front.phone is a Javascript library that identifies, validates and formats phone numbers.
The main goal of this project is to create a trustful component to input phone numbers and extract information from it. We can currently extract the phone's country code, national destination number, it's number and in some cases if it is a mobile number. The recommended input for it's use is in international notation.
We are compliant to the E.123 notation.
Depending on you application scope, you may want or not to use all countries available in this library. You can follow this rule:
- All countries:
vtex-phone-bundle.min.js
- Just some countries:
vtex-phone-core.min.js
+usa.js
+brazil.js
+ etc
front.phone checks phone countries files included, so if you include a new country file, it will recognize and validate as expected.
There's also an Angular.js filter: vtex-phone-filter.min.js
. (The bundle does not include the filter).
We currently cover these countries.
Didn't find your own? Feel free to contribute!
This functions extracts info from a number in international or national notation and also validate. You can pass the country code and national destination number (in this order) as a param, if you already know them.
// you can relax about usage of hiphens and other special characters, we'll strip
//it down internally later ;)
var number = "5521989898989";
var phone = vtex.phone.getPhoneInternational(number);
console.log(phone); // { countryCode: "55", nationalDestinationCode: "21",
//number: "998986565", isMobile: true, isValid: true }
var number = "5521989898989";
var phone = vtex.phone.getPhoneNational(number, "55"); // if you use this function,
//you MUST give the phone's countryCode
console.log(phone); // { countryCode: "55", nationalDestinationCode: "21",
//number: "998986565", isMobile: true, isValid: true }
This function is a bit different from the above function, it's a bit faster and uses only a big regex to validate the number, returning true
or false
.
// Given a phone number in international notation
var number = "+552189898989";
var result = vtex.phone.validate(number);
console.log(result); // true
If you already know the phone's country code you may include in a new param.
// Given a phone number in international notation
var number = "+552189898989";
var result = vtex.phone.validate(number, "55");
console.log(result); // true
For the use of this function you need first to get the phone's info. You can get formatted in three different notations: international, national or local. Remember that all of them follows E.123.
var number = "552189898989";
var phone = vtex.phone.getPhoneInternational(number);
var result = vtex.phone.format(phone, vtex.phone.INTERNATIONAL);
console.log(result); // +55 21 8989 8989
var number = "552189898989";
var phone = vtex.phone.getPhoneInternational(number);
var result = vtex.phone.format(phone, vtex.phone.NATIONAL);
console.log(result); // (21) 8989-8989
var number = "552189898989";
var phone = vtex.phone.getPhoneInternational(number);
var result = vtex.phone.format(phone, vtex.phone.LOCAL);
console.log(result); // 8989-8989
-
Include
vtex-phone-filter.min.js
. -
Add
"vtex-phoneFilter"
as a dependency to your app. -
Use the filter like this:
{{ user.phoneNumber | phone }} or {{ '552189898989' | phone }} -> +55 21 8989 8989
It also has two optional parameters:
- the format to be converted. One of
'international'
,'national'
,'local'
. - the national number, if needed. It's blank by default.
{{ '2189898989' | phone:'international':55 }} -> +55 21 8989 8989
- the format to be converted. One of
We use Grunt as a task runner. Before you start, make sure to npm install -g grunt-cli
and npm install
.
Use grunt
to build and test, and rebuild whenever a file is changed.
Use grunt dist
to build, test and prepare files on the dist
folder.
Anyone is welcome to contribute to this project. We now are urging for pull requests of new countries' phones. But before you do, please read the guidelines for contributing.
Copyright 2014 VTEX
Licensed under the MIT License