This small Gem adds useful methods to your Rails app to validate, display and save phone numbers. It uses the super awesome Phony gem (https://github.com/floere/phony).
Find version information in the CHANGELOG.
Add this line to your application's Gemfile (requires Ruby > 2.3):
gem 'phony_rails'
And then execute:
$ bundle
Or install it yourself as:
$ gem install phony_rails
For ActiveRecord, in your model add:
class SomeModel < ActiveRecord::Base
# Normalizes the attribute itself before validation
phony_normalize :phone_number, default_country_code: 'US'
# Normalizes attribute before validation and saves into other attribute
phony_normalize :phone_number, as: :phone_number_normalized_version, default_country_code: 'US'
# Creates method normalized_fax_number that returns the normalized version of fax_number
phony_normalized_method :fax_number
# Conditionally normalizes the attribute
phony_normalize :recipient, default_country_code: 'US', if: -> { contact_method == 'phone_number' }
end
For Rails-like models without a database, add:
class SomeModel
include ActiveModel::Model # we get AR-like attributes and validations
include ActiveModel::Validations::Callbacks # a dependency for normalization
# your attributes must be defined, they are not inherited from a DB table
attr_accessor :phone_number, :phone_number_as_normalized
# Once the model is set up, we have the same things as with ActiveRecord
phony_normalize :phone_number, default_country_code: 'US'
end
WARNING: From v0.15.0 Mongoid support has been removed!
The :default_country_code
options is used to specify a country_code when normalizing.
PhonyRails will also check your model for a country_code method to use when normalizing the number. So '070-12341234'
with country_code
'NL' will get normalized to '+317012341234'
.
You can also do-it-yourself and call:
# Options:
# :country_code => The country code we should use (forced).
# :default_country_code => Some fallback code (eg. 'NL') that can be used as default (comes from phony_normalize_numbers method).
PhonyRails.normalize_number('some number', country_code: 'NL')
PhonyRails.normalize_number('+4790909090', country_code: 'SE') # => '+464790909090' (forced to +46)
PhonyRails.normalize_number('+4790909090', default_country_code: 'SE') # => '+4790909090' (still +47 so not changed)
The country_code should always be a ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_3166-1_alpha-2).
You can set the default_country_code for all models using:
PhonyRails.default_country_code = "US"
In your model use the Phony.plausible method to validate an attribute:
validates :phone_number, phony_plausible: true
or the helper method:
validates_plausible_phone :phone_number
this method use other validators under the hood to provide:
- presence validation using
ActiveModel::Validations::PresenceValidator
- format validation using
ActiveModel::Validations::FormatValidator
so we can use:
validates_plausible_phone :phone_number, presence: true
validates_plausible_phone :phone_number, with: /\A\+\d+/
validates_plausible_phone :phone_number, without: /\A\+\d+/
validates_plausible_phone :phone_number, presence: true, with: /\A\+\d+/
the i18n key is :improbable_phone
. Languages supported by default: de, en, es, fr, it, ja, kh, ko, nl, pt, tr, ua and ru.
You can also validate if a number has the correct country number:
validates_plausible_phone :phone_number, country_number: '61'
or correct country code:
validates_plausible_phone :phone_number, country_code: 'AU'
You can validate against the normalized input as opposed to the raw input:
phony_normalize :phone_number, as: :phone_number_normalized, default_country_code: 'US'
validates_plausible_phone :phone_number_normalized, presence: true, if: :phone_number?
Validation supports phone numbers with extension, such as +18181231234 x1234
or '+1 (818)151-5483 #4312'
out-of-the-box.
Return original value after validation:
The flag normalize_when_valid (disabled by default), allows to return the original phone_number when is the object is not valid. When phone validation fails, normalization is not triggered at all. It could prevent a situation where user fills in the phone number and after validation, he gets back different, already normalized phone number value, even if phone number was wrong.
Example usage:
validates_plausible_phone :phone_number
phony_normalize :phone_number, country_code: :country_code, normalize_when_valid: true
Filling in the number will result with following:
When the number is incorrect (e.g. phone_number: +44 888 888 888
for country_code 'PL'), the original validation behavior is preserved, but if the number is still invalid, the original value is returned.
When number is valid, it will save the normalized number (e.g. +48 888 888 888
will be saved as +48888888888
).
You may have a record specifying one country (via a country_code
attribute) but using a phone number from another country. For example, your record may be from Japan but have a phone number from the Philippines. By default, phony_rails
will consider your record's country_code
as part of the validation. If that country doesn't match the country code in the phone number, validation will fail.
Additionally, phony_normalize
will always add the records country code as the country number (eg. the user enters '+81xxx' for Japan and the records country_code
is 'DE' then phony_normalize
will change the number to '+4981'). You can turn this off by adding enforce_record_country: false
to the validation options. The country_code will then only be added if no country code is specified.
If you want to allow records from one country to have phone numbers from a different one, there are a couple of options you can use: ignore_record_country_number
and ignore_record_country_code
. Use them like so:
validates :phone_number, phony_plausible: { ignore_record_country_code: true, ignore_record_country_number: true }
Obviously, you don't have to use both, and you may not need or want to set either.
In your views use:
<%= "311012341234".phony_formatted(format: :international, spaces: '-') %>
<%= "+31-10-12341234".phony_formatted(format: :international, spaces: '-') %>
<%= "+31(0)1012341234".phony_formatted(format: :international, spaces: '-') %>
To first normalize the String to a certain country use:
<%= "010-12341234".phony_formatted(normalize: :NL, format: :international, spaces: '-') %>
To return nil when a number is not valid:
"123".phony_formatted(strict: true) # => nil
You can also use the bang method (phony_formatted!):
number = "010-12341234"
number.phony_formatted!(normalize: :NL, format: :international)
number # => "+31 10 123 41234"
You can also easily normalize a phone number String:
"+31 (0)30 1234 123".phony_normalized # => '31301234123'
"(0)30 1234 123".phony_normalized # => '301234123'
"(0)30 1234 123".phony_normalized(country_code: 'NL') # => '301234123'
Extensions are supported (identified by "ext", "ex", "x", "xt", "#", or ":") and will show at the end of the number:
"+31 (0)30 1234 123 x999".phony_normalized # => '31301234123 x999'
"+31 (0)30 1234 123 ext999".phony_normalized # => '31301234123 x999'
"+31 (0)30 1234 123 #999".phony_normalized # => '31301234123 x999'
Say you want to find a record by a phone number. Best is to normalize user input and compare to an attribute stored in the db.
Home.find_by_normalized_phone_number(PhonyRails.normalize_number(params[:phone_number]))
- Fork it
- Create your feature branch (
git checkout -b my-new-feature
) - Commit your changes (
git commit -am 'Added some feature'
) - Push to the branch (
git push origin my-new-feature
) - Create new Pull Request
Don't forget to add tests and run rspec before creating a pull request :)
See all contributors on https://github.com/joost/phony_rails/graphs/contributors.