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A simpler (and smaller) rewrite of Google Android's famous libphonenumber
library: easy phone number parsing and formatting in javascript.
libphonenumber
is a phone number formatting and parsing library released by Google, originally developed for (and currently used in) Google's Android mobile phone operating system. Implementing a rigorous phone number formatting and parsing library was crucial for the phone OS overall usability (back then, in the early 2000s, it was originally meant to be a phone after all, not just a SnapChat device).
libphonenumber-js
is a simplified pure javascript port of the original libphonenumber
library (written in C++ and Java because those are the programming languages used in Android OS). While libphonenumber
has an official javascript port which is being maintained by Google, it is tightly coupled to Google's closure
javascript utility framework. It still can be compiled into one big bundle which weighs 220 KiloBytes — quite a size for a phone number input component. It can be reduced to a specific set of countries only but that wouldn't be an option for a worldwide international solution.
One part of me was curious about how all this phone matching machinery worked, and another part of me was curious if there's a way to reduce those 220 KiloBytes to something more reasonable while also getting rid of the closure
library and rewriting it all in pure javascript. So, that was my little hackathon for a couple of weeks, and seems that it succeeded. The resulting library does everything a modern web application needs while maintaining a much smaller size of about 75 KiloBytes.
- Pure javascript, doesn't require any 3rd party libraries
- Metadata size is just about 75 KiloBytes while the original
libphonenumber
metadata size is about 200 KiloBytes - Better "as you type" formatting (and also more iPhone-alike style)
- Doesn't parse alphabetic phone numbers like
1-800-GOT-MILK
as we don't use telephone sets in the XXIst century that much (and we have phonebooks in your mobile phones) - Doesn't handle carrier codes: they're only used in Colombia and Brazil, and only when dialing within those countries from a mobile phone to a fixed line number (the locals surely already know those carrier codes by themselves)
- Assumes all phone numbers being
format
ted are internationally diallable, because that's the only type of phone numbers users are supposed to be inputting on websites (no one inputs short codes, emergency telephone numbers like911
, etc.) - Doesn't parse phone numbers with extensions (again, this is not the type of phone numbers users should input on websites — they're supposed to input their personal mobile phone numbers, or home stationary phone numbers if they're living in an area where celltowers don't have a good signal, not their business/enterprise stationary phone numbers)
- Doesn't use
possibleDigits
data to speed up phone number pre-validation (it just skips to the regular expression check itself) - Doesn't distinguish between fixed line, mobile, pager, voicemail, toll free and other XXth century bullsh*t
- Doesn't format phone numbers for "out of country dialing", e.g.
011 ...
in the US (again, just use the+...
notation accepted worldwide for mobile phones) - Doesn't parse
tel:...
URIs (RFC 3966) because it's not relevant for user-facing web experience - When formatting international numbers replaces all braces, dashes, etc with spaces (because that's the logical thing to do, and leaving braces in an international number isn't)
npm install libphonenumber-js --save
import { parse, format, asYouType } from 'libphonenumber-js'
parse('8 (800) 555 35 35', 'RU')
// { country: 'RU', phone: '8005553535' }
format('2133734253', 'US', 'International')
// '+1-213-373-4253'
new asYouType().input('+12133734')
// '+1 213 373 4'
new asYouType('US').input('2133734')
// '(213) 373-4'
"Country code" means either a two-letter ISO country code (like US
) or a special 001
country code used for non-geographical entities (as per Google's libphonenumber library). For example, +7 800 555 35 35
phone number belongs to Russia so it has RU
country code where as +800 1 1111 1111
phone number could belong to any country so it has 001
country code.
options
can be either an object
country:
{
restrict — (country code)
the phone number must be in this country
default — (country code)
default country to use for phone number parsing and validation
(if no country code could be derived from the phone number)
}
or just a country code which is gonna be country.restrict
.
Returns { country, phone }
where
country
is a country codephone
is a national (significant) number
If the phone number supplied isn't valid then an empty object {}
is returned.
parse('+1-213-373-4253') === { country: 'US', phone: '2133734253' }
parse('(213) 373-4253', 'US') === { country: 'US', phone: '2133734253' }
Formats a phone number using one of the following format
s:
International
— e.g.+1 213 373 4253
International_plaintext
— (akaE.164
) e.g.+12133734253
National
— e.g.(213) 373-4253
parsed_number
argument should be taken from the result of the parse()
function call: { country, phone }
. phone
must be a national (significant) number (i.e. no national prefix). parsed_number
argument can also be expanded into two arguments:
format({ country: 'US', phone: '2133734253' }, 'International') === '+1 213 373 4253'
format('2133734253', 'US', 'International') === '+1 213 373 4253'
Determines phone number type (fixed line, mobile, toll free, etc). This function will work if --extended
metadata is available (see Metadata section of this document). The regular expressions used to differentiate between various phone number types consume a lot of space (two thirds of the total size of the --extended
library build) therefore they're not included in the bundle by default.
getNumberType('8005553535', 'RU') === 'MOBILE'
(aka is_valid_number
)
Checks if a phone number is valid.
The arguments can be
- either the result of the
parse()
function call:{ country, phone }
- or a pair of arguments
(phone, country_code)
which will then be simply passed to theparse()
function for parsing
isValidNumber('+1-213-373-4253') === true
isValidNumber('+1-213-373') === false
isValidNumber('(213) 373-4253', 'US') === true
isValidNumber('(213) 37', 'US') === false
isValidNumber({ phone: '2133734253', country: 'US' }) === true
The difference between using parse()
and isValidNumber()
for phone number validation is that isValidNumber()
also checks the precise regular expressions of possible phone numbers for a country. For example, for Germany parse('123456', 'DE')
would return { country: 'DE', phone: '123456' }
because this phone number matches the general phone number rules for Germany. But, if the metadata is compiled with --extended
flag (see below) and the precise regular expressions for possible phone numbers are included in the metadata then isValidNumber()
is gonna use those precise regular expressions for validation and isValid('123456', 'DE')
will return false
because the phone number 123456
doesn't actually exist in Germany.
So, the general phone number rules for a country are mainly for phone number formatting: they dictate how different phone numbers (matching those general regular expressions) should be formatted. And parse()
uses only those general regular expressions (as per the reference Google's libphonenumber
implementation) to perform basic phone number validation. isValidNumber()
, on the other hand, is all about validation, so it digs deeper into precise regular expressions (if they're included in metadata) for possible phone numbers in a given country. And that's the difference between them: parse()
parses phone numbers and loosely validates them while isValidNumber()
validates phone number precisely (provided the precise regular expressions are included in metadata).
By default those precise regular expressions aren't included in metadata at all because that would cause metadata to grow twice in its size (the complete metadata would be about 200 KiloBytes). If anyone needs to generate custom metadata then it's very easy to do so: just follow the instructions provided in the Customizing metadata section of this document (the option to look for is --extended
).
(aka as_you_type
)
Creates a formatter for partially entered phone number. The two-letter default_country_code
is optional and, if specified, is gonna be the default country for the phone number being input (in case it's not an international one). The instance of this class has two methods:
input(text)
— takes any text and appends it to the input; returns the formatted phone numberreset()
— resets the input
The instance of this class has also these fields:
valid
— is the phone number being input a valid one alreadycountry
— a country code of the country this phone belongs tocountry_phone_code
— a phone code of thecountry
national_number
— national number part (so far)template
— currently used phone number formatting template, where digits (and the plus sign, if present) are denoted byx
-es
new asYouType().input('+12133734') === '+1 213 373 4'
new asYouType('US').input('2133734') === '(213) 373-4'
const formatter = new asYouType()
formatter.input('+1-213-373-4253') === '+1 213 373 4253'
formatter.valid === true
formatter.country === 'US'
formatter.country_phone_code = '1'
formatter.template === 'xx xxx xxx xxxx'
Metadata is generated from Google's original PhoneNumberMetadata.xml
by transforming XML into JSON and removing unnecessary fields.
Currently I have an npm script for monitoring changes to PhoneNumberMetadata.xml
in Google's repo and automatically creating a Pull Request in this repo with the fresh metadata when it is updated. What's left is to test this script and schedule it to run daily on my machine. So this project's metadata is supposed to be up-to-date. Still, in case the automatic metadata update script malfunctions some day, anyone can request metadata update via a Pull Request here on GitHub:
- Fork this repo
npm install
npm run metadata:update
- Submit a Pull Request to this repo from the
update-metadata
branch of your fork
npm run metadata:update
command creates a new update-metadata
branch, downloads the new PhoneNumberMetadata.xml
into the project folder replacing the old one, generates JSON metadata out of the XML one, checks if the metadata has changed, runs the tests, commits the new metadata and pushes the commit to the remote update-metadata
branch of your fork.
Alternatively, a developer may wish to update metadata urgently, without waiting for a pull request approval. In this case just perform the steps described in the Customizing metadata section of this document.
There's also a React component utilizing this library: react-phone-number-input
If you spot any inconsistencies with the original Google's libphonenumber
then create an issue in this repo.
If you're using Webpack 1 (which you most likely are) then make sure that
- You have
json-loader
set up for*.json
files in Webpack configuration (Webpack 2 hasjson-loader
set up by default) json-loader
doesn'texclude
/node_modules/
- If you override
resolve.extensions
in Webpack configuration then make sure.json
extension is present in the list
Webpack 2 sets up json-loader
by default so there's no need for any special configuration. So better upgrade to Webpack 2 instead.
For those who aren't using bundlers for some reason there's a way to build a standalone version of the library
git clone https://github.com/halt-hammerzeit/libphonenumber-js.git
npm install
npm run browser-build
- See the
bundle
folder forlibphonenumber-js.min.js
<script src="/scripts/libphonenumber-js.min.js"></script>
<script>
alert(new libphonenumber.asYouType('US').input('213-373-4253'))
</script>
If only a specific set of countries is needed in a project, and a developer really wants to reduce the resulting bundle size, say, by 50 KiloBytes, then he can generate custom metadata and pass it as an extra argument to this library's functions. Or, say, if a developer wants to use the complete metadata (which is about 200 KiloBytes) for precise phone number validation then he can also generate such complete metadata set.
First, add metadata generation script to your project's package.json
{
"scripts": {
"libphonenumber-metadata": "libphonenumber-generate-metadata metadata.min.json --countries RU,DE --extended",
}
}
And then run it like npm run libphonenumber-metadata
.
The first argument is the output metadata file path. --countries
argument is a comma-separated list of the required countries (if --countries
is omitted then all countries are included). --extended
argument may be passed to increase the precision of phone number validation but at the same time it will enlarge the resulting metadata size approximately twice.
Then use the generated metadata.min.json
with the exported "custom" functions.
For a "tree-shaking" ES6-capable bundler (e.g. Webpack 2) that would be
import { parseCustom, formatCustom, isValidNumberCustom, asYouTypeCustom } from 'libphonenumber-js'
import metadata from './metadata.min.json'
export const parse = (...args) => parseCustom(...args, metadata);
export const format = (...args) => formatCustom(...args, metadata);
export const isValidNumber = (...args) => isValidNumberCustom(...args, metadata);
export class asYouType extends asYouTypeCustom {
constructor(country) {
super(country, metadata)
}
}
And for Common.js environment that would be
var custom = require('libphonenumber-js/custom')
var metadata = require('./metadata.min.json')
exports.parse = function parse() {
var parameters = Array.prototype.slice.call(arguments)
parameters.push(metadata)
return custom.parse.apply(this, parameters)
}
exports.format = function format() {
var parameters = Array.prototype.slice.call(arguments)
parameters.push(metadata)
return custom.format.apply(this, parameters)
}
exports.isValidNumber = function isValidNumber() {
var parameters = Array.prototype.slice.call(arguments)
parameters.push(metadata)
return custom.isValidNumber.apply(this, parameters)
}
exports.asYouType = function asYouType(country) {
custom.asYouType.call(this, country, metadata)
}
exports.asYouType.prototype = Object.create(custom.asYouType.prototype, {})
exports.asYouType.prototype.constructor = exports.asYouType
After cloning this repo, ensure dependencies are installed by running:
npm install
This module is written in ES6 and uses Babel for ES5 transpilation. Widely consumable JavaScript can be produced by running:
npm run build
Once npm run build
has run, you may import
or require()
directly from
node.
After developing, the full test suite can be evaluated by running:
npm test
When you're ready to test your new functionality on a real project, you can run
npm pack
It will build
, test
and then create a .tgz
archive which you can then install in your project folder
npm install [module name with version].tar.gz
MIT [npm]: https://www.npmjs.org/package/libphonenumber-js [npm-badge]: https://img.shields.io/npm/v/libphonenumber-js.svg?style=flat-square [travis]: https://travis-ci.org/halt-hammerzeit/libphonenumber-js [travis-badge]: https://img.shields.io/travis/halt-hammerzeit/libphonenumber-js/master.svg?style=flat-square [coveralls]: https://coveralls.io/r/halt-hammerzeit/libphonenumber-js?branch=master [coveralls-badge]: https://img.shields.io/coveralls/halt-hammerzeit/libphonenumber-js/master.svg?style=flat-square