if I clear everything before "of" it result in the last eg come as "Paris" instead of "Plaster of Paris"). I haven't been able to find a solution on how I remove just the first 3 words.

A man puts on black gloves and climbs the White House fence. While reporters photograph him bemusedly, he runs at the White House and is intercepted by the Secret Service ERT. As he struggles with them, he pulls out a gun and accidentally shoots himself. Bleeding on the ground, he begs the agents to get something to the President and hands them a computer disk with three words on it: Fight the Future.

If we, what3words ltd, are ever unable to maintain the what3words technology or make arrangements for it to be maintained by a third-party (with that third-party being willing to make this same commitment), then we will release our source code into the public domain. We will do this in such a way and with suitable licences and documentation to ensure that any and all users of what3words, whether they are individuals, businesses, charitable organisations, aid agencies, governments or anyone else can continue to rely on the what3words system. ff782bc1db

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