Parsing, validating and creating phone numbers
You can install the phone library as a gem
gem sources -a http://gemcutter.org gem install phone
Or as a Rails plugin
script/plugin install git://github.com/carr/phone.git
The biggest updating is the namespacing problem fixed that a lot of people were having. You now use phone by refering to
Phoner::Phone
You can initialize a new phone object with the number, area code, country code and extension number
Phoner::Phone.new('5125486', '91', '385')
or
Phoner::Phone.new(:number => '5125486', :area_code => '91', :country_code => '385', :extension => '143')
You can create a new phone object by parsing from a string. Phoner::Phone does it’s best to detect the country and area codes:
Phoner::Phone.parse '+385915125486' Phoner::Phone.parse '00385915125486'
If the country or area code isn’t given in the string, you must set it, otherwise it doesn’t work:
Phoner::Phone.parse '091/512-5486', :country_code => '385' Phoner::Phone.parse '(091) 512 5486', :country_code => '385'
If you feel that it’s tedious, set the default country code once (in your config/environment.rb):
Phoner::Phone.default_country_code = '385' Phoner::Phone.parse '091/512-5486' Phoner::Phone.parse '(091) 512 5486'
Same goes for the area code:
Phoner::Phone.parse '451-588', :country_code => '385', :area_code => '47'
or
Phoner::Phone.default_country_code = '385' Phoner::Phone.default_area_code = '47' Phoner::Phone.parse '451-588'
Like it’s stated above, Phone does it’s best to automatically detect the country and area code while parsing. Do do this, phone uses data stored in data/countries.yml
.
Each country code can have a regular expression named area_code
that describes how the area code for that particular country looks like.
If an area_code
regular expression isn’t specified, the default, Phoner::Phone::DEFAULT_AREA_CODE
(correct for the US) is used.
Validating is very relaxed, basically it strips out everything that’s not a number or ‘+’ character:
Phoner::Phone.valid? 'blabla 091/512-5486 blabla'
Formating is done via the format
method. The method accepts a Symbol
or a String
.
When given a string, it interpolates the string with the following fields:
-
%c - country_code (385)
-
%a - area_code (91)
-
%A - area_code with leading zero (091)
-
%n - number (5125486)
-
%f - first @@n1_length characters of number (configured through Phoner::Phone.n1_length), default is 3 (512)
-
%l - last characters of number (5486)
-
%x - the extension number
pn = Phoner::Phone.parse('+385915125486') pn.to_s # => "+385915125486" pn.format("%A/%f-%l") # => "091/512-5486" pn.format("+ %c (%a) %n") # => "+ 385 (91) 5125486"
When given a symbol it is used as a lookup for the format in the Phoner::Phone.named_formats
hash.
pn.format(:europe) # => "+385 (0) 91 512 5486" pn.format(:us) # => "(234) 123 4567" pn.format(:default_with_extension) # => "+3851234567x143"
You can add your own custom named formats like so:
Phoner::Phone.named_formats[:short] = '%A/%n1-%n2' pn.format(:short) # => 091/512-5486
Parse testing for different countries.
Currently tested on:
- AU
-
Australia
- BA
-
Bosnia and Herzegovina
- BE
-
Belgium
- DE
-
Germany
- FR
-
France
- GB
-
United Kingdom
- HR
-
Croatia
- HU
-
Hungary
- NL
-
Netherlands
- RS
-
Serbia
- SE
-
Sweden
- SI
-
Slovenia
- UA
-
Ukraine
- US
-
United States
- ZA
-
South Africa
There’s an issue with Germany and area codes.
Copyright © 2010 Tomislav Car, Infinum
Don Morrison, Michael Squires, Todd Eichel (Fooala, Inc.), chipiga, Etienne Samson, Luke Randall