1 /* 2 * Copyright (C) 2009 The Libphonenumber Authors 3 * 4 * Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); 5 * you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. 6 * You may obtain a copy of the License at 7 * 8 * http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 9 * 10 * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software 11 * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, 12 * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. 13 * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and 14 * limitations under the License. 15 */ 16 17 package com.android.i18n.phonenumbers; 18 19 import com.android.i18n.phonenumbers.Phonemetadata.NumberFormat; 20 import com.android.i18n.phonenumbers.Phonemetadata.PhoneMetadata; 21 import com.android.i18n.phonenumbers.Phonemetadata.PhoneMetadataCollection; 22 import com.android.i18n.phonenumbers.Phonemetadata.PhoneNumberDesc; 23 import com.android.i18n.phonenumbers.Phonenumber.PhoneNumber; 24 import com.android.i18n.phonenumbers.Phonenumber.PhoneNumber.CountryCodeSource; 25 26 import java.io.IOException; 27 import java.io.InputStream; 28 import java.io.ObjectInputStream; 29 import java.util.ArrayList; 30 import java.util.Arrays; 31 import java.util.Collections; 32 import java.util.HashMap; 33 import java.util.HashSet; 34 import java.util.Iterator; 35 import java.util.List; 36 import java.util.Map; 37 import java.util.Set; 38 import java.util.logging.Level; 39 import java.util.logging.Logger; 40 import java.util.regex.Matcher; 41 import java.util.regex.Pattern; 42 43 /** 44 * Utility for international phone numbers. Functionality includes formatting, parsing and 45 * validation. 46 * 47 * <p>If you use this library, and want to be notified about important changes, please sign up to 48 * our <a href="http://groups.google.com/group/libphonenumber-discuss/about">mailing list</a>. 49 * 50 * NOTE: A lot of methods in this class require Region Code strings. These must be provided using 51 * ISO 3166-1 two-letter country-code format. These should be in upper-case. The list of the codes 52 * can be found here: 53 * http://www.iso.org/iso/country_codes/iso_3166_code_lists/country_names_and_code_elements.htm 54 * 55 * @author Shaopeng Jia 56 * @author Lara Rennie 57 */ 58 public class PhoneNumberUtil { 59 /** Flags to use when compiling regular expressions for phone numbers. */ 60 static final int REGEX_FLAGS = Pattern.UNICODE_CASE | Pattern.CASE_INSENSITIVE; 61 // The minimum and maximum length of the national significant number. 62 private static final int MIN_LENGTH_FOR_NSN = 2; 63 // The ITU says the maximum length should be 15, but we have found longer numbers in Germany. 64 static final int MAX_LENGTH_FOR_NSN = 16; 65 // The maximum length of the country calling code. 66 static final int MAX_LENGTH_COUNTRY_CODE = 3; 67 // We don't allow input strings for parsing to be longer than 250 chars. This prevents malicious 68 // input from overflowing the regular-expression engine. 69 private static final int MAX_INPUT_STRING_LENGTH = 250; 70 static final String META_DATA_FILE_PREFIX = 71 "/com/android/i18n/phonenumbers/data/PhoneNumberMetadataProto"; 72 private String currentFilePrefix = META_DATA_FILE_PREFIX; 73 private static final Logger LOGGER = Logger.getLogger(PhoneNumberUtil.class.getName()); 74 75 // A mapping from a country calling code to the region codes which denote the region represented 76 // by that country calling code. In the case of multiple regions sharing a calling code, such as 77 // the NANPA regions, the one indicated with "isMainCountryForCode" in the metadata should be 78 // first. 79 private Map<Integer, List<String>> countryCallingCodeToRegionCodeMap = null; 80 81 // The set of regions the library supports. 82 // There are roughly 240 of them and we set the initial capacity of the HashSet to 320 to offer a 83 // load factor of roughly 0.75. 84 private final Set<String> supportedRegions = new HashSet<String>(320); 85 86 // Region-code for the unknown region. 87 private static final String UNKNOWN_REGION = "ZZ"; 88 89 // The set of regions that share country calling code 1. 90 // There are roughly 26 regions and we set the initial capacity of the HashSet to 35 to offer a 91 // load factor of roughly 0.75. 92 private final Set<String> nanpaRegions = new HashSet<String>(35); 93 private static final int NANPA_COUNTRY_CODE = 1; 94 95 // The prefix that needs to be inserted in front of a Colombian landline number when dialed from 96 // a mobile phone in Colombia. 97 private static final String COLOMBIA_MOBILE_TO_FIXED_LINE_PREFIX = "3"; 98 99 // The PLUS_SIGN signifies the international prefix. 100 static final char PLUS_SIGN = '+'; 101 102 private static final char STAR_SIGN = '*'; 103 104 private static final String RFC3966_EXTN_PREFIX = ";ext="; 105 private static final String RFC3966_PREFIX = "tel:"; 106 private static final String RFC3966_PHONE_CONTEXT = ";phone-context="; 107 private static final String RFC3966_ISDN_SUBADDRESS = ";isub="; 108 109 // A map that contains characters that are essential when dialling. That means any of the 110 // characters in this map must not be removed from a number when dialling, otherwise the call 111 // will not reach the intended destination. 112 private static final Map<Character, Character> DIALLABLE_CHAR_MAPPINGS; 113 114 // Only upper-case variants of alpha characters are stored. 115 private static final Map<Character, Character> ALPHA_MAPPINGS; 116 117 // For performance reasons, amalgamate both into one map. 118 private static final Map<Character, Character> ALPHA_PHONE_MAPPINGS; 119 120 // Separate map of all symbols that we wish to retain when formatting alpha numbers. This 121 // includes digits, ASCII letters and number grouping symbols such as "-" and " ". 122 private static final Map<Character, Character> ALL_PLUS_NUMBER_GROUPING_SYMBOLS; 123 124 static { 125 // Simple ASCII digits map used to populate ALPHA_PHONE_MAPPINGS and 126 // ALL_PLUS_NUMBER_GROUPING_SYMBOLS. 127 HashMap<Character, Character> asciiDigitMappings = new HashMap<Character, Character>(); 128 asciiDigitMappings.put('0', '0'); 129 asciiDigitMappings.put('1', '1'); 130 asciiDigitMappings.put('2', '2'); 131 asciiDigitMappings.put('3', '3'); 132 asciiDigitMappings.put('4', '4'); 133 asciiDigitMappings.put('5', '5'); 134 asciiDigitMappings.put('6', '6'); 135 asciiDigitMappings.put('7', '7'); 136 asciiDigitMappings.put('8', '8'); 137 asciiDigitMappings.put('9', '9'); 138 139 HashMap<Character, Character> alphaMap = new HashMap<Character, Character>(40); 140 alphaMap.put('A', '2'); 141 alphaMap.put('B', '2'); 142 alphaMap.put('C', '2'); 143 alphaMap.put('D', '3'); 144 alphaMap.put('E', '3'); 145 alphaMap.put('F', '3'); 146 alphaMap.put('G', '4'); 147 alphaMap.put('H', '4'); 148 alphaMap.put('I', '4'); 149 alphaMap.put('J', '5'); 150 alphaMap.put('K', '5'); 151 alphaMap.put('L', '5'); 152 alphaMap.put('M', '6'); 153 alphaMap.put('N', '6'); 154 alphaMap.put('O', '6'); 155 alphaMap.put('P', '7'); 156 alphaMap.put('Q', '7'); 157 alphaMap.put('R', '7'); 158 alphaMap.put('S', '7'); 159 alphaMap.put('T', '8'); 160 alphaMap.put('U', '8'); 161 alphaMap.put('V', '8'); 162 alphaMap.put('W', '9'); 163 alphaMap.put('X', '9'); 164 alphaMap.put('Y', '9'); 165 alphaMap.put('Z', '9'); 166 ALPHA_MAPPINGS = Collections.unmodifiableMap(alphaMap); 167 168 HashMap<Character, Character> combinedMap = new HashMap<Character, Character>(100); 169 combinedMap.putAll(ALPHA_MAPPINGS); 170 combinedMap.putAll(asciiDigitMappings); 171 ALPHA_PHONE_MAPPINGS = Collections.unmodifiableMap(combinedMap); 172 173 HashMap<Character, Character> diallableCharMap = new HashMap<Character, Character>(); 174 diallableCharMap.putAll(asciiDigitMappings); 175 diallableCharMap.put(PLUS_SIGN, PLUS_SIGN); 176 diallableCharMap.put('*', '*'); 177 DIALLABLE_CHAR_MAPPINGS = Collections.unmodifiableMap(diallableCharMap); 178 179 HashMap<Character, Character> allPlusNumberGroupings = new HashMap<Character, Character>(); 180 // Put (lower letter -> upper letter) and (upper letter -> upper letter) mappings. 181 for (char c : ALPHA_MAPPINGS.keySet()) { 182 allPlusNumberGroupings.put(Character.toLowerCase(c), c); 183 allPlusNumberGroupings.put(c, c); 184 } 185 allPlusNumberGroupings.putAll(asciiDigitMappings); 186 // Put grouping symbols. 187 allPlusNumberGroupings.put('-', '-'); 188 allPlusNumberGroupings.put('\uFF0D', '-'); 189 allPlusNumberGroupings.put('\u2010', '-'); 190 allPlusNumberGroupings.put('\u2011', '-'); 191 allPlusNumberGroupings.put('\u2012', '-'); 192 allPlusNumberGroupings.put('\u2013', '-'); 193 allPlusNumberGroupings.put('\u2014', '-'); 194 allPlusNumberGroupings.put('\u2015', '-'); 195 allPlusNumberGroupings.put('\u2212', '-'); 196 allPlusNumberGroupings.put('/', '/'); 197 allPlusNumberGroupings.put('\uFF0F', '/'); 198 allPlusNumberGroupings.put(' ', ' '); 199 allPlusNumberGroupings.put('\u3000', ' '); 200 allPlusNumberGroupings.put('\u2060', ' '); 201 allPlusNumberGroupings.put('.', '.'); 202 allPlusNumberGroupings.put('\uFF0E', '.'); 203 ALL_PLUS_NUMBER_GROUPING_SYMBOLS = Collections.unmodifiableMap(allPlusNumberGroupings); 204 } 205 206 // Pattern that makes it easy to distinguish whether a region has a unique international dialing 207 // prefix or not. If a region has a unique international prefix (e.g. 011 in USA), it will be 208 // represented as a string that contains a sequence of ASCII digits. If there are multiple 209 // available international prefixes in a region, they will be represented as a regex string that 210 // always contains character(s) other than ASCII digits. 211 // Note this regex also includes tilde, which signals waiting for the tone. 212 private static final Pattern UNIQUE_INTERNATIONAL_PREFIX = 213 Pattern.compile("[\\d]+(?:[~\u2053\u223C\uFF5E][\\d]+)?"); 214 215 // Regular expression of acceptable punctuation found in phone numbers. This excludes punctuation 216 // found as a leading character only. 217 // This consists of dash characters, white space characters, full stops, slashes, 218 // square brackets, parentheses and tildes. It also includes the letter 'x' as that is found as a 219 // placeholder for carrier information in some phone numbers. Full-width variants are also 220 // present. 221 static final String VALID_PUNCTUATION = "-x\u2010-\u2015\u2212\u30FC\uFF0D-\uFF0F " + 222 "\u00A0\u00AD\u200B\u2060\u3000()\uFF08\uFF09\uFF3B\uFF3D.\\[\\]/~\u2053\u223C\uFF5E"; 223 224 private static final String DIGITS = "\\p{Nd}"; 225 // We accept alpha characters in phone numbers, ASCII only, upper and lower case. 226 private static final String VALID_ALPHA = 227 Arrays.toString(ALPHA_MAPPINGS.keySet().toArray()).replaceAll("[, \\[\\]]", "") + 228 Arrays.toString(ALPHA_MAPPINGS.keySet().toArray()).toLowerCase().replaceAll("[, \\[\\]]", ""); 229 static final String PLUS_CHARS = "+\uFF0B"; 230 static final Pattern PLUS_CHARS_PATTERN = Pattern.compile("[" + PLUS_CHARS + "]+"); 231 private static final Pattern SEPARATOR_PATTERN = Pattern.compile("[" + VALID_PUNCTUATION + "]+"); 232 private static final Pattern CAPTURING_DIGIT_PATTERN = Pattern.compile("(" + DIGITS + ")"); 233 234 // Regular expression of acceptable characters that may start a phone number for the purposes of 235 // parsing. This allows us to strip away meaningless prefixes to phone numbers that may be 236 // mistakenly given to us. This consists of digits, the plus symbol and arabic-indic digits. This 237 // does not contain alpha characters, although they may be used later in the number. It also does 238 // not include other punctuation, as this will be stripped later during parsing and is of no 239 // information value when parsing a number. 240 private static final String VALID_START_CHAR = "[" + PLUS_CHARS + DIGITS + "]"; 241 private static final Pattern VALID_START_CHAR_PATTERN = Pattern.compile(VALID_START_CHAR); 242 243 // Regular expression of characters typically used to start a second phone number for the purposes 244 // of parsing. This allows us to strip off parts of the number that are actually the start of 245 // another number, such as for: (530) 583-6985 x302/x2303 -> the second extension here makes this 246 // actually two phone numbers, (530) 583-6985 x302 and (530) 583-6985 x2303. We remove the second 247 // extension so that the first number is parsed correctly. 248 private static final String SECOND_NUMBER_START = "[\\\\/] *x"; 249 static final Pattern SECOND_NUMBER_START_PATTERN = Pattern.compile(SECOND_NUMBER_START); 250 251 // Regular expression of trailing characters that we want to remove. We remove all characters that 252 // are not alpha or numerical characters. The hash character is retained here, as it may signify 253 // the previous block was an extension. 254 private static final String UNWANTED_END_CHARS = "[[\\P{N}&&\\P{L}]&&[^#]]+$"; 255 static final Pattern UNWANTED_END_CHAR_PATTERN = Pattern.compile(UNWANTED_END_CHARS); 256 257 // We use this pattern to check if the phone number has at least three letters in it - if so, then 258 // we treat it as a number where some phone-number digits are represented by letters. 259 private static final Pattern VALID_ALPHA_PHONE_PATTERN = Pattern.compile("(?:.*?[A-Za-z]){3}.*"); 260 261 // Regular expression of viable phone numbers. This is location independent. Checks we have at 262 // least three leading digits, and only valid punctuation, alpha characters and 263 // digits in the phone number. Does not include extension data. 264 // The symbol 'x' is allowed here as valid punctuation since it is often used as a placeholder for 265 // carrier codes, for example in Brazilian phone numbers. We also allow multiple "+" characters at 266 // the start. 267 // Corresponds to the following: 268 // [digits]{minLengthNsn}| 269 // plus_sign*(([punctuation]|[star])*[digits]){3,}([punctuation]|[star]|[digits]|[alpha])* 270 // 271 // The first reg-ex is to allow short numbers (two digits long) to be parsed if they are entered 272 // as "15" etc, but only if there is no punctuation in them. The second expression restricts the 273 // number of digits to three or more, but then allows them to be in international form, and to 274 // have alpha-characters and punctuation. 275 // 276 // Note VALID_PUNCTUATION starts with a -, so must be the first in the range. 277 private static final String VALID_PHONE_NUMBER = 278 DIGITS + "{" + MIN_LENGTH_FOR_NSN + "}" + "|" + 279 "[" + PLUS_CHARS + "]*+(?:[" + VALID_PUNCTUATION + STAR_SIGN + "]*" + DIGITS + "){3,}[" + 280 VALID_PUNCTUATION + STAR_SIGN + VALID_ALPHA + DIGITS + "]*"; 281 282 // Default extension prefix to use when formatting. This will be put in front of any extension 283 // component of the number, after the main national number is formatted. For example, if you wish 284 // the default extension formatting to be " extn: 3456", then you should specify " extn: " here 285 // as the default extension prefix. This can be overridden by region-specific preferences. 286 private static final String DEFAULT_EXTN_PREFIX = " ext. "; 287 288 // Pattern to capture digits used in an extension. Places a maximum length of "7" for an 289 // extension. 290 private static final String CAPTURING_EXTN_DIGITS = "(" + DIGITS + "{1,7})"; 291 // Regexp of all possible ways to write extensions, for use when parsing. This will be run as a 292 // case-insensitive regexp match. Wide character versions are also provided after each ASCII 293 // version. 294 private static final String EXTN_PATTERNS_FOR_PARSING; 295 static final String EXTN_PATTERNS_FOR_MATCHING; 296 static { 297 // One-character symbols that can be used to indicate an extension. 298 String singleExtnSymbolsForMatching = "x\uFF58#\uFF03~\uFF5E"; 299 // For parsing, we are slightly more lenient in our interpretation than for matching. Here we 300 // allow a "comma" as a possible extension indicator. When matching, this is hardly ever used to 301 // indicate this. 302 String singleExtnSymbolsForParsing = "," + singleExtnSymbolsForMatching; 303 304 EXTN_PATTERNS_FOR_PARSING = createExtnPattern(singleExtnSymbolsForParsing); 305 EXTN_PATTERNS_FOR_MATCHING = createExtnPattern(singleExtnSymbolsForMatching); 306 } 307 308 /** 309 * Helper initialiser method to create the regular-expression pattern to match extensions, 310 * allowing the one-char extension symbols provided by {@code singleExtnSymbols}. 311 */ 312 private static String createExtnPattern(String singleExtnSymbols) { 313 // There are three regular expressions here. The first covers RFC 3966 format, where the 314 // extension is added using ";ext=". The second more generic one starts with optional white 315 // space and ends with an optional full stop (.), followed by zero or more spaces/tabs and then 316 // the numbers themselves. The other one covers the special case of American numbers where the 317 // extension is written with a hash at the end, such as "- 503#". 318 // Note that the only capturing groups should be around the digits that you want to capture as 319 // part of the extension, or else parsing will fail! 320 // Canonical-equivalence doesn't seem to be an option with Android java, so we allow two options 321 // for representing the accented o - the character itself, and one in the unicode decomposed 322 // form with the combining acute accent. 323 return (RFC3966_EXTN_PREFIX + CAPTURING_EXTN_DIGITS + "|" + "[ \u00A0\\t,]*" + 324 "(?:e?xt(?:ensi(?:o\u0301?|\u00F3))?n?|\uFF45?\uFF58\uFF54\uFF4E?|" + 325 "[" + singleExtnSymbols + "]|int|anexo|\uFF49\uFF4E\uFF54)" + 326 "[:\\.\uFF0E]?[ \u00A0\\t,-]*" + CAPTURING_EXTN_DIGITS + "#?|" + 327 "[- ]+(" + DIGITS + "{1,5})#"); 328 } 329 330 // Regexp of all known extension prefixes used by different regions followed by 1 or more valid 331 // digits, for use when parsing. 332 private static final Pattern EXTN_PATTERN = 333 Pattern.compile("(?:" + EXTN_PATTERNS_FOR_PARSING + ")$", REGEX_FLAGS); 334 335 // We append optionally the extension pattern to the end here, as a valid phone number may 336 // have an extension prefix appended, followed by 1 or more digits. 337 private static final Pattern VALID_PHONE_NUMBER_PATTERN = 338 Pattern.compile(VALID_PHONE_NUMBER + "(?:" + EXTN_PATTERNS_FOR_PARSING + ")?", REGEX_FLAGS); 339 340 static final Pattern NON_DIGITS_PATTERN = Pattern.compile("(\\D+)"); 341 342 // The FIRST_GROUP_PATTERN was originally set to $1 but there are some countries for which the 343 // first group is not used in the national pattern (e.g. Argentina) so the $1 group does not match 344 // correctly. Therefore, we use \d, so that the first group actually used in the pattern will be 345 // matched. 346 private static final Pattern FIRST_GROUP_PATTERN = Pattern.compile("(\\$\\d)"); 347 private static final Pattern NP_PATTERN = Pattern.compile("\\$NP"); 348 private static final Pattern FG_PATTERN = Pattern.compile("\\$FG"); 349 private static final Pattern CC_PATTERN = Pattern.compile("\\$CC"); 350 351 // A pattern that is used to determine if the national prefix formatting rule has the first group 352 // only, i.e., does not start with the national prefix. Note that the pattern explicitly allows 353 // for unbalanced parentheses. 354 private static final Pattern FIRST_GROUP_ONLY_PREFIX_PATTERN = Pattern.compile("\\(?\\$1\\)?"); 355 356 private static PhoneNumberUtil instance = null; 357 358 // A mapping from a region code to the PhoneMetadata for that region. 359 private final Map<String, PhoneMetadata> regionToMetadataMap = 360 Collections.synchronizedMap(new HashMap<String, PhoneMetadata>()); 361 362 // A mapping from a country calling code for a non-geographical entity to the PhoneMetadata for 363 // that country calling code. Examples of the country calling codes include 800 (International 364 // Toll Free Service) and 808 (International Shared Cost Service). 365 private final Map<Integer, PhoneMetadata> countryCodeToNonGeographicalMetadataMap = 366 Collections.synchronizedMap(new HashMap<Integer, PhoneMetadata>()); 367 368 // The set of county calling codes that map to the non-geo entity region ("001"). This set 369 // currently contains < 12 elements so the default capacity of 16 (load factor=0.75) is fine. 370 private final Set<Integer> countryCodesForNonGeographicalRegion = new HashSet<Integer>(); 371 372 // A cache for frequently used region-specific regular expressions. 373 // As most people use phone numbers primarily from one to two countries, and there are roughly 60 374 // regular expressions needed, the initial capacity of 100 offers a rough load factor of 0.75. 375 private RegexCache regexCache = new RegexCache(100); 376 377 public static final String REGION_CODE_FOR_NON_GEO_ENTITY = "001"; 378 379 /** 380 * INTERNATIONAL and NATIONAL formats are consistent with the definition in ITU-T Recommendation 381 * E123. For example, the number of the Google Switzerland office will be written as 382 * "+41 44 668 1800" in INTERNATIONAL format, and as "044 668 1800" in NATIONAL format. 383 * E164 format is as per INTERNATIONAL format but with no formatting applied, e.g. 384 * "+41446681800". RFC3966 is as per INTERNATIONAL format, but with all spaces and other 385 * separating symbols replaced with a hyphen, and with any phone number extension appended with 386 * ";ext=". It also will have a prefix of "tel:" added, e.g. "tel:+41-44-668-1800". 387 * 388 * Note: If you are considering storing the number in a neutral format, you are highly advised to 389 * use the PhoneNumber class. 390 */ 391 public enum PhoneNumberFormat { 392 E164, 393 INTERNATIONAL, 394 NATIONAL, 395 RFC3966 396 } 397 398 /** 399 * Type of phone numbers. 400 */ 401 public enum PhoneNumberType { 402 FIXED_LINE, 403 MOBILE, 404 // In some regions (e.g. the USA), it is impossible to distinguish between fixed-line and 405 // mobile numbers by looking at the phone number itself. 406 FIXED_LINE_OR_MOBILE, 407 // Freephone lines 408 TOLL_FREE, 409 PREMIUM_RATE, 410 // The cost of this call is shared between the caller and the recipient, and is hence typically 411 // less than PREMIUM_RATE calls. See // http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shared_Cost_Service for 412 // more information. 413 SHARED_COST, 414 // Voice over IP numbers. This includes TSoIP (Telephony Service over IP). 415 VOIP, 416 // A personal number is associated with a particular person, and may be routed to either a 417 // MOBILE or FIXED_LINE number. Some more information can be found here: 418 // http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Personal_Numbers 419 PERSONAL_NUMBER, 420 PAGER, 421 // Used for "Universal Access Numbers" or "Company Numbers". They may be further routed to 422 // specific offices, but allow one number to be used for a company. 423 UAN, 424 // Used for "Voice Mail Access Numbers". 425 VOICEMAIL, 426 // A phone number is of type UNKNOWN when it does not fit any of the known patterns for a 427 // specific region. 428 UNKNOWN 429 } 430 431 /** 432 * Types of phone number matches. See detailed description beside the isNumberMatch() method. 433 */ 434 public enum MatchType { 435 NOT_A_NUMBER, 436 NO_MATCH, 437 SHORT_NSN_MATCH, 438 NSN_MATCH, 439 EXACT_MATCH, 440 } 441 442 /** 443 * Possible outcomes when testing if a PhoneNumber is possible. 444 */ 445 public enum ValidationResult { 446 IS_POSSIBLE, 447 INVALID_COUNTRY_CODE, 448 TOO_SHORT, 449 TOO_LONG, 450 } 451 452 /** 453 * Leniency when {@linkplain PhoneNumberUtil#findNumbers finding} potential phone numbers in text 454 * segments. The levels here are ordered in increasing strictness. 455 */ 456 public enum Leniency { 457 /** 458 * Phone numbers accepted are {@linkplain PhoneNumberUtil#isPossibleNumber(PhoneNumber) 459 * possible}, but not necessarily {@linkplain PhoneNumberUtil#isValidNumber(PhoneNumber) valid}. 460 */ 461 POSSIBLE { 462 @Override 463 boolean verify(PhoneNumber number, String candidate, PhoneNumberUtil util) { 464 return util.isPossibleNumber(number); 465 } 466 }, 467 /** 468 * Phone numbers accepted are {@linkplain PhoneNumberUtil#isPossibleNumber(PhoneNumber) 469 * possible} and {@linkplain PhoneNumberUtil#isValidNumber(PhoneNumber) valid}. Numbers written 470 * in national format must have their national-prefix present if it is usually written for a 471 * number of this type. 472 */ 473 VALID { 474 @Override 475 boolean verify(PhoneNumber number, String candidate, PhoneNumberUtil util) { 476 if (!util.isValidNumber(number) || 477 !PhoneNumberMatcher.containsOnlyValidXChars(number, candidate, util)) { 478 return false; 479 } 480 return PhoneNumberMatcher.isNationalPrefixPresentIfRequired(number, util); 481 } 482 }, 483 /** 484 * Phone numbers accepted are {@linkplain PhoneNumberUtil#isValidNumber(PhoneNumber) valid} and 485 * are grouped in a possible way for this locale. For example, a US number written as 486 * "65 02 53 00 00" and "650253 0000" are not accepted at this leniency level, whereas 487 * "650 253 0000", "650 2530000" or "6502530000" are. 488 * Numbers with more than one '/' symbol are also dropped at this level. 489 * <p> 490 * Warning: This level might result in lower coverage especially for regions outside of country 491 * code "+1". If you are not sure about which level to use, email the discussion group 492 * libphonenumber-discuss (at) googlegroups.com. 493 */ 494 STRICT_GROUPING { 495 @Override 496 boolean verify(PhoneNumber number, String candidate, PhoneNumberUtil util) { 497 if (!util.isValidNumber(number) || 498 !PhoneNumberMatcher.containsOnlyValidXChars(number, candidate, util) || 499 PhoneNumberMatcher.containsMoreThanOneSlash(candidate) || 500 !PhoneNumberMatcher.isNationalPrefixPresentIfRequired(number, util)) { 501 return false; 502 } 503 return PhoneNumberMatcher.checkNumberGroupingIsValid( 504 number, candidate, util, new PhoneNumberMatcher.NumberGroupingChecker() { 505 public boolean checkGroups(PhoneNumberUtil util, PhoneNumber number, 506 StringBuilder normalizedCandidate, 507 String[] expectedNumberGroups) { 508 return PhoneNumberMatcher.allNumberGroupsRemainGrouped( 509 util, number, normalizedCandidate, expectedNumberGroups); 510 } 511 }); 512 } 513 }, 514 /** 515 * Phone numbers accepted are {@linkplain PhoneNumberUtil#isValidNumber(PhoneNumber) valid} and 516 * are grouped in the same way that we would have formatted it, or as a single block. For 517 * example, a US number written as "650 2530000" is not accepted at this leniency level, whereas 518 * "650 253 0000" or "6502530000" are. 519 * Numbers with more than one '/' symbol are also dropped at this level. 520 * <p> 521 * Warning: This level might result in lower coverage especially for regions outside of country 522 * code "+1". If you are not sure about which level to use, email the discussion group 523 * libphonenumber-discuss (at) googlegroups.com. 524 */ 525 EXACT_GROUPING { 526 @Override 527 boolean verify(PhoneNumber number, String candidate, PhoneNumberUtil util) { 528 if (!util.isValidNumber(number) || 529 !PhoneNumberMatcher.containsOnlyValidXChars(number, candidate, util) || 530 PhoneNumberMatcher.containsMoreThanOneSlash(candidate) || 531 !PhoneNumberMatcher.isNationalPrefixPresentIfRequired(number, util)) { 532 return false; 533 } 534 return PhoneNumberMatcher.checkNumberGroupingIsValid( 535 number, candidate, util, new PhoneNumberMatcher.NumberGroupingChecker() { 536 public boolean checkGroups(PhoneNumberUtil util, PhoneNumber number, 537 StringBuilder normalizedCandidate, 538 String[] expectedNumberGroups) { 539 return PhoneNumberMatcher.allNumberGroupsAreExactlyPresent( 540 util, number, normalizedCandidate, expectedNumberGroups); 541 } 542 }); 543 } 544 }; 545 546 /** Returns true if {@code number} is a verified number according to this leniency. */ 547 abstract boolean verify(PhoneNumber number, String candidate, PhoneNumberUtil util); 548 } 549 550 /** 551 * This class implements a singleton, so the only constructor is private. 552 */ 553 private PhoneNumberUtil() { 554 } 555 556 private void init(String filePrefix) { 557 currentFilePrefix = filePrefix; 558 for (Map.Entry<Integer, List<String>> entry : countryCallingCodeToRegionCodeMap.entrySet()) { 559 List<String> regionCodes = entry.getValue(); 560 // We can assume that if the county calling code maps to the non-geo entity region code then 561 // that's the only region code it maps to. 562 if (regionCodes.size() == 1 && REGION_CODE_FOR_NON_GEO_ENTITY.equals(regionCodes.get(0))) { 563 // This is the subset of all country codes that map to the non-geo entity region code. 564 countryCodesForNonGeographicalRegion.add(entry.getKey()); 565 } else { 566 // The supported regions set does not include the "001" non-geo entity region code. 567 supportedRegions.addAll(regionCodes); 568 } 569 } 570 // If the non-geo entity still got added to the set of supported regions it must be because 571 // there are entries that list the non-geo entity alongside normal regions (which is wrong). 572 // If we discover this, remove the non-geo entity from the set of supported regions and log. 573 if (supportedRegions.remove(REGION_CODE_FOR_NON_GEO_ENTITY)) { 574 LOGGER.log(Level.WARNING, "invalid metadata " + 575 "(country calling code was mapped to the non-geo entity as well as specific region(s))"); 576 } 577 nanpaRegions.addAll(countryCallingCodeToRegionCodeMap.get(NANPA_COUNTRY_CODE)); 578 } 579 580 // @VisibleForTesting 581 void loadMetadataFromFile(String filePrefix, String regionCode, int countryCallingCode) { 582 boolean isNonGeoRegion = REGION_CODE_FOR_NON_GEO_ENTITY.equals(regionCode); 583 String fileName = filePrefix + "_" + 584 (isNonGeoRegion ? String.valueOf(countryCallingCode) : regionCode); 585 InputStream source = PhoneNumberUtil.class.getResourceAsStream(fileName); 586 if (source == null) { 587 LOGGER.log(Level.SEVERE, "missing metadata: " + fileName); 588 throw new RuntimeException("missing metadata: " + fileName); 589 } 590 ObjectInputStream in = null; 591 try { 592 in = new ObjectInputStream(source); 593 PhoneMetadataCollection metadataCollection = new PhoneMetadataCollection(); 594 metadataCollection.readExternal(in); 595 List<PhoneMetadata> metadataList = metadataCollection.getMetadataList(); 596 if (metadataList.isEmpty()) { 597 LOGGER.log(Level.SEVERE, "empty metadata: " + fileName); 598 throw new RuntimeException("empty metadata: " + fileName); 599 } 600 if (metadataList.size() > 1) { 601 LOGGER.log(Level.WARNING, "invalid metadata (too many entries): " + fileName); 602 } 603 PhoneMetadata metadata = metadataList.get(0); 604 if (isNonGeoRegion) { 605 countryCodeToNonGeographicalMetadataMap.put(countryCallingCode, metadata); 606 } else { 607 regionToMetadataMap.put(regionCode, metadata); 608 } 609 } catch (IOException e) { 610 LOGGER.log(Level.SEVERE, "cannot load/parse metadata: " + fileName, e); 611 throw new RuntimeException("cannot load/parse metadata: " + fileName, e); 612 } finally { 613 close(in); 614 } 615 } 616 617 private static void close(InputStream in) { 618 if (in != null) { 619 try { 620 in.close(); 621 } catch (IOException e) { 622 LOGGER.log(Level.WARNING, "error closing input stream (ignored)", e); 623 } 624 } 625 } 626 627 /** 628 * Attempts to extract a possible number from the string passed in. This currently strips all 629 * leading characters that cannot be used to start a phone number. Characters that can be used to 630 * start a phone number are defined in the VALID_START_CHAR_PATTERN. If none of these characters 631 * are found in the number passed in, an empty string is returned. This function also attempts to 632 * strip off any alternative extensions or endings if two or more are present, such as in the case 633 * of: (530) 583-6985 x302/x2303. The second extension here makes this actually two phone numbers, 634 * (530) 583-6985 x302 and (530) 583-6985 x2303. We remove the second extension so that the first 635 * number is parsed correctly. 636 * 637 * @param number the string that might contain a phone number 638 * @return the number, stripped of any non-phone-number prefix (such as "Tel:") or an empty 639 * string if no character used to start phone numbers (such as + or any digit) is 640 * found in the number 641 */ 642 static String extractPossibleNumber(String number) { 643 Matcher m = VALID_START_CHAR_PATTERN.matcher(number); 644 if (m.find()) { 645 number = number.substring(m.start()); 646 // Remove trailing non-alpha non-numerical characters. 647 Matcher trailingCharsMatcher = UNWANTED_END_CHAR_PATTERN.matcher(number); 648 if (trailingCharsMatcher.find()) { 649 number = number.substring(0, trailingCharsMatcher.start()); 650 LOGGER.log(Level.FINER, "Stripped trailing characters: " + number); 651 } 652 // Check for extra numbers at the end. 653 Matcher secondNumber = SECOND_NUMBER_START_PATTERN.matcher(number); 654 if (secondNumber.find()) { 655 number = number.substring(0, secondNumber.start()); 656 } 657 return number; 658 } else { 659 return ""; 660 } 661 } 662 663 /** 664 * Checks to see if the string of characters could possibly be a phone number at all. At the 665 * moment, checks to see that the string begins with at least 2 digits, ignoring any punctuation 666 * commonly found in phone numbers. 667 * This method does not require the number to be normalized in advance - but does assume that 668 * leading non-number symbols have been removed, such as by the method extractPossibleNumber. 669 * 670 * @param number string to be checked for viability as a phone number 671 * @return true if the number could be a phone number of some sort, otherwise false 672 */ 673 // @VisibleForTesting 674 static boolean isViablePhoneNumber(String number) { 675 if (number.length() < MIN_LENGTH_FOR_NSN) { 676 return false; 677 } 678 Matcher m = VALID_PHONE_NUMBER_PATTERN.matcher(number); 679 return m.matches(); 680 } 681 682 /** 683 * Normalizes a string of characters representing a phone number. This performs the following 684 * conversions: 685 * Punctuation is stripped. 686 * For ALPHA/VANITY numbers: 687 * Letters are converted to their numeric representation on a telephone keypad. The keypad 688 * used here is the one defined in ITU Recommendation E.161. This is only done if there are 689 * 3 or more letters in the number, to lessen the risk that such letters are typos. 690 * For other numbers: 691 * Wide-ascii digits are converted to normal ASCII (European) digits. 692 * Arabic-Indic numerals are converted to European numerals. 693 * Spurious alpha characters are stripped. 694 * 695 * @param number a string of characters representing a phone number 696 * @return the normalized string version of the phone number 697 */ 698 static String normalize(String number) { 699 Matcher m = VALID_ALPHA_PHONE_PATTERN.matcher(number); 700 if (m.matches()) { 701 return normalizeHelper(number, ALPHA_PHONE_MAPPINGS, true); 702 } else { 703 return normalizeDigitsOnly(number); 704 } 705 } 706 707 /** 708 * Normalizes a string of characters representing a phone number. This is a wrapper for 709 * normalize(String number) but does in-place normalization of the StringBuilder provided. 710 * 711 * @param number a StringBuilder of characters representing a phone number that will be 712 * normalized in place 713 */ 714 static void normalize(StringBuilder number) { 715 String normalizedNumber = normalize(number.toString()); 716 number.replace(0, number.length(), normalizedNumber); 717 } 718 719 /** 720 * Normalizes a string of characters representing a phone number. This converts wide-ascii and 721 * arabic-indic numerals to European numerals, and strips punctuation and alpha characters. 722 * 723 * @param number a string of characters representing a phone number 724 * @return the normalized string version of the phone number 725 */ 726 public static String normalizeDigitsOnly(String number) { 727 return normalizeDigits(number, false /* strip non-digits */).toString(); 728 } 729 730 static StringBuilder normalizeDigits(String number, boolean keepNonDigits) { 731 StringBuilder normalizedDigits = new StringBuilder(number.length()); 732 for (char c : number.toCharArray()) { 733 int digit = Character.digit(c, 10); 734 if (digit != -1) { 735 normalizedDigits.append(digit); 736 } else if (keepNonDigits) { 737 normalizedDigits.append(c); 738 } 739 } 740 return normalizedDigits; 741 } 742 743 /** 744 * Converts all alpha characters in a number to their respective digits on a keypad, but retains 745 * existing formatting. 746 */ 747 public static String convertAlphaCharactersInNumber(String number) { 748 return normalizeHelper(number, ALPHA_PHONE_MAPPINGS, false); 749 } 750 751 /** 752 * Gets the length of the geographical area code from the {@code nationalNumber_} field of the 753 * PhoneNumber object passed in, so that clients could use it to split a national significant 754 * number into geographical area code and subscriber number. It works in such a way that the 755 * resultant subscriber number should be diallable, at least on some devices. An example of how 756 * this could be used: 757 * 758 * <pre> 759 * PhoneNumberUtil phoneUtil = PhoneNumberUtil.getInstance(); 760 * PhoneNumber number = phoneUtil.parse("16502530000", "US"); 761 * String nationalSignificantNumber = phoneUtil.getNationalSignificantNumber(number); 762 * String areaCode; 763 * String subscriberNumber; 764 * 765 * int areaCodeLength = phoneUtil.getLengthOfGeographicalAreaCode(number); 766 * if (areaCodeLength > 0) { 767 * areaCode = nationalSignificantNumber.substring(0, areaCodeLength); 768 * subscriberNumber = nationalSignificantNumber.substring(areaCodeLength); 769 * } else { 770 * areaCode = ""; 771 * subscriberNumber = nationalSignificantNumber; 772 * } 773 * </pre> 774 * 775 * N.B.: area code is a very ambiguous concept, so the I18N team generally recommends against 776 * using it for most purposes, but recommends using the more general {@code national_number} 777 * instead. Read the following carefully before deciding to use this method: 778 * <ul> 779 * <li> geographical area codes change over time, and this method honors those changes; 780 * therefore, it doesn't guarantee the stability of the result it produces. 781 * <li> subscriber numbers may not be diallable from all devices (notably mobile devices, which 782 * typically requires the full national_number to be dialled in most regions). 783 * <li> most non-geographical numbers have no area codes, including numbers from non-geographical 784 * entities 785 * <li> some geographical numbers have no area codes. 786 * </ul> 787 * @param number the PhoneNumber object for which clients want to know the length of the area 788 * code. 789 * @return the length of area code of the PhoneNumber object passed in. 790 */ 791 public int getLengthOfGeographicalAreaCode(PhoneNumber number) { 792 PhoneMetadata metadata = getMetadataForRegion(getRegionCodeForNumber(number)); 793 if (metadata == null) { 794 return 0; 795 } 796 // If a country doesn't use a national prefix, and this number doesn't have an Italian leading 797 // zero, we assume it is a closed dialling plan with no area codes. 798 if (!metadata.hasNationalPrefix() && !number.isItalianLeadingZero()) { 799 return 0; 800 } 801 802 if (!isNumberGeographical(number)) { 803 return 0; 804 } 805 806 return getLengthOfNationalDestinationCode(number); 807 } 808 809 /** 810 * Gets the length of the national destination code (NDC) from the PhoneNumber object passed in, 811 * so that clients could use it to split a national significant number into NDC and subscriber 812 * number. The NDC of a phone number is normally the first group of digit(s) right after the 813 * country calling code when the number is formatted in the international format, if there is a 814 * subscriber number part that follows. An example of how this could be used: 815 * 816 * <pre> 817 * PhoneNumberUtil phoneUtil = PhoneNumberUtil.getInstance(); 818 * PhoneNumber number = phoneUtil.parse("18002530000", "US"); 819 * String nationalSignificantNumber = phoneUtil.getNationalSignificantNumber(number); 820 * String nationalDestinationCode; 821 * String subscriberNumber; 822 * 823 * int nationalDestinationCodeLength = phoneUtil.getLengthOfNationalDestinationCode(number); 824 * if (nationalDestinationCodeLength > 0) { 825 * nationalDestinationCode = nationalSignificantNumber.substring(0, 826 * nationalDestinationCodeLength); 827 * subscriberNumber = nationalSignificantNumber.substring(nationalDestinationCodeLength); 828 * } else { 829 * nationalDestinationCode = ""; 830 * subscriberNumber = nationalSignificantNumber; 831 * } 832 * </pre> 833 * 834 * Refer to the unittests to see the difference between this function and 835 * {@link #getLengthOfGeographicalAreaCode}. 836 * 837 * @param number the PhoneNumber object for which clients want to know the length of the NDC. 838 * @return the length of NDC of the PhoneNumber object passed in. 839 */ 840 public int getLengthOfNationalDestinationCode(PhoneNumber number) { 841 PhoneNumber copiedProto; 842 if (number.hasExtension()) { 843 // We don't want to alter the proto given to us, but we don't want to include the extension 844 // when we format it, so we copy it and clear the extension here. 845 copiedProto = new PhoneNumber(); 846 copiedProto.mergeFrom(number); 847 copiedProto.clearExtension(); 848 } else { 849 copiedProto = number; 850 } 851 852 String nationalSignificantNumber = format(copiedProto, 853 PhoneNumberUtil.PhoneNumberFormat.INTERNATIONAL); 854 String[] numberGroups = NON_DIGITS_PATTERN.split(nationalSignificantNumber); 855 // The pattern will start with "+COUNTRY_CODE " so the first group will always be the empty 856 // string (before the + symbol) and the second group will be the country calling code. The third 857 // group will be area code if it is not the last group. 858 if (numberGroups.length <= 3) { 859 return 0; 860 } 861 862 if (getRegionCodeForCountryCode(number.getCountryCode()).equals("AR") && 863 getNumberType(number) == PhoneNumberType.MOBILE) { 864 // Argentinian mobile numbers, when formatted in the international format, are in the form of 865 // +54 9 NDC XXXX.... As a result, we take the length of the third group (NDC) and add 1 for 866 // the digit 9, which also forms part of the national significant number. 867 // 868 // TODO: Investigate the possibility of better modeling the metadata to make it 869 // easier to obtain the NDC. 870 return numberGroups[3].length() + 1; 871 } 872 return numberGroups[2].length(); 873 } 874 875 /** 876 * Normalizes a string of characters representing a phone number by replacing all characters found 877 * in the accompanying map with the values therein, and stripping all other characters if 878 * removeNonMatches is true. 879 * 880 * @param number a string of characters representing a phone number 881 * @param normalizationReplacements a mapping of characters to what they should be replaced by in 882 * the normalized version of the phone number 883 * @param removeNonMatches indicates whether characters that are not able to be replaced 884 * should be stripped from the number. If this is false, they 885 * will be left unchanged in the number. 886 * @return the normalized string version of the phone number 887 */ 888 private static String normalizeHelper(String number, 889 Map<Character, Character> normalizationReplacements, 890 boolean removeNonMatches) { 891 StringBuilder normalizedNumber = new StringBuilder(number.length()); 892 for (int i = 0; i < number.length(); i++) { 893 char character = number.charAt(i); 894 Character newDigit = normalizationReplacements.get(Character.toUpperCase(character)); 895 if (newDigit != null) { 896 normalizedNumber.append(newDigit); 897 } else if (!removeNonMatches) { 898 normalizedNumber.append(character); 899 } 900 // If neither of the above are true, we remove this character. 901 } 902 return normalizedNumber.toString(); 903 } 904 905 // @VisibleForTesting 906 static synchronized PhoneNumberUtil getInstance( 907 String baseFileLocation, 908 Map<Integer, List<String>> countryCallingCodeToRegionCodeMap) { 909 if (instance == null) { 910 instance = new PhoneNumberUtil(); 911 instance.countryCallingCodeToRegionCodeMap = countryCallingCodeToRegionCodeMap; 912 instance.init(baseFileLocation); 913 } 914 return instance; 915 } 916 917 /** 918 * Used for testing purposes only to reset the PhoneNumberUtil singleton to null. 919 */ 920 // @VisibleForTesting 921 static synchronized void resetInstance() { 922 instance = null; 923 } 924 925 /** 926 * Convenience method to get a list of what regions the library has metadata for. 927 */ 928 public Set<String> getSupportedRegions() { 929 return Collections.unmodifiableSet(supportedRegions); 930 } 931 932 /** 933 * Convenience method to get a list of what global network calling codes the library has metadata 934 * for. 935 */ 936 public Set<Integer> getSupportedGlobalNetworkCallingCodes() { 937 return Collections.unmodifiableSet(countryCodesForNonGeographicalRegion); 938 } 939 940 /** 941 * Gets a {@link PhoneNumberUtil} instance to carry out international phone number formatting, 942 * parsing, or validation. The instance is loaded with phone number metadata for a number of most 943 * commonly used regions. 944 * 945 * <p>The {@link PhoneNumberUtil} is implemented as a singleton. Therefore, calling getInstance 946 * multiple times will only result in one instance being created. 947 * 948 * @return a PhoneNumberUtil instance 949 */ 950 public static synchronized PhoneNumberUtil getInstance() { 951 if (instance == null) { 952 return getInstance(META_DATA_FILE_PREFIX, 953 CountryCodeToRegionCodeMap.getCountryCodeToRegionCodeMap()); 954 } 955 return instance; 956 } 957 958 /** 959 * Helper function to check if the national prefix formatting rule has the first group only, i.e., 960 * does not start with the national prefix. 961 */ 962 static boolean formattingRuleHasFirstGroupOnly(String nationalPrefixFormattingRule) { 963 return FIRST_GROUP_ONLY_PREFIX_PATTERN.matcher(nationalPrefixFormattingRule).matches(); 964 } 965 966 /** 967 * Tests whether a phone number has a geographical association. It checks if the number is 968 * associated to a certain region in the country where it belongs to. Note that this doesn't 969 * verify if the number is actually in use. 970 */ 971 boolean isNumberGeographical(PhoneNumber phoneNumber) { 972 PhoneNumberType numberType = getNumberType(phoneNumber); 973 // TODO: Include mobile phone numbers from countries like Indonesia, which has some 974 // mobile numbers that are geographical. 975 return numberType == PhoneNumberType.FIXED_LINE || 976 numberType == PhoneNumberType.FIXED_LINE_OR_MOBILE; 977 } 978 979 /** 980 * Helper function to check region code is not unknown or null. 981 */ 982 private boolean isValidRegionCode(String regionCode) { 983 return regionCode != null && supportedRegions.contains(regionCode); 984 } 985 986 /** 987 * Helper function to check the country calling code is valid. 988 */ 989 private boolean hasValidCountryCallingCode(int countryCallingCode) { 990 return countryCallingCodeToRegionCodeMap.containsKey(countryCallingCode); 991 } 992 993 /** 994 * Formats a phone number in the specified format using default rules. Note that this does not 995 * promise to produce a phone number that the user can dial from where they are - although we do 996 * format in either 'national' or 'international' format depending on what the client asks for, we 997 * do not currently support a more abbreviated format, such as for users in the same "area" who 998 * could potentially dial the number without area code. Note that if the phone number has a 999 * country calling code of 0 or an otherwise invalid country calling code, we cannot work out 1000 * which formatting rules to apply so we return the national significant number with no formatting 1001 * applied. 1002 * 1003 * @param number the phone number to be formatted 1004 * @param numberFormat the format the phone number should be formatted into 1005 * @return the formatted phone number 1006 */ 1007 public String format(PhoneNumber number, PhoneNumberFormat numberFormat) { 1008 if (number.getNationalNumber() == 0 && number.hasRawInput()) { 1009 // Unparseable numbers that kept their raw input just use that. 1010 // This is the only case where a number can be formatted as E164 without a 1011 // leading '+' symbol (but the original number wasn't parseable anyway). 1012 // TODO: Consider removing the 'if' above so that unparseable 1013 // strings without raw input format to the empty string instead of "+00" 1014 String rawInput = number.getRawInput(); 1015 if (rawInput.length() > 0) { 1016 return rawInput; 1017 } 1018 } 1019 StringBuilder formattedNumber = new StringBuilder(20); 1020 format(number, numberFormat, formattedNumber); 1021 return formattedNumber.toString(); 1022 } 1023 1024 /** 1025 * Same as {@link #format(PhoneNumber, PhoneNumberFormat)}, but accepts a mutable StringBuilder as 1026 * a parameter to decrease object creation when invoked many times. 1027 */ 1028 public void format(PhoneNumber number, PhoneNumberFormat numberFormat, 1029 StringBuilder formattedNumber) { 1030 // Clear the StringBuilder first. 1031 formattedNumber.setLength(0); 1032 int countryCallingCode = number.getCountryCode(); 1033 String nationalSignificantNumber = getNationalSignificantNumber(number); 1034 if (numberFormat == PhoneNumberFormat.E164) { 1035 // Early exit for E164 case (even if the country calling code is invalid) since no formatting 1036 // of the national number needs to be applied. Extensions are not formatted. 1037 formattedNumber.append(nationalSignificantNumber); 1038 prefixNumberWithCountryCallingCode(countryCallingCode, PhoneNumberFormat.E164, 1039 formattedNumber); 1040 return; 1041 } 1042 if (!hasValidCountryCallingCode(countryCallingCode)) { 1043 formattedNumber.append(nationalSignificantNumber); 1044 return; 1045 } 1046 // Note getRegionCodeForCountryCode() is used because formatting information for regions which 1047 // share a country calling code is contained by only one region for performance reasons. For 1048 // example, for NANPA regions it will be contained in the metadata for US. 1049 String regionCode = getRegionCodeForCountryCode(countryCallingCode); 1050 // Metadata cannot be null because the country calling code is valid (which means that the 1051 // region code cannot be ZZ and must be one of our supported region codes). 1052 PhoneMetadata metadata = 1053 getMetadataForRegionOrCallingCode(countryCallingCode, regionCode); 1054 formattedNumber.append(formatNsn(nationalSignificantNumber, metadata, numberFormat)); 1055 maybeAppendFormattedExtension(number, metadata, numberFormat, formattedNumber); 1056 prefixNumberWithCountryCallingCode(countryCallingCode, numberFormat, formattedNumber); 1057 } 1058 1059 /** 1060 * Formats a phone number in the specified format using client-defined formatting rules. Note that 1061 * if the phone number has a country calling code of zero or an otherwise invalid country calling 1062 * code, we cannot work out things like whether there should be a national prefix applied, or how 1063 * to format extensions, so we return the national significant number with no formatting applied. 1064 * 1065 * @param number the phone number to be formatted 1066 * @param numberFormat the format the phone number should be formatted into 1067 * @param userDefinedFormats formatting rules specified by clients 1068 * @return the formatted phone number 1069 */ 1070 public String formatByPattern(PhoneNumber number, 1071 PhoneNumberFormat numberFormat, 1072 List<NumberFormat> userDefinedFormats) { 1073 int countryCallingCode = number.getCountryCode(); 1074 String nationalSignificantNumber = getNationalSignificantNumber(number); 1075 if (!hasValidCountryCallingCode(countryCallingCode)) { 1076 return nationalSignificantNumber; 1077 } 1078 // Note getRegionCodeForCountryCode() is used because formatting information for regions which 1079 // share a country calling code is contained by only one region for performance reasons. For 1080 // example, for NANPA regions it will be contained in the metadata for US. 1081 String regionCode = getRegionCodeForCountryCode(countryCallingCode); 1082 // Metadata cannot be null because the country calling code is valid 1083 PhoneMetadata metadata = 1084 getMetadataForRegionOrCallingCode(countryCallingCode, regionCode); 1085 1086 StringBuilder formattedNumber = new StringBuilder(20); 1087 1088 NumberFormat formattingPattern = 1089 chooseFormattingPatternForNumber(userDefinedFormats, nationalSignificantNumber); 1090 if (formattingPattern == null) { 1091 // If no pattern above is matched, we format the number as a whole. 1092 formattedNumber.append(nationalSignificantNumber); 1093 } else { 1094 NumberFormat numFormatCopy = new NumberFormat(); 1095 // Before we do a replacement of the national prefix pattern $NP with the national prefix, we 1096 // need to copy the rule so that subsequent replacements for different numbers have the 1097 // appropriate national prefix. 1098 numFormatCopy.mergeFrom(formattingPattern); 1099 String nationalPrefixFormattingRule = formattingPattern.getNationalPrefixFormattingRule(); 1100 if (nationalPrefixFormattingRule.length() > 0) { 1101 String nationalPrefix = metadata.getNationalPrefix(); 1102 if (nationalPrefix.length() > 0) { 1103 // Replace $NP with national prefix and $FG with the first group ($1). 1104 nationalPrefixFormattingRule = 1105 NP_PATTERN.matcher(nationalPrefixFormattingRule).replaceFirst(nationalPrefix); 1106 nationalPrefixFormattingRule = 1107 FG_PATTERN.matcher(nationalPrefixFormattingRule).replaceFirst("\\$1"); 1108 numFormatCopy.setNationalPrefixFormattingRule(nationalPrefixFormattingRule); 1109 } else { 1110 // We don't want to have a rule for how to format the national prefix if there isn't one. 1111 numFormatCopy.clearNationalPrefixFormattingRule(); 1112 } 1113 } 1114 formattedNumber.append( 1115 formatNsnUsingPattern(nationalSignificantNumber, numFormatCopy, numberFormat)); 1116 } 1117 maybeAppendFormattedExtension(number, metadata, numberFormat, formattedNumber); 1118 prefixNumberWithCountryCallingCode(countryCallingCode, numberFormat, formattedNumber); 1119 return formattedNumber.toString(); 1120 } 1121 1122 /** 1123 * Formats a phone number in national format for dialing using the carrier as specified in the 1124 * {@code carrierCode}. The {@code carrierCode} will always be used regardless of whether the 1125 * phone number already has a preferred domestic carrier code stored. If {@code carrierCode} 1126 * contains an empty string, returns the number in national format without any carrier code. 1127 * 1128 * @param number the phone number to be formatted 1129 * @param carrierCode the carrier selection code to be used 1130 * @return the formatted phone number in national format for dialing using the carrier as 1131 * specified in the {@code carrierCode} 1132 */ 1133 public String formatNationalNumberWithCarrierCode(PhoneNumber number, String carrierCode) { 1134 int countryCallingCode = number.getCountryCode(); 1135 String nationalSignificantNumber = getNationalSignificantNumber(number); 1136 if (!hasValidCountryCallingCode(countryCallingCode)) { 1137 return nationalSignificantNumber; 1138 } 1139 1140 // Note getRegionCodeForCountryCode() is used because formatting information for regions which 1141 // share a country calling code is contained by only one region for performance reasons. For 1142 // example, for NANPA regions it will be contained in the metadata for US. 1143 String regionCode = getRegionCodeForCountryCode(countryCallingCode); 1144 // Metadata cannot be null because the country calling code is valid. 1145 PhoneMetadata metadata = getMetadataForRegionOrCallingCode(countryCallingCode, regionCode); 1146 1147 StringBuilder formattedNumber = new StringBuilder(20); 1148 formattedNumber.append(formatNsn(nationalSignificantNumber, metadata, 1149 PhoneNumberFormat.NATIONAL, carrierCode)); 1150 maybeAppendFormattedExtension(number, metadata, PhoneNumberFormat.NATIONAL, formattedNumber); 1151 prefixNumberWithCountryCallingCode(countryCallingCode, PhoneNumberFormat.NATIONAL, 1152 formattedNumber); 1153 return formattedNumber.toString(); 1154 } 1155 1156 private PhoneMetadata getMetadataForRegionOrCallingCode( 1157 int countryCallingCode, String regionCode) { 1158 return REGION_CODE_FOR_NON_GEO_ENTITY.equals(regionCode) 1159 ? getMetadataForNonGeographicalRegion(countryCallingCode) 1160 : getMetadataForRegion(regionCode); 1161 } 1162 1163 /** 1164 * Formats a phone number in national format for dialing using the carrier as specified in the 1165 * preferredDomesticCarrierCode field of the PhoneNumber object passed in. If that is missing, 1166 * use the {@code fallbackCarrierCode} passed in instead. If there is no 1167 * {@code preferredDomesticCarrierCode}, and the {@code fallbackCarrierCode} contains an empty 1168 * string, return the number in national format without any carrier code. 1169 * 1170 * <p>Use {@link #formatNationalNumberWithCarrierCode} instead if the carrier code passed in 1171 * should take precedence over the number's {@code preferredDomesticCarrierCode} when formatting. 1172 * 1173 * @param number the phone number to be formatted 1174 * @param fallbackCarrierCode the carrier selection code to be used, if none is found in the 1175 * phone number itself 1176 * @return the formatted phone number in national format for dialing using the number's 1177 * {@code preferredDomesticCarrierCode}, or the {@code fallbackCarrierCode} passed in if 1178 * none is found 1179 */ 1180 public String formatNationalNumberWithPreferredCarrierCode(PhoneNumber number, 1181 String fallbackCarrierCode) { 1182 return formatNationalNumberWithCarrierCode(number, number.hasPreferredDomesticCarrierCode() 1183 ? number.getPreferredDomesticCarrierCode() 1184 : fallbackCarrierCode); 1185 } 1186 1187 /** 1188 * Returns a number formatted in such a way that it can be dialed from a mobile phone in a 1189 * specific region. If the number cannot be reached from the region (e.g. some countries block 1190 * toll-free numbers from being called outside of the country), the method returns an empty 1191 * string. 1192 * 1193 * @param number the phone number to be formatted 1194 * @param regionCallingFrom the region where the call is being placed 1195 * @param withFormatting whether the number should be returned with formatting symbols, such as 1196 * spaces and dashes. 1197 * @return the formatted phone number 1198 */ 1199 public String formatNumberForMobileDialing(PhoneNumber number, String regionCallingFrom, 1200 boolean withFormatting) { 1201 int countryCallingCode = number.getCountryCode(); 1202 if (!hasValidCountryCallingCode(countryCallingCode)) { 1203 return number.hasRawInput() ? number.getRawInput() : ""; 1204 } 1205 1206 String formattedNumber; 1207 // Clear the extension, as that part cannot normally be dialed together with the main number. 1208 PhoneNumber numberNoExt = new PhoneNumber().mergeFrom(number).clearExtension(); 1209 PhoneNumberType numberType = getNumberType(numberNoExt); 1210 String regionCode = getRegionCodeForCountryCode(countryCallingCode); 1211 if (regionCode.equals("CO") && regionCallingFrom.equals("CO")) { 1212 if (numberType == PhoneNumberType.FIXED_LINE) { 1213 formattedNumber = 1214 formatNationalNumberWithCarrierCode(numberNoExt, COLOMBIA_MOBILE_TO_FIXED_LINE_PREFIX); 1215 } else { 1216 // E164 doesn't work at all when dialing within Colombia. 1217 formattedNumber = format(numberNoExt, PhoneNumberFormat.NATIONAL); 1218 } 1219 } else if (regionCode.equals("PE") && regionCallingFrom.equals("PE")) { 1220 // In Peru, numbers cannot be dialled using E164 format from a mobile phone for Movistar. 1221 // Instead they must be dialled in national format. 1222 formattedNumber = format(numberNoExt, PhoneNumberFormat.NATIONAL); 1223 } else if (regionCode.equals("AE") && regionCallingFrom.equals("AE") && 1224 numberType == PhoneNumberType.UAN) { 1225 // In the United Arab Emirates, numbers with the prefix 600 (UAN numbers) cannot be dialled 1226 // using E164 format. Instead they must be dialled in national format. 1227 formattedNumber = format(numberNoExt, PhoneNumberFormat.NATIONAL); 1228 } else if (regionCode.equals("BR") && regionCallingFrom.equals("BR") && 1229 ((numberType == PhoneNumberType.FIXED_LINE) || (numberType == PhoneNumberType.MOBILE) || 1230 (numberType == PhoneNumberType.FIXED_LINE_OR_MOBILE))) { 1231 formattedNumber = numberNoExt.hasPreferredDomesticCarrierCode() 1232 ? formatNationalNumberWithPreferredCarrierCode(numberNoExt, "") 1233 // Brazilian fixed line and mobile numbers need to be dialed with a carrier code when 1234 // called within Brazil. Without that, most of the carriers won't connect the call. 1235 // Because of that, we return an empty string here. 1236 : ""; 1237 } else if (canBeInternationallyDialled(numberNoExt)) { 1238 return withFormatting ? format(numberNoExt, PhoneNumberFormat.INTERNATIONAL) 1239 : format(numberNoExt, PhoneNumberFormat.E164); 1240 } else { 1241 formattedNumber = (regionCallingFrom.equals(regionCode)) 1242 ? format(numberNoExt, PhoneNumberFormat.NATIONAL) : ""; 1243 } 1244 return withFormatting ? formattedNumber 1245 : normalizeHelper(formattedNumber, DIALLABLE_CHAR_MAPPINGS, 1246 true /* remove non matches */); 1247 } 1248 1249 /** 1250 * Formats a phone number for out-of-country dialing purposes. If no regionCallingFrom is 1251 * supplied, we format the number in its INTERNATIONAL format. If the country calling code is the 1252 * same as that of the region where the number is from, then NATIONAL formatting will be applied. 1253 * 1254 * <p>If the number itself has a country calling code of zero or an otherwise invalid country 1255 * calling code, then we return the number with no formatting applied. 1256 * 1257 * <p>Note this function takes care of the case for calling inside of NANPA and between Russia and 1258 * Kazakhstan (who share the same country calling code). In those cases, no international prefix 1259 * is used. For regions which have multiple international prefixes, the number in its 1260 * INTERNATIONAL format will be returned instead. 1261 * 1262 * @param number the phone number to be formatted 1263 * @param regionCallingFrom the region where the call is being placed 1264 * @return the formatted phone number 1265 */ 1266 public String formatOutOfCountryCallingNumber(PhoneNumber number, 1267 String regionCallingFrom) { 1268 if (!isValidRegionCode(regionCallingFrom)) { 1269 LOGGER.log(Level.WARNING, 1270 "Trying to format number from invalid region " 1271 + regionCallingFrom 1272 + ". International formatting applied."); 1273 return format(number, PhoneNumberFormat.INTERNATIONAL); 1274 } 1275 int countryCallingCode = number.getCountryCode(); 1276 String nationalSignificantNumber = getNationalSignificantNumber(number); 1277 if (!hasValidCountryCallingCode(countryCallingCode)) { 1278 return nationalSignificantNumber; 1279 } 1280 if (countryCallingCode == NANPA_COUNTRY_CODE) { 1281 if (isNANPACountry(regionCallingFrom)) { 1282 // For NANPA regions, return the national format for these regions but prefix it with the 1283 // country calling code. 1284 return countryCallingCode + " " + format(number, PhoneNumberFormat.NATIONAL); 1285 } 1286 } else if (countryCallingCode == getCountryCodeForValidRegion(regionCallingFrom)) { 1287 // If regions share a country calling code, the country calling code need not be dialled. 1288 // This also applies when dialling within a region, so this if clause covers both these cases. 1289 // Technically this is the case for dialling from La Reunion to other overseas departments of 1290 // France (French Guiana, Martinique, Guadeloupe), but not vice versa - so we don't cover this 1291 // edge case for now and for those cases return the version including country calling code. 1292 // Details here: http://www.petitfute.com/voyage/225-info-pratiques-reunion 1293 return format(number, PhoneNumberFormat.NATIONAL); 1294 } 1295 // Metadata cannot be null because we checked 'isValidRegionCode()' above. 1296 PhoneMetadata metadataForRegionCallingFrom = getMetadataForRegion(regionCallingFrom); 1297 String internationalPrefix = metadataForRegionCallingFrom.getInternationalPrefix(); 1298 1299 // For regions that have multiple international prefixes, the international format of the 1300 // number is returned, unless there is a preferred international prefix. 1301 String internationalPrefixForFormatting = ""; 1302 if (UNIQUE_INTERNATIONAL_PREFIX.matcher(internationalPrefix).matches()) { 1303 internationalPrefixForFormatting = internationalPrefix; 1304 } else if (metadataForRegionCallingFrom.hasPreferredInternationalPrefix()) { 1305 internationalPrefixForFormatting = 1306 metadataForRegionCallingFrom.getPreferredInternationalPrefix(); 1307 } 1308 1309 String regionCode = getRegionCodeForCountryCode(countryCallingCode); 1310 // Metadata cannot be null because the country calling code is valid. 1311 PhoneMetadata metadataForRegion = 1312 getMetadataForRegionOrCallingCode(countryCallingCode, regionCode); 1313 String formattedNationalNumber = 1314 formatNsn(nationalSignificantNumber, metadataForRegion, PhoneNumberFormat.INTERNATIONAL); 1315 StringBuilder formattedNumber = new StringBuilder(formattedNationalNumber); 1316 maybeAppendFormattedExtension(number, metadataForRegion, PhoneNumberFormat.INTERNATIONAL, 1317 formattedNumber); 1318 if (internationalPrefixForFormatting.length() > 0) { 1319 formattedNumber.insert(0, " ").insert(0, countryCallingCode).insert(0, " ") 1320 .insert(0, internationalPrefixForFormatting); 1321 } else { 1322 prefixNumberWithCountryCallingCode(countryCallingCode, 1323 PhoneNumberFormat.INTERNATIONAL, 1324 formattedNumber); 1325 } 1326 return formattedNumber.toString(); 1327 } 1328 1329 /** 1330 * Formats a phone number using the original phone number format that the number is parsed from. 1331 * The original format is embedded in the country_code_source field of the PhoneNumber object 1332 * passed in. If such information is missing, the number will be formatted into the NATIONAL 1333 * format by default. When the number contains a leading zero and this is unexpected for this 1334 * country, or we don't have a formatting pattern for the number, the method returns the raw input 1335 * when it is available. 1336 * 1337 * Note this method guarantees no digit will be inserted, removed or modified as a result of 1338 * formatting. 1339 * 1340 * @param number the phone number that needs to be formatted in its original number format 1341 * @param regionCallingFrom the region whose IDD needs to be prefixed if the original number 1342 * has one 1343 * @return the formatted phone number in its original number format 1344 */ 1345 public String formatInOriginalFormat(PhoneNumber number, String regionCallingFrom) { 1346 if (number.hasRawInput() && 1347 (hasUnexpectedItalianLeadingZero(number) || !hasFormattingPatternForNumber(number))) { 1348 // We check if we have the formatting pattern because without that, we might format the number 1349 // as a group without national prefix. 1350 return number.getRawInput(); 1351 } 1352 if (!number.hasCountryCodeSource()) { 1353 return format(number, PhoneNumberFormat.NATIONAL); 1354 } 1355 String formattedNumber; 1356 switch (number.getCountryCodeSource()) { 1357 case FROM_NUMBER_WITH_PLUS_SIGN: 1358 formattedNumber = format(number, PhoneNumberFormat.INTERNATIONAL); 1359 break; 1360 case FROM_NUMBER_WITH_IDD: 1361 formattedNumber = formatOutOfCountryCallingNumber(number, regionCallingFrom); 1362 break; 1363 case FROM_NUMBER_WITHOUT_PLUS_SIGN: 1364 formattedNumber = format(number, PhoneNumberFormat.INTERNATIONAL).substring(1); 1365 break; 1366 case FROM_DEFAULT_COUNTRY: 1367 // Fall-through to default case. 1368 default: 1369 String regionCode = getRegionCodeForCountryCode(number.getCountryCode()); 1370 // We strip non-digits from the NDD here, and from the raw input later, so that we can 1371 // compare them easily. 1372 String nationalPrefix = getNddPrefixForRegion(regionCode, true /* strip non-digits */); 1373 String nationalFormat = format(number, PhoneNumberFormat.NATIONAL); 1374 if (nationalPrefix == null || nationalPrefix.length() == 0) { 1375 // If the region doesn't have a national prefix at all, we can safely return the national 1376 // format without worrying about a national prefix being added. 1377 formattedNumber = nationalFormat; 1378 break; 1379 } 1380 // Otherwise, we check if the original number was entered with a national prefix. 1381 if (rawInputContainsNationalPrefix( 1382 number.getRawInput(), nationalPrefix, regionCode)) { 1383 // If so, we can safely return the national format. 1384 formattedNumber = nationalFormat; 1385 break; 1386 } 1387 // Metadata cannot be null here because getNddPrefixForRegion() (above) returns null if 1388 // there is no metadata for the region. 1389 PhoneMetadata metadata = getMetadataForRegion(regionCode); 1390 String nationalNumber = getNationalSignificantNumber(number); 1391 NumberFormat formatRule = 1392 chooseFormattingPatternForNumber(metadata.numberFormats(), nationalNumber); 1393 // The format rule could still be null here if the national number was 0 and there was no 1394 // raw input (this should not be possible for numbers generated by the phonenumber library 1395 // as they would also not have a country calling code and we would have exited earlier). 1396 if (formatRule == null) { 1397 formattedNumber = nationalFormat; 1398 break; 1399 } 1400 // When the format we apply to this number doesn't contain national prefix, we can just 1401 // return the national format. 1402 // TODO: Refactor the code below with the code in isNationalPrefixPresentIfRequired. 1403 String candidateNationalPrefixRule = formatRule.getNationalPrefixFormattingRule(); 1404 // We assume that the first-group symbol will never be _before_ the national prefix. 1405 int indexOfFirstGroup = candidateNationalPrefixRule.indexOf("$1"); 1406 if (indexOfFirstGroup <= 0) { 1407 formattedNumber = nationalFormat; 1408 break; 1409 } 1410 candidateNationalPrefixRule = 1411 candidateNationalPrefixRule.substring(0, indexOfFirstGroup); 1412 candidateNationalPrefixRule = normalizeDigitsOnly(candidateNationalPrefixRule); 1413 if (candidateNationalPrefixRule.length() == 0) { 1414 // National prefix not used when formatting this number. 1415 formattedNumber = nationalFormat; 1416 break; 1417 } 1418 // Otherwise, we need to remove the national prefix from our output. 1419 NumberFormat numFormatCopy = new NumberFormat(); 1420 numFormatCopy.mergeFrom(formatRule); 1421 numFormatCopy.clearNationalPrefixFormattingRule(); 1422 List<NumberFormat> numberFormats = new ArrayList<NumberFormat>(1); 1423 numberFormats.add(numFormatCopy); 1424 formattedNumber = formatByPattern(number, PhoneNumberFormat.NATIONAL, numberFormats); 1425 break; 1426 } 1427 String rawInput = number.getRawInput(); 1428 // If no digit is inserted/removed/modified as a result of our formatting, we return the 1429 // formatted phone number; otherwise we return the raw input the user entered. 1430 if (formattedNumber != null && rawInput.length() > 0) { 1431 String normalizedFormattedNumber = 1432 normalizeHelper(formattedNumber, DIALLABLE_CHAR_MAPPINGS, true /* remove non matches */); 1433 String normalizedRawInput = 1434 normalizeHelper(rawInput, DIALLABLE_CHAR_MAPPINGS, true /* remove non matches */); 1435 if (!normalizedFormattedNumber.equals(normalizedRawInput)) { 1436 formattedNumber = rawInput; 1437 } 1438 } 1439 return formattedNumber; 1440 } 1441 1442 // Check if rawInput, which is assumed to be in the national format, has a national prefix. The 1443 // national prefix is assumed to be in digits-only form. 1444 private boolean rawInputContainsNationalPrefix(String rawInput, String nationalPrefix, 1445 String regionCode) { 1446 String normalizedNationalNumber = normalizeDigitsOnly(rawInput); 1447 if (normalizedNationalNumber.startsWith(nationalPrefix)) { 1448 try { 1449 // Some Japanese numbers (e.g. 00777123) might be mistaken to contain the national prefix 1450 // when written without it (e.g. 0777123) if we just do prefix matching. To tackle that, we 1451 // check the validity of the number if the assumed national prefix is removed (777123 won't 1452 // be valid in Japan). 1453 return isValidNumber( 1454 parse(normalizedNationalNumber.substring(nationalPrefix.length()), regionCode)); 1455 } catch (NumberParseException e) { 1456 return false; 1457 } 1458 } 1459 return false; 1460 } 1461 1462 /** 1463 * Returns true if a number is from a region whose national significant number couldn't contain a 1464 * leading zero, but has the italian_leading_zero field set to true. 1465 */ 1466 private boolean hasUnexpectedItalianLeadingZero(PhoneNumber number) { 1467 return number.isItalianLeadingZero() && !isLeadingZeroPossible(number.getCountryCode()); 1468 } 1469 1470 private boolean hasFormattingPatternForNumber(PhoneNumber number) { 1471 int countryCallingCode = number.getCountryCode(); 1472 String phoneNumberRegion = getRegionCodeForCountryCode(countryCallingCode); 1473 PhoneMetadata metadata = 1474 getMetadataForRegionOrCallingCode(countryCallingCode, phoneNumberRegion); 1475 if (metadata == null) { 1476 return false; 1477 } 1478 String nationalNumber = getNationalSignificantNumber(number); 1479 NumberFormat formatRule = 1480 chooseFormattingPatternForNumber(metadata.numberFormats(), nationalNumber); 1481 return formatRule != null; 1482 } 1483 1484 /** 1485 * Formats a phone number for out-of-country dialing purposes. 1486 * 1487 * Note that in this version, if the number was entered originally using alpha characters and 1488 * this version of the number is stored in raw_input, this representation of the number will be 1489 * used rather than the digit representation. Grouping information, as specified by characters 1490 * such as "-" and " ", will be retained. 1491 * 1492 * <p><b>Caveats:</b></p> 1493 * <ul> 1494 * <li> This will not produce good results if the country calling code is both present in the raw 1495 * input _and_ is the start of the national number. This is not a problem in the regions 1496 * which typically use alpha numbers. 1497 * <li> This will also not produce good results if the raw input has any grouping information 1498 * within the first three digits of the national number, and if the function needs to strip 1499 * preceding digits/words in the raw input before these digits. Normally people group the 1500 * first three digits together so this is not a huge problem - and will be fixed if it 1501 * proves to be so. 1502 * </ul> 1503 * 1504 * @param number the phone number that needs to be formatted 1505 * @param regionCallingFrom the region where the call is being placed 1506 * @return the formatted phone number 1507 */ 1508 public String formatOutOfCountryKeepingAlphaChars(PhoneNumber number, 1509 String regionCallingFrom) { 1510 String rawInput = number.getRawInput(); 1511 // If there is no raw input, then we can't keep alpha characters because there aren't any. 1512 // In this case, we return formatOutOfCountryCallingNumber. 1513 if (rawInput.length() == 0) { 1514 return formatOutOfCountryCallingNumber(number, regionCallingFrom); 1515 } 1516 int countryCode = number.getCountryCode(); 1517 if (!hasValidCountryCallingCode(countryCode)) { 1518 return rawInput; 1519 } 1520 // Strip any prefix such as country calling code, IDD, that was present. We do this by comparing 1521 // the number in raw_input with the parsed number. 1522 // To do this, first we normalize punctuation. We retain number grouping symbols such as " " 1523 // only. 1524 rawInput = normalizeHelper(rawInput, ALL_PLUS_NUMBER_GROUPING_SYMBOLS, true); 1525 // Now we trim everything before the first three digits in the parsed number. We choose three 1526 // because all valid alpha numbers have 3 digits at the start - if it does not, then we don't 1527 // trim anything at all. Similarly, if the national number was less than three digits, we don't 1528 // trim anything at all. 1529 String nationalNumber = getNationalSignificantNumber(number); 1530 if (nationalNumber.length() > 3) { 1531 int firstNationalNumberDigit = rawInput.indexOf(nationalNumber.substring(0, 3)); 1532 if (firstNationalNumberDigit != -1) { 1533 rawInput = rawInput.substring(firstNationalNumberDigit); 1534 } 1535 } 1536 PhoneMetadata metadataForRegionCallingFrom = getMetadataForRegion(regionCallingFrom); 1537 if (countryCode == NANPA_COUNTRY_CODE) { 1538 if (isNANPACountry(regionCallingFrom)) { 1539 return countryCode + " " + rawInput; 1540 } 1541 } else if (metadataForRegionCallingFrom != null && 1542 countryCode == getCountryCodeForValidRegion(regionCallingFrom)) { 1543 NumberFormat formattingPattern = 1544 chooseFormattingPatternForNumber(metadataForRegionCallingFrom.numberFormats(), 1545 nationalNumber); 1546 if (formattingPattern == null) { 1547 // If no pattern above is matched, we format the original input. 1548 return rawInput; 1549 } 1550 NumberFormat newFormat = new NumberFormat(); 1551 newFormat.mergeFrom(formattingPattern); 1552 // The first group is the first group of digits that the user wrote together. 1553 newFormat.setPattern("(\\d+)(.*)"); 1554 // Here we just concatenate them back together after the national prefix has been fixed. 1555 newFormat.setFormat("$1$2"); 1556 // Now we format using this pattern instead of the default pattern, but with the national 1557 // prefix prefixed if necessary. 1558 // This will not work in the cases where the pattern (and not the leading digits) decide 1559 // whether a national prefix needs to be used, since we have overridden the pattern to match 1560 // anything, but that is not the case in the metadata to date. 1561 return formatNsnUsingPattern(rawInput, newFormat, PhoneNumberFormat.NATIONAL); 1562 } 1563 String internationalPrefixForFormatting = ""; 1564 // If an unsupported region-calling-from is entered, or a country with multiple international 1565 // prefixes, the international format of the number is returned, unless there is a preferred 1566 // international prefix. 1567 if (metadataForRegionCallingFrom != null) { 1568 String internationalPrefix = metadataForRegionCallingFrom.getInternationalPrefix(); 1569 internationalPrefixForFormatting = 1570 UNIQUE_INTERNATIONAL_PREFIX.matcher(internationalPrefix).matches() 1571 ? internationalPrefix 1572 : metadataForRegionCallingFrom.getPreferredInternationalPrefix(); 1573 } 1574 StringBuilder formattedNumber = new StringBuilder(rawInput); 1575 String regionCode = getRegionCodeForCountryCode(countryCode); 1576 // Metadata cannot be null because the country calling code is valid. 1577 PhoneMetadata metadataForRegion = getMetadataForRegionOrCallingCode(countryCode, regionCode); 1578 maybeAppendFormattedExtension(number, metadataForRegion, 1579 PhoneNumberFormat.INTERNATIONAL, formattedNumber); 1580 if (internationalPrefixForFormatting.length() > 0) { 1581 formattedNumber.insert(0, " ").insert(0, countryCode).insert(0, " ") 1582 .insert(0, internationalPrefixForFormatting); 1583 } else { 1584 // Invalid region entered as country-calling-from (so no metadata was found for it) or the 1585 // region chosen has multiple international dialling prefixes. 1586 LOGGER.log(Level.WARNING, 1587 "Trying to format number from invalid region " 1588 + regionCallingFrom 1589 + ". International formatting applied."); 1590 prefixNumberWithCountryCallingCode(countryCode, 1591 PhoneNumberFormat.INTERNATIONAL, 1592 formattedNumber); 1593 } 1594 return formattedNumber.toString(); 1595 } 1596 1597 /** 1598 * Gets the national significant number of the a phone number. Note a national significant number 1599 * doesn't contain a national prefix or any formatting. 1600 * 1601 * @param number the phone number for which the national significant number is needed 1602 * @return the national significant number of the PhoneNumber object passed in 1603 */ 1604 public String getNationalSignificantNumber(PhoneNumber number) { 1605 // If a leading zero has been set, we prefix this now. Note this is not a national prefix. 1606 StringBuilder nationalNumber = new StringBuilder(number.isItalianLeadingZero() ? "0" : ""); 1607 nationalNumber.append(number.getNationalNumber()); 1608 return nationalNumber.toString(); 1609 } 1610 1611 /** 1612 * A helper function that is used by format and formatByPattern. 1613 */ 1614 private void prefixNumberWithCountryCallingCode(int countryCallingCode, 1615 PhoneNumberFormat numberFormat, 1616 StringBuilder formattedNumber) { 1617 switch (numberFormat) { 1618 case E164: 1619 formattedNumber.insert(0, countryCallingCode).insert(0, PLUS_SIGN); 1620 return; 1621 case INTERNATIONAL: 1622 formattedNumber.insert(0, " ").insert(0, countryCallingCode).insert(0, PLUS_SIGN); 1623 return; 1624 case RFC3966: 1625 formattedNumber.insert(0, "-").insert(0, countryCallingCode).insert(0, PLUS_SIGN) 1626 .insert(0, RFC3966_PREFIX); 1627 return; 1628 case NATIONAL: 1629 default: 1630 return; 1631 } 1632 } 1633 1634 // Simple wrapper of formatNsn for the common case of no carrier code. 1635 private String formatNsn(String number, PhoneMetadata metadata, PhoneNumberFormat numberFormat) { 1636 return formatNsn(number, metadata, numberFormat, null); 1637 } 1638 1639 // Note in some regions, the national number can be written in two completely different ways 1640 // depending on whether it forms part of the NATIONAL format or INTERNATIONAL format. The 1641 // numberFormat parameter here is used to specify which format to use for those cases. If a 1642 // carrierCode is specified, this will be inserted into the formatted string to replace $CC. 1643 private String formatNsn(String number, 1644 PhoneMetadata metadata, 1645 PhoneNumberFormat numberFormat, 1646 String carrierCode) { 1647 List<NumberFormat> intlNumberFormats = metadata.intlNumberFormats(); 1648 // When the intlNumberFormats exists, we use that to format national number for the 1649 // INTERNATIONAL format instead of using the numberDesc.numberFormats. 1650 List<NumberFormat> availableFormats = 1651 (intlNumberFormats.size() == 0 || numberFormat == PhoneNumberFormat.NATIONAL) 1652 ? metadata.numberFormats() 1653 : metadata.intlNumberFormats(); 1654 NumberFormat formattingPattern = chooseFormattingPatternForNumber(availableFormats, number); 1655 return (formattingPattern == null) 1656 ? number 1657 : formatNsnUsingPattern(number, formattingPattern, numberFormat, carrierCode); 1658 } 1659 1660 NumberFormat chooseFormattingPatternForNumber(List<NumberFormat> availableFormats, 1661 String nationalNumber) { 1662 for (NumberFormat numFormat : availableFormats) { 1663 int size = numFormat.leadingDigitsPatternSize(); 1664 if (size == 0 || regexCache.getPatternForRegex( 1665 // We always use the last leading_digits_pattern, as it is the most detailed. 1666 numFormat.getLeadingDigitsPattern(size - 1)).matcher(nationalNumber).lookingAt()) { 1667 Matcher m = regexCache.getPatternForRegex(numFormat.getPattern()).matcher(nationalNumber); 1668 if (m.matches()) { 1669 return numFormat; 1670 } 1671 } 1672 } 1673 return null; 1674 } 1675 1676 // Simple wrapper of formatNsnUsingPattern for the common case of no carrier code. 1677 String formatNsnUsingPattern(String nationalNumber, 1678 NumberFormat formattingPattern, 1679 PhoneNumberFormat numberFormat) { 1680 return formatNsnUsingPattern(nationalNumber, formattingPattern, numberFormat, null); 1681 } 1682 1683 // Note that carrierCode is optional - if null or an empty string, no carrier code replacement 1684 // will take place. 1685 private String formatNsnUsingPattern(String nationalNumber, 1686 NumberFormat formattingPattern, 1687 PhoneNumberFormat numberFormat, 1688 String carrierCode) { 1689 String numberFormatRule = formattingPattern.getFormat(); 1690 Matcher m = 1691 regexCache.getPatternForRegex(formattingPattern.getPattern()).matcher(nationalNumber); 1692 String formattedNationalNumber = ""; 1693 if (numberFormat == PhoneNumberFormat.NATIONAL && 1694 carrierCode != null && carrierCode.length() > 0 && 1695 formattingPattern.getDomesticCarrierCodeFormattingRule().length() > 0) { 1696 // Replace the $CC in the formatting rule with the desired carrier code. 1697 String carrierCodeFormattingRule = formattingPattern.getDomesticCarrierCodeFormattingRule(); 1698 carrierCodeFormattingRule = 1699 CC_PATTERN.matcher(carrierCodeFormattingRule).replaceFirst(carrierCode); 1700 // Now replace the $FG in the formatting rule with the first group and the carrier code 1701 // combined in the appropriate way. 1702 numberFormatRule = FIRST_GROUP_PATTERN.matcher(numberFormatRule) 1703 .replaceFirst(carrierCodeFormattingRule); 1704 formattedNationalNumber = m.replaceAll(numberFormatRule); 1705 } else { 1706 // Use the national prefix formatting rule instead. 1707 String nationalPrefixFormattingRule = formattingPattern.getNationalPrefixFormattingRule(); 1708 if (numberFormat == PhoneNumberFormat.NATIONAL && 1709 nationalPrefixFormattingRule != null && 1710 nationalPrefixFormattingRule.length() > 0) { 1711 Matcher firstGroupMatcher = FIRST_GROUP_PATTERN.matcher(numberFormatRule); 1712 formattedNationalNumber = 1713 m.replaceAll(firstGroupMatcher.replaceFirst(nationalPrefixFormattingRule)); 1714 } else { 1715 formattedNationalNumber = m.replaceAll(numberFormatRule); 1716 } 1717 } 1718 if (numberFormat == PhoneNumberFormat.RFC3966) { 1719 // Strip any leading punctuation. 1720 Matcher matcher = SEPARATOR_PATTERN.matcher(formattedNationalNumber); 1721 if (matcher.lookingAt()) { 1722 formattedNationalNumber = matcher.replaceFirst(""); 1723 } 1724 // Replace the rest with a dash between each number group. 1725 formattedNationalNumber = matcher.reset(formattedNationalNumber).replaceAll("-"); 1726 } 1727 return formattedNationalNumber; 1728 } 1729 1730 /** 1731 * Gets a valid number for the specified region. 1732 * 1733 * @param regionCode the region for which an example number is needed 1734 * @return a valid fixed-line number for the specified region. Returns null when the metadata 1735 * does not contain such information, or the region 001 is passed in. For 001 (representing 1736 * non-geographical numbers), call {@link #getExampleNumberForNonGeoEntity} instead. 1737 */ 1738 public PhoneNumber getExampleNumber(String regionCode) { 1739 return getExampleNumberForType(regionCode, PhoneNumberType.FIXED_LINE); 1740 } 1741 1742 /** 1743 * Gets a valid number for the specified region and number type. 1744 * 1745 * @param regionCode the region for which an example number is needed 1746 * @param type the type of number that is needed 1747 * @return a valid number for the specified region and type. Returns null when the metadata 1748 * does not contain such information or if an invalid region or region 001 was entered. 1749 * For 001 (representing non-geographical numbers), call 1750 * {@link #getExampleNumberForNonGeoEntity} instead. 1751 */ 1752 public PhoneNumber getExampleNumberForType(String regionCode, PhoneNumberType type) { 1753 // Check the region code is valid. 1754 if (!isValidRegionCode(regionCode)) { 1755 LOGGER.log(Level.WARNING, "Invalid or unknown region code provided: " + regionCode); 1756 return null; 1757 } 1758 PhoneNumberDesc desc = getNumberDescByType(getMetadataForRegion(regionCode), type); 1759 try { 1760 if (desc.hasExampleNumber()) { 1761 return parse(desc.getExampleNumber(), regionCode); 1762 } 1763 } catch (NumberParseException e) { 1764 LOGGER.log(Level.SEVERE, e.toString()); 1765 } 1766 return null; 1767 } 1768 1769 /** 1770 * Gets a valid number for the specified country calling code for a non-geographical entity. 1771 * 1772 * @param countryCallingCode the country calling code for a non-geographical entity 1773 * @return a valid number for the non-geographical entity. Returns null when the metadata 1774 * does not contain such information, or the country calling code passed in does not belong 1775 * to a non-geographical entity. 1776 */ 1777 public PhoneNumber getExampleNumberForNonGeoEntity(int countryCallingCode) { 1778 PhoneMetadata metadata = getMetadataForNonGeographicalRegion(countryCallingCode); 1779 if (metadata != null) { 1780 PhoneNumberDesc desc = metadata.getGeneralDesc(); 1781 try { 1782 if (desc.hasExampleNumber()) { 1783 return parse("+" + countryCallingCode + desc.getExampleNumber(), "ZZ"); 1784 } 1785 } catch (NumberParseException e) { 1786 LOGGER.log(Level.SEVERE, e.toString()); 1787 } 1788 } else { 1789 LOGGER.log(Level.WARNING, 1790 "Invalid or unknown country calling code provided: " + countryCallingCode); 1791 } 1792 return null; 1793 } 1794 1795 /** 1796 * Appends the formatted extension of a phone number to formattedNumber, if the phone number had 1797 * an extension specified. 1798 */ 1799 private void maybeAppendFormattedExtension(PhoneNumber number, PhoneMetadata metadata, 1800 PhoneNumberFormat numberFormat, 1801 StringBuilder formattedNumber) { 1802 if (number.hasExtension() && number.getExtension().length() > 0) { 1803 if (numberFormat == PhoneNumberFormat.RFC3966) { 1804 formattedNumber.append(RFC3966_EXTN_PREFIX).append(number.getExtension()); 1805 } else { 1806 if (metadata.hasPreferredExtnPrefix()) { 1807 formattedNumber.append(metadata.getPreferredExtnPrefix()).append(number.getExtension()); 1808 } else { 1809 formattedNumber.append(DEFAULT_EXTN_PREFIX).append(number.getExtension()); 1810 } 1811 } 1812 } 1813 } 1814 1815 PhoneNumberDesc getNumberDescByType(PhoneMetadata metadata, PhoneNumberType type) { 1816 switch (type) { 1817 case PREMIUM_RATE: 1818 return metadata.getPremiumRate(); 1819 case TOLL_FREE: 1820 return metadata.getTollFree(); 1821 case MOBILE: 1822 return metadata.getMobile(); 1823 case FIXED_LINE: 1824 case FIXED_LINE_OR_MOBILE: 1825 return metadata.getFixedLine(); 1826 case SHARED_COST: 1827 return metadata.getSharedCost(); 1828 case VOIP: 1829 return metadata.getVoip(); 1830 case PERSONAL_NUMBER: 1831 return metadata.getPersonalNumber(); 1832 case PAGER: 1833 return metadata.getPager(); 1834 case UAN: 1835 return metadata.getUan(); 1836 case VOICEMAIL: 1837 return metadata.getVoicemail(); 1838 default: 1839 return metadata.getGeneralDesc(); 1840 } 1841 } 1842 1843 /** 1844 * Gets the type of a phone number. 1845 * 1846 * @param number the phone number that we want to know the type 1847 * @return the type of the phone number 1848 */ 1849 public PhoneNumberType getNumberType(PhoneNumber number) { 1850 String regionCode = getRegionCodeForNumber(number); 1851 PhoneMetadata metadata = getMetadataForRegionOrCallingCode(number.getCountryCode(), regionCode); 1852 if (metadata == null) { 1853 return PhoneNumberType.UNKNOWN; 1854 } 1855 String nationalSignificantNumber = getNationalSignificantNumber(number); 1856 return getNumberTypeHelper(nationalSignificantNumber, metadata); 1857 } 1858 1859 private PhoneNumberType getNumberTypeHelper(String nationalNumber, PhoneMetadata metadata) { 1860 PhoneNumberDesc generalNumberDesc = metadata.getGeneralDesc(); 1861 if (!generalNumberDesc.hasNationalNumberPattern() || 1862 !isNumberMatchingDesc(nationalNumber, generalNumberDesc)) { 1863 return PhoneNumberType.UNKNOWN; 1864 } 1865 1866 if (isNumberMatchingDesc(nationalNumber, metadata.getPremiumRate())) { 1867 return PhoneNumberType.PREMIUM_RATE; 1868 } 1869 if (isNumberMatchingDesc(nationalNumber, metadata.getTollFree())) { 1870 return PhoneNumberType.TOLL_FREE; 1871 } 1872 if (isNumberMatchingDesc(nationalNumber, metadata.getSharedCost())) { 1873 return PhoneNumberType.SHARED_COST; 1874 } 1875 if (isNumberMatchingDesc(nationalNumber, metadata.getVoip())) { 1876 return PhoneNumberType.VOIP; 1877 } 1878 if (isNumberMatchingDesc(nationalNumber, metadata.getPersonalNumber())) { 1879 return PhoneNumberType.PERSONAL_NUMBER; 1880 } 1881 if (isNumberMatchingDesc(nationalNumber, metadata.getPager())) { 1882 return PhoneNumberType.PAGER; 1883 } 1884 if (isNumberMatchingDesc(nationalNumber, metadata.getUan())) { 1885 return PhoneNumberType.UAN; 1886 } 1887 if (isNumberMatchingDesc(nationalNumber, metadata.getVoicemail())) { 1888 return PhoneNumberType.VOICEMAIL; 1889 } 1890 1891 boolean isFixedLine = isNumberMatchingDesc(nationalNumber, metadata.getFixedLine()); 1892 if (isFixedLine) { 1893 if (metadata.isSameMobileAndFixedLinePattern()) { 1894 return PhoneNumberType.FIXED_LINE_OR_MOBILE; 1895 } else if (isNumberMatchingDesc(nationalNumber, metadata.getMobile())) { 1896 return PhoneNumberType.FIXED_LINE_OR_MOBILE; 1897 } 1898 return PhoneNumberType.FIXED_LINE; 1899 } 1900 // Otherwise, test to see if the number is mobile. Only do this if certain that the patterns for 1901 // mobile and fixed line aren't the same. 1902 if (!metadata.isSameMobileAndFixedLinePattern() && 1903 isNumberMatchingDesc(nationalNumber, metadata.getMobile())) { 1904 return PhoneNumberType.MOBILE; 1905 } 1906 return PhoneNumberType.UNKNOWN; 1907 } 1908 1909 /** 1910 * Returns the metadata for the given region code or {@code null} if the region code is invalid 1911 * or unknown. 1912 */ 1913 PhoneMetadata getMetadataForRegion(String regionCode) { 1914 if (!isValidRegionCode(regionCode)) { 1915 return null; 1916 } 1917 synchronized (regionToMetadataMap) { 1918 if (!regionToMetadataMap.containsKey(regionCode)) { 1919 // The regionCode here will be valid and won't be '001', so we don't need to worry about 1920 // what to pass in for the country calling code. 1921 loadMetadataFromFile(currentFilePrefix, regionCode, 0); 1922 } 1923 } 1924 return regionToMetadataMap.get(regionCode); 1925 } 1926 1927 PhoneMetadata getMetadataForNonGeographicalRegion(int countryCallingCode) { 1928 synchronized (countryCodeToNonGeographicalMetadataMap) { 1929 if (!countryCallingCodeToRegionCodeMap.containsKey(countryCallingCode)) { 1930 return null; 1931 } 1932 if (!countryCodeToNonGeographicalMetadataMap.containsKey(countryCallingCode)) { 1933 loadMetadataFromFile(currentFilePrefix, REGION_CODE_FOR_NON_GEO_ENTITY, countryCallingCode); 1934 } 1935 } 1936 return countryCodeToNonGeographicalMetadataMap.get(countryCallingCode); 1937 } 1938 1939 private boolean isNumberMatchingDesc(String nationalNumber, PhoneNumberDesc numberDesc) { 1940 Matcher possibleNumberPatternMatcher = 1941 regexCache.getPatternForRegex(numberDesc.getPossibleNumberPattern()) 1942 .matcher(nationalNumber); 1943 Matcher nationalNumberPatternMatcher = 1944 regexCache.getPatternForRegex(numberDesc.getNationalNumberPattern()) 1945 .matcher(nationalNumber); 1946 return possibleNumberPatternMatcher.matches() && nationalNumberPatternMatcher.matches(); 1947 } 1948 1949 /** 1950 * Tests whether a phone number matches a valid pattern. Note this doesn't verify the number 1951 * is actually in use, which is impossible to tell by just looking at a number itself. 1952 * 1953 * @param number the phone number that we want to validate 1954 * @return a boolean that indicates whether the number is of a valid pattern 1955 */ 1956 public boolean isValidNumber(PhoneNumber number) { 1957 String regionCode = getRegionCodeForNumber(number); 1958 return isValidNumberForRegion(number, regionCode); 1959 } 1960 1961 /** 1962 * Tests whether a phone number is valid for a certain region. Note this doesn't verify the number 1963 * is actually in use, which is impossible to tell by just looking at a number itself. If the 1964 * country calling code is not the same as the country calling code for the region, this 1965 * immediately exits with false. After this, the specific number pattern rules for the region are 1966 * examined. This is useful for determining for example whether a particular number is valid for 1967 * Canada, rather than just a valid NANPA number. 1968 * Warning: In most cases, you want to use {@link #isValidNumber} instead. For example, this 1969 * method will mark numbers from British Crown dependencies such as the Isle of Man as invalid for 1970 * the region "GB" (United Kingdom), since it has its own region code, "IM", which may be 1971 * undesirable. 1972 * 1973 * @param number the phone number that we want to validate 1974 * @param regionCode the region that we want to validate the phone number for 1975 * @return a boolean that indicates whether the number is of a valid pattern 1976 */ 1977 public boolean isValidNumberForRegion(PhoneNumber number, String regionCode) { 1978 int countryCode = number.getCountryCode(); 1979 PhoneMetadata metadata = getMetadataForRegionOrCallingCode(countryCode, regionCode); 1980 if ((metadata == null) || 1981 (!REGION_CODE_FOR_NON_GEO_ENTITY.equals(regionCode) && 1982 countryCode != getCountryCodeForValidRegion(regionCode))) { 1983 // Either the region code was invalid, or the country calling code for this number does not 1984 // match that of the region code. 1985 return false; 1986 } 1987 PhoneNumberDesc generalNumDesc = metadata.getGeneralDesc(); 1988 String nationalSignificantNumber = getNationalSignificantNumber(number); 1989 1990 // For regions where we don't have metadata for PhoneNumberDesc, we treat any number passed in 1991 // as a valid number if its national significant number is between the minimum and maximum 1992 // lengths defined by ITU for a national significant number. 1993 if (!generalNumDesc.hasNationalNumberPattern()) { 1994 int numberLength = nationalSignificantNumber.length(); 1995 return numberLength > MIN_LENGTH_FOR_NSN && numberLength <= MAX_LENGTH_FOR_NSN; 1996 } 1997 return getNumberTypeHelper(nationalSignificantNumber, metadata) != PhoneNumberType.UNKNOWN; 1998 } 1999 2000 /** 2001 * Returns the region where a phone number is from. This could be used for geocoding at the region 2002 * level. 2003 * 2004 * @param number the phone number whose origin we want to know 2005 * @return the region where the phone number is from, or null if no region matches this calling 2006 * code 2007 */ 2008 public String getRegionCodeForNumber(PhoneNumber number) { 2009 int countryCode = number.getCountryCode(); 2010 List<String> regions = countryCallingCodeToRegionCodeMap.get(countryCode); 2011 if (regions == null) { 2012 String numberString = getNationalSignificantNumber(number); 2013 LOGGER.log(Level.WARNING, 2014 "Missing/invalid country_code (" + countryCode + ") for number " + numberString); 2015 return null; 2016 } 2017 if (regions.size() == 1) { 2018 return regions.get(0); 2019 } else { 2020 return getRegionCodeForNumberFromRegionList(number, regions); 2021 } 2022 } 2023 2024 private String getRegionCodeForNumberFromRegionList(PhoneNumber number, 2025 List<String> regionCodes) { 2026 String nationalNumber = getNationalSignificantNumber(number); 2027 for (String regionCode : regionCodes) { 2028 // If leadingDigits is present, use this. Otherwise, do full validation. 2029 // Metadata cannot be null because the region codes come from the country calling code map. 2030 PhoneMetadata metadata = getMetadataForRegion(regionCode); 2031 if (metadata.hasLeadingDigits()) { 2032 if (regexCache.getPatternForRegex(metadata.getLeadingDigits()) 2033 .matcher(nationalNumber).lookingAt()) { 2034 return regionCode; 2035 } 2036 } else if (getNumberTypeHelper(nationalNumber, metadata) != PhoneNumberType.UNKNOWN) { 2037 return regionCode; 2038 } 2039 } 2040 return null; 2041 } 2042 2043 /** 2044 * Returns the region code that matches the specific country calling code. In the case of no 2045 * region code being found, ZZ will be returned. In the case of multiple regions, the one 2046 * designated in the metadata as the "main" region for this calling code will be returned. 2047 */ 2048 public String getRegionCodeForCountryCode(int countryCallingCode) { 2049 List<String> regionCodes = countryCallingCodeToRegionCodeMap.get(countryCallingCode); 2050 return regionCodes == null ? UNKNOWN_REGION : regionCodes.get(0); 2051 } 2052 2053 /** 2054 * Returns a list with the region codes that match the specific country calling code. For 2055 * non-geographical country calling codes, the region code 001 is returned. Also, in the case 2056 * of no region code being found, an empty list is returned. 2057 */ 2058 public List<String> getRegionCodesForCountryCode(int countryCallingCode) { 2059 List<String> regionCodes = countryCallingCodeToRegionCodeMap.get(countryCallingCode); 2060 return Collections.unmodifiableList(regionCodes == null ? new ArrayList<String>(0) 2061 : regionCodes); 2062 } 2063 2064 /** 2065 * Returns the country calling code for a specific region. For example, this would be 1 for the 2066 * United States, and 64 for New Zealand. 2067 * 2068 * @param regionCode the region that we want to get the country calling code for 2069 * @return the country calling code for the region denoted by regionCode 2070 */ 2071 public int getCountryCodeForRegion(String regionCode) { 2072 if (!isValidRegionCode(regionCode)) { 2073 LOGGER.log(Level.WARNING, 2074 "Invalid or missing region code (" 2075 + ((regionCode == null) ? "null" : regionCode) 2076 + ") provided."); 2077 return 0; 2078 } 2079 return getCountryCodeForValidRegion(regionCode); 2080 } 2081 2082 /** 2083 * Returns the country calling code for a specific region. For example, this would be 1 for the 2084 * United States, and 64 for New Zealand. Assumes the region is already valid. 2085 * 2086 * @param regionCode the region that we want to get the country calling code for 2087 * @return the country calling code for the region denoted by regionCode 2088 * @throws IllegalArgumentException if the region is invalid 2089 */ 2090 private int getCountryCodeForValidRegion(String regionCode) { 2091 PhoneMetadata metadata = getMetadataForRegion(regionCode); 2092 if (metadata == null) { 2093 throw new IllegalArgumentException("Invalid region code: " + regionCode); 2094 } 2095 return metadata.getCountryCode(); 2096 } 2097 2098 /** 2099 * Returns the national dialling prefix for a specific region. For example, this would be 1 for 2100 * the United States, and 0 for New Zealand. Set stripNonDigits to true to strip symbols like "~" 2101 * (which indicates a wait for a dialling tone) from the prefix returned. If no national prefix is 2102 * present, we return null. 2103 * 2104 * <p>Warning: Do not use this method for do-your-own formatting - for some regions, the 2105 * national dialling prefix is used only for certain types of numbers. Use the library's 2106 * formatting functions to prefix the national prefix when required. 2107 * 2108 * @param regionCode the region that we want to get the dialling prefix for 2109 * @param stripNonDigits true to strip non-digits from the national dialling prefix 2110 * @return the dialling prefix for the region denoted by regionCode 2111 */ 2112 public String getNddPrefixForRegion(String regionCode, boolean stripNonDigits) { 2113 PhoneMetadata metadata = getMetadataForRegion(regionCode); 2114 if (metadata == null) { 2115 LOGGER.log(Level.WARNING, 2116 "Invalid or missing region code (" 2117 + ((regionCode == null) ? "null" : regionCode) 2118 + ") provided."); 2119 return null; 2120 } 2121 String nationalPrefix = metadata.getNationalPrefix(); 2122 // If no national prefix was found, we return null. 2123 if (nationalPrefix.length() == 0) { 2124 return null; 2125 } 2126 if (stripNonDigits) { 2127 // Note: if any other non-numeric symbols are ever used in national prefixes, these would have 2128 // to be removed here as well. 2129 nationalPrefix = nationalPrefix.replace("~", ""); 2130 } 2131 return nationalPrefix; 2132 } 2133 2134 /** 2135 * Checks if this is a region under the North American Numbering Plan Administration (NANPA). 2136 * 2137 * @return true if regionCode is one of the regions under NANPA 2138 */ 2139 public boolean isNANPACountry(String regionCode) { 2140 return nanpaRegions.contains(regionCode); 2141 } 2142 2143 /** 2144 * Checks whether the country calling code is from a region whose national significant number 2145 * could contain a leading zero. An example of such a region is Italy. Returns false if no 2146 * metadata for the country is found. 2147 */ 2148 boolean isLeadingZeroPossible(int countryCallingCode) { 2149 PhoneMetadata mainMetadataForCallingCode = 2150 getMetadataForRegionOrCallingCode(countryCallingCode, 2151 getRegionCodeForCountryCode(countryCallingCode)); 2152 if (mainMetadataForCallingCode == null) { 2153 return false; 2154 } 2155 return mainMetadataForCallingCode.isLeadingZeroPossible(); 2156 } 2157 2158 /** 2159 * Checks if the number is a valid vanity (alpha) number such as 800 MICROSOFT. A valid vanity 2160 * number will start with at least 3 digits and will have three or more alpha characters. This 2161 * does not do region-specific checks - to work out if this number is actually valid for a region, 2162 * it should be parsed and methods such as {@link #isPossibleNumberWithReason} and 2163 * {@link #isValidNumber} should be used. 2164 * 2165 * @param number the number that needs to be checked 2166 * @return true if the number is a valid vanity number 2167 */ 2168 public boolean isAlphaNumber(String number) { 2169 if (!isViablePhoneNumber(number)) { 2170 // Number is too short, or doesn't match the basic phone number pattern. 2171 return false; 2172 } 2173 StringBuilder strippedNumber = new StringBuilder(number); 2174 maybeStripExtension(strippedNumber); 2175 return VALID_ALPHA_PHONE_PATTERN.matcher(strippedNumber).matches(); 2176 } 2177 2178 /** 2179 * Convenience wrapper around {@link #isPossibleNumberWithReason}. Instead of returning the reason 2180 * for failure, this method returns a boolean value. 2181 * @param number the number that needs to be checked 2182 * @return true if the number is possible 2183 */ 2184 public boolean isPossibleNumber(PhoneNumber number) { 2185 return isPossibleNumberWithReason(number) == ValidationResult.IS_POSSIBLE; 2186 } 2187 2188 /** 2189 * Helper method to check a number against a particular pattern and determine whether it matches, 2190 * or is too short or too long. Currently, if a number pattern suggests that numbers of length 7 2191 * and 10 are possible, and a number in between these possible lengths is entered, such as of 2192 * length 8, this will return TOO_LONG. 2193 */ 2194 private ValidationResult testNumberLengthAgainstPattern(Pattern numberPattern, String number) { 2195 Matcher numberMatcher = numberPattern.matcher(number); 2196 if (numberMatcher.matches()) { 2197 return ValidationResult.IS_POSSIBLE; 2198 } 2199 if (numberMatcher.lookingAt()) { 2200 return ValidationResult.TOO_LONG; 2201 } else { 2202 return ValidationResult.TOO_SHORT; 2203 } 2204 } 2205 2206 /** 2207 * Check whether a phone number is a possible number. It provides a more lenient check than 2208 * {@link #isValidNumber} in the following sense: 2209 *<ol> 2210 * <li> It only checks the length of phone numbers. In particular, it doesn't check starting 2211 * digits of the number. 2212 * <li> It doesn't attempt to figure out the type of the number, but uses general rules which 2213 * applies to all types of phone numbers in a region. Therefore, it is much faster than 2214 * isValidNumber. 2215 * <li> For fixed line numbers, many regions have the concept of area code, which together with 2216 * subscriber number constitute the national significant number. It is sometimes okay to dial 2217 * the subscriber number only when dialing in the same area. This function will return 2218 * true if the subscriber-number-only version is passed in. On the other hand, because 2219 * isValidNumber validates using information on both starting digits (for fixed line 2220 * numbers, that would most likely be area codes) and length (obviously includes the 2221 * length of area codes for fixed line numbers), it will return false for the 2222 * subscriber-number-only version. 2223 * </ol> 2224 * @param number the number that needs to be checked 2225 * @return a ValidationResult object which indicates whether the number is possible 2226 */ 2227 public ValidationResult isPossibleNumberWithReason(PhoneNumber number) { 2228 String nationalNumber = getNationalSignificantNumber(number); 2229 int countryCode = number.getCountryCode(); 2230 // Note: For Russian Fed and NANPA numbers, we just use the rules from the default region (US or 2231 // Russia) since the getRegionCodeForNumber will not work if the number is possible but not 2232 // valid. This would need to be revisited if the possible number pattern ever differed between 2233 // various regions within those plans. 2234 if (!hasValidCountryCallingCode(countryCode)) { 2235 return ValidationResult.INVALID_COUNTRY_CODE; 2236 } 2237 String regionCode = getRegionCodeForCountryCode(countryCode); 2238 // Metadata cannot be null because the country calling code is valid. 2239 PhoneMetadata metadata = getMetadataForRegionOrCallingCode(countryCode, regionCode); 2240 PhoneNumberDesc generalNumDesc = metadata.getGeneralDesc(); 2241 // Handling case of numbers with no metadata. 2242 if (!generalNumDesc.hasNationalNumberPattern()) { 2243 LOGGER.log(Level.FINER, "Checking if number is possible with incomplete metadata."); 2244 int numberLength = nationalNumber.length(); 2245 if (numberLength < MIN_LENGTH_FOR_NSN) { 2246 return ValidationResult.TOO_SHORT; 2247 } else if (numberLength > MAX_LENGTH_FOR_NSN) { 2248 return ValidationResult.TOO_LONG; 2249 } else { 2250 return ValidationResult.IS_POSSIBLE; 2251 } 2252 } 2253 Pattern possibleNumberPattern = 2254 regexCache.getPatternForRegex(generalNumDesc.getPossibleNumberPattern()); 2255 return testNumberLengthAgainstPattern(possibleNumberPattern, nationalNumber); 2256 } 2257 2258 /** 2259 * Check whether a phone number is a possible number given a number in the form of a string, and 2260 * the region where the number could be dialed from. It provides a more lenient check than 2261 * {@link #isValidNumber}. See {@link #isPossibleNumber(PhoneNumber)} for details. 2262 * 2263 * <p>This method first parses the number, then invokes {@link #isPossibleNumber(PhoneNumber)} 2264 * with the resultant PhoneNumber object. 2265 * 2266 * @param number the number that needs to be checked, in the form of a string 2267 * @param regionDialingFrom the region that we are expecting the number to be dialed from. 2268 * Note this is different from the region where the number belongs. For example, the number 2269 * +1 650 253 0000 is a number that belongs to US. When written in this form, it can be 2270 * dialed from any region. When it is written as 00 1 650 253 0000, it can be dialed from any 2271 * region which uses an international dialling prefix of 00. When it is written as 2272 * 650 253 0000, it can only be dialed from within the US, and when written as 253 0000, it 2273 * can only be dialed from within a smaller area in the US (Mountain View, CA, to be more 2274 * specific). 2275 * @return true if the number is possible 2276 */ 2277 public boolean isPossibleNumber(String number, String regionDialingFrom) { 2278 try { 2279 return isPossibleNumber(parse(number, regionDialingFrom)); 2280 } catch (NumberParseException e) { 2281 return false; 2282 } 2283 } 2284 2285 /** 2286 * Attempts to extract a valid number from a phone number that is too long to be valid, and resets 2287 * the PhoneNumber object passed in to that valid version. If no valid number could be extracted, 2288 * the PhoneNumber object passed in will not be modified. 2289 * @param number a PhoneNumber object which contains a number that is too long to be valid. 2290 * @return true if a valid phone number can be successfully extracted. 2291 */ 2292 public boolean truncateTooLongNumber(PhoneNumber number) { 2293 if (isValidNumber(number)) { 2294 return true; 2295 } 2296 PhoneNumber numberCopy = new PhoneNumber(); 2297 numberCopy.mergeFrom(number); 2298 long nationalNumber = number.getNationalNumber(); 2299 do { 2300 nationalNumber /= 10; 2301 numberCopy.setNationalNumber(nationalNumber); 2302 if (isPossibleNumberWithReason(numberCopy) == ValidationResult.TOO_SHORT || 2303 nationalNumber == 0) { 2304 return false; 2305 } 2306 } while (!isValidNumber(numberCopy)); 2307 number.setNationalNumber(nationalNumber); 2308 return true; 2309 } 2310 2311 /** 2312 * Gets an {@link com.android.i18n.phonenumbers.AsYouTypeFormatter} for the specific region. 2313 * 2314 * @param regionCode the region where the phone number is being entered 2315 * @return an {@link com.android.i18n.phonenumbers.AsYouTypeFormatter} object, which can be used 2316 * to format phone numbers in the specific region "as you type" 2317 */ 2318 public AsYouTypeFormatter getAsYouTypeFormatter(String regionCode) { 2319 return new AsYouTypeFormatter(regionCode); 2320 } 2321 2322 // Extracts country calling code from fullNumber, returns it and places the remaining number in 2323 // nationalNumber. It assumes that the leading plus sign or IDD has already been removed. Returns 2324 // 0 if fullNumber doesn't start with a valid country calling code, and leaves nationalNumber 2325 // unmodified. 2326 int extractCountryCode(StringBuilder fullNumber, StringBuilder nationalNumber) { 2327 if ((fullNumber.length() == 0) || (fullNumber.charAt(0) == '0')) { 2328 // Country codes do not begin with a '0'. 2329 return 0; 2330 } 2331 int potentialCountryCode; 2332 int numberLength = fullNumber.length(); 2333 for (int i = 1; i <= MAX_LENGTH_COUNTRY_CODE && i <= numberLength; i++) { 2334 potentialCountryCode = Integer.parseInt(fullNumber.substring(0, i)); 2335 if (countryCallingCodeToRegionCodeMap.containsKey(potentialCountryCode)) { 2336 nationalNumber.append(fullNumber.substring(i)); 2337 return potentialCountryCode; 2338 } 2339 } 2340 return 0; 2341 } 2342 2343 /** 2344 * Tries to extract a country calling code from a number. This method will return zero if no 2345 * country calling code is considered to be present. Country calling codes are extracted in the 2346 * following ways: 2347 * <ul> 2348 * <li> by stripping the international dialing prefix of the region the person is dialing from, 2349 * if this is present in the number, and looking at the next digits 2350 * <li> by stripping the '+' sign if present and then looking at the next digits 2351 * <li> by comparing the start of the number and the country calling code of the default region. 2352 * If the number is not considered possible for the numbering plan of the default region 2353 * initially, but starts with the country calling code of this region, validation will be 2354 * reattempted after stripping this country calling code. If this number is considered a 2355 * possible number, then the first digits will be considered the country calling code and 2356 * removed as such. 2357 * </ul> 2358 * It will throw a NumberParseException if the number starts with a '+' but the country calling 2359 * code supplied after this does not match that of any known region. 2360 * 2361 * @param number non-normalized telephone number that we wish to extract a country calling 2362 * code from - may begin with '+' 2363 * @param defaultRegionMetadata metadata about the region this number may be from 2364 * @param nationalNumber a string buffer to store the national significant number in, in the case 2365 * that a country calling code was extracted. The number is appended to any existing contents. 2366 * If no country calling code was extracted, this will be left unchanged. 2367 * @param keepRawInput true if the country_code_source and preferred_carrier_code fields of 2368 * phoneNumber should be populated. 2369 * @param phoneNumber the PhoneNumber object where the country_code and country_code_source need 2370 * to be populated. Note the country_code is always populated, whereas country_code_source is 2371 * only populated when keepCountryCodeSource is true. 2372 * @return the country calling code extracted or 0 if none could be extracted 2373 */ 2374 // @VisibleForTesting 2375 int maybeExtractCountryCode(String number, PhoneMetadata defaultRegionMetadata, 2376 StringBuilder nationalNumber, boolean keepRawInput, 2377 PhoneNumber phoneNumber) 2378 throws NumberParseException { 2379 if (number.length() == 0) { 2380 return 0; 2381 } 2382 StringBuilder fullNumber = new StringBuilder(number); 2383 // Set the default prefix to be something that will never match. 2384 String possibleCountryIddPrefix = "NonMatch"; 2385 if (defaultRegionMetadata != null) { 2386 possibleCountryIddPrefix = defaultRegionMetadata.getInternationalPrefix(); 2387 } 2388 2389 CountryCodeSource countryCodeSource = 2390 maybeStripInternationalPrefixAndNormalize(fullNumber, possibleCountryIddPrefix); 2391 if (keepRawInput) { 2392 phoneNumber.setCountryCodeSource(countryCodeSource); 2393 } 2394 if (countryCodeSource != CountryCodeSource.FROM_DEFAULT_COUNTRY) { 2395 if (fullNumber.length() <= MIN_LENGTH_FOR_NSN) { 2396 throw new NumberParseException(NumberParseException.ErrorType.TOO_SHORT_AFTER_IDD, 2397 "Phone number had an IDD, but after this was not " 2398 + "long enough to be a viable phone number."); 2399 } 2400 int potentialCountryCode = extractCountryCode(fullNumber, nationalNumber); 2401 if (potentialCountryCode != 0) { 2402 phoneNumber.setCountryCode(potentialCountryCode); 2403 return potentialCountryCode; 2404 } 2405 2406 // If this fails, they must be using a strange country calling code that we don't recognize, 2407 // or that doesn't exist. 2408 throw new NumberParseException(NumberParseException.ErrorType.INVALID_COUNTRY_CODE, 2409 "Country calling code supplied was not recognised."); 2410 } else if (defaultRegionMetadata != null) { 2411 // Check to see if the number starts with the country calling code for the default region. If 2412 // so, we remove the country calling code, and do some checks on the validity of the number 2413 // before and after. 2414 int defaultCountryCode = defaultRegionMetadata.getCountryCode(); 2415 String defaultCountryCodeString = String.valueOf(defaultCountryCode); 2416 String normalizedNumber = fullNumber.toString(); 2417 if (normalizedNumber.startsWith(defaultCountryCodeString)) { 2418 StringBuilder potentialNationalNumber = 2419 new StringBuilder(normalizedNumber.substring(defaultCountryCodeString.length())); 2420 PhoneNumberDesc generalDesc = defaultRegionMetadata.getGeneralDesc(); 2421 Pattern validNumberPattern = 2422 regexCache.getPatternForRegex(generalDesc.getNationalNumberPattern()); 2423 maybeStripNationalPrefixAndCarrierCode( 2424 potentialNationalNumber, defaultRegionMetadata, null /* Don't need the carrier code */); 2425 Pattern possibleNumberPattern = 2426 regexCache.getPatternForRegex(generalDesc.getPossibleNumberPattern()); 2427 // If the number was not valid before but is valid now, or if it was too long before, we 2428 // consider the number with the country calling code stripped to be a better result and 2429 // keep that instead. 2430 if ((!validNumberPattern.matcher(fullNumber).matches() && 2431 validNumberPattern.matcher(potentialNationalNumber).matches()) || 2432 testNumberLengthAgainstPattern(possibleNumberPattern, fullNumber.toString()) 2433 == ValidationResult.TOO_LONG) { 2434 nationalNumber.append(potentialNationalNumber); 2435 if (keepRawInput) { 2436 phoneNumber.setCountryCodeSource(CountryCodeSource.FROM_NUMBER_WITHOUT_PLUS_SIGN); 2437 } 2438 phoneNumber.setCountryCode(defaultCountryCode); 2439 return defaultCountryCode; 2440 } 2441 } 2442 } 2443 // No country calling code present. 2444 phoneNumber.setCountryCode(0); 2445 return 0; 2446 } 2447 2448 /** 2449 * Strips the IDD from the start of the number if present. Helper function used by 2450 * maybeStripInternationalPrefixAndNormalize. 2451 */ 2452 private boolean parsePrefixAsIdd(Pattern iddPattern, StringBuilder number) { 2453 Matcher m = iddPattern.matcher(number); 2454 if (m.lookingAt()) { 2455 int matchEnd = m.end(); 2456 // Only strip this if the first digit after the match is not a 0, since country calling codes 2457 // cannot begin with 0. 2458 Matcher digitMatcher = CAPTURING_DIGIT_PATTERN.matcher(number.substring(matchEnd)); 2459 if (digitMatcher.find()) { 2460 String normalizedGroup = normalizeDigitsOnly(digitMatcher.group(1)); 2461 if (normalizedGroup.equals("0")) { 2462 return false; 2463 } 2464 } 2465 number.delete(0, matchEnd); 2466 return true; 2467 } 2468 return false; 2469 } 2470 2471 /** 2472 * Strips any international prefix (such as +, 00, 011) present in the number provided, normalizes 2473 * the resulting number, and indicates if an international prefix was present. 2474 * 2475 * @param number the non-normalized telephone number that we wish to strip any international 2476 * dialing prefix from. 2477 * @param possibleIddPrefix the international direct dialing prefix from the region we 2478 * think this number may be dialed in 2479 * @return the corresponding CountryCodeSource if an international dialing prefix could be 2480 * removed from the number, otherwise CountryCodeSource.FROM_DEFAULT_COUNTRY if the number did 2481 * not seem to be in international format. 2482 */ 2483 // @VisibleForTesting 2484 CountryCodeSource maybeStripInternationalPrefixAndNormalize( 2485 StringBuilder number, 2486 String possibleIddPrefix) { 2487 if (number.length() == 0) { 2488 return CountryCodeSource.FROM_DEFAULT_COUNTRY; 2489 } 2490 // Check to see if the number begins with one or more plus signs. 2491 Matcher m = PLUS_CHARS_PATTERN.matcher(number); 2492 if (m.lookingAt()) { 2493 number.delete(0, m.end()); 2494 // Can now normalize the rest of the number since we've consumed the "+" sign at the start. 2495 normalize(number); 2496 return CountryCodeSource.FROM_NUMBER_WITH_PLUS_SIGN; 2497 } 2498 // Attempt to parse the first digits as an international prefix. 2499 Pattern iddPattern = regexCache.getPatternForRegex(possibleIddPrefix); 2500 normalize(number); 2501 return parsePrefixAsIdd(iddPattern, number) 2502 ? CountryCodeSource.FROM_NUMBER_WITH_IDD 2503 : CountryCodeSource.FROM_DEFAULT_COUNTRY; 2504 } 2505 2506 /** 2507 * Strips any national prefix (such as 0, 1) present in the number provided. 2508 * 2509 * @param number the normalized telephone number that we wish to strip any national 2510 * dialing prefix from 2511 * @param metadata the metadata for the region that we think this number is from 2512 * @param carrierCode a place to insert the carrier code if one is extracted 2513 * @return true if a national prefix or carrier code (or both) could be extracted. 2514 */ 2515 // @VisibleForTesting 2516 boolean maybeStripNationalPrefixAndCarrierCode( 2517 StringBuilder number, PhoneMetadata metadata, StringBuilder carrierCode) { 2518 int numberLength = number.length(); 2519 String possibleNationalPrefix = metadata.getNationalPrefixForParsing(); 2520 if (numberLength == 0 || possibleNationalPrefix.length() == 0) { 2521 // Early return for numbers of zero length. 2522 return false; 2523 } 2524 // Attempt to parse the first digits as a national prefix. 2525 Matcher prefixMatcher = regexCache.getPatternForRegex(possibleNationalPrefix).matcher(number); 2526 if (prefixMatcher.lookingAt()) { 2527 Pattern nationalNumberRule = 2528 regexCache.getPatternForRegex(metadata.getGeneralDesc().getNationalNumberPattern()); 2529 // Check if the original number is viable. 2530 boolean isViableOriginalNumber = nationalNumberRule.matcher(number).matches(); 2531 // prefixMatcher.group(numOfGroups) == null implies nothing was captured by the capturing 2532 // groups in possibleNationalPrefix; therefore, no transformation is necessary, and we just 2533 // remove the national prefix. 2534 int numOfGroups = prefixMatcher.groupCount(); 2535 String transformRule = metadata.getNationalPrefixTransformRule(); 2536 if (transformRule == null || transformRule.length() == 0 || 2537 prefixMatcher.group(numOfGroups) == null) { 2538 // If the original number was viable, and the resultant number is not, we return. 2539 if (isViableOriginalNumber && 2540 !nationalNumberRule.matcher(number.substring(prefixMatcher.end())).matches()) { 2541 return false; 2542 } 2543 if (carrierCode != null && numOfGroups > 0 && prefixMatcher.group(numOfGroups) != null) { 2544 carrierCode.append(prefixMatcher.group(1)); 2545 } 2546 number.delete(0, prefixMatcher.end()); 2547 return true; 2548 } else { 2549 // Check that the resultant number is still viable. If not, return. Check this by copying 2550 // the string buffer and making the transformation on the copy first. 2551 StringBuilder transformedNumber = new StringBuilder(number); 2552 transformedNumber.replace(0, numberLength, prefixMatcher.replaceFirst(transformRule)); 2553 if (isViableOriginalNumber && 2554 !nationalNumberRule.matcher(transformedNumber.toString()).matches()) { 2555 return false; 2556 } 2557 if (carrierCode != null && numOfGroups > 1) { 2558 carrierCode.append(prefixMatcher.group(1)); 2559 } 2560 number.replace(0, number.length(), transformedNumber.toString()); 2561 return true; 2562 } 2563 } 2564 return false; 2565 } 2566 2567 /** 2568 * Strips any extension (as in, the part of the number dialled after the call is connected, 2569 * usually indicated with extn, ext, x or similar) from the end of the number, and returns it. 2570 * 2571 * @param number the non-normalized telephone number that we wish to strip the extension from 2572 * @return the phone extension 2573 */ 2574 // @VisibleForTesting 2575 String maybeStripExtension(StringBuilder number) { 2576 Matcher m = EXTN_PATTERN.matcher(number); 2577 // If we find a potential extension, and the number preceding this is a viable number, we assume 2578 // it is an extension. 2579 if (m.find() && isViablePhoneNumber(number.substring(0, m.start()))) { 2580 // The numbers are captured into groups in the regular expression. 2581 for (int i = 1, length = m.groupCount(); i <= length; i++) { 2582 if (m.group(i) != null) { 2583 // We go through the capturing groups until we find one that captured some digits. If none 2584 // did, then we will return the empty string. 2585 String extension = m.group(i); 2586 number.delete(m.start(), number.length()); 2587 return extension; 2588 } 2589 } 2590 } 2591 return ""; 2592 } 2593 2594 /** 2595 * Checks to see that the region code used is valid, or if it is not valid, that the number to 2596 * parse starts with a + symbol so that we can attempt to infer the region from the number. 2597 * Returns false if it cannot use the region provided and the region cannot be inferred. 2598 */ 2599 private boolean checkRegionForParsing(String numberToParse, String defaultRegion) { 2600 if (!isValidRegionCode(defaultRegion)) { 2601 // If the number is null or empty, we can't infer the region. 2602 if (numberToParse == null || numberToParse.length() == 0 || 2603 !PLUS_CHARS_PATTERN.matcher(numberToParse).lookingAt()) { 2604 return false; 2605 } 2606 } 2607 return true; 2608 } 2609 2610 /** 2611 * Parses a string and returns it in proto buffer format. This method will throw a 2612 * {@link com.android.i18n.phonenumbers.NumberParseException} if the number is not considered to be 2613 * a possible number. Note that validation of whether the number is actually a valid number for a 2614 * particular region is not performed. This can be done separately with {@link #isValidNumber}. 2615 * 2616 * @param numberToParse number that we are attempting to parse. This can contain formatting 2617 * such as +, ( and -, as well as a phone number extension. It can also 2618 * be provided in RFC3966 format. 2619 * @param defaultRegion region that we are expecting the number to be from. This is only used 2620 * if the number being parsed is not written in international format. 2621 * The country_code for the number in this case would be stored as that 2622 * of the default region supplied. If the number is guaranteed to 2623 * start with a '+' followed by the country calling code, then 2624 * "ZZ" or null can be supplied. 2625 * @return a phone number proto buffer filled with the parsed number 2626 * @throws NumberParseException if the string is not considered to be a viable phone number or if 2627 * no default region was supplied and the number is not in 2628 * international format (does not start with +) 2629 */ 2630 public PhoneNumber parse(String numberToParse, String defaultRegion) 2631 throws NumberParseException { 2632 PhoneNumber phoneNumber = new PhoneNumber(); 2633 parse(numberToParse, defaultRegion, phoneNumber); 2634 return phoneNumber; 2635 } 2636 2637 /** 2638 * Same as {@link #parse(String, String)}, but accepts mutable PhoneNumber as a parameter to 2639 * decrease object creation when invoked many times. 2640 */ 2641 public void parse(String numberToParse, String defaultRegion, PhoneNumber phoneNumber) 2642 throws NumberParseException { 2643 parseHelper(numberToParse, defaultRegion, false, true, phoneNumber); 2644 } 2645 2646 /** 2647 * Parses a string and returns it in proto buffer format. This method differs from {@link #parse} 2648 * in that it always populates the raw_input field of the protocol buffer with numberToParse as 2649 * well as the country_code_source field. 2650 * 2651 * @param numberToParse number that we are attempting to parse. This can contain formatting 2652 * such as +, ( and -, as well as a phone number extension. 2653 * @param defaultRegion region that we are expecting the number to be from. This is only used 2654 * if the number being parsed is not written in international format. 2655 * The country calling code for the number in this case would be stored 2656 * as that of the default region supplied. 2657 * @return a phone number proto buffer filled with the parsed number 2658 * @throws NumberParseException if the string is not considered to be a viable phone number or if 2659 * no default region was supplied 2660 */ 2661 public PhoneNumber parseAndKeepRawInput(String numberToParse, String defaultRegion) 2662 throws NumberParseException { 2663 PhoneNumber phoneNumber = new PhoneNumber(); 2664 parseAndKeepRawInput(numberToParse, defaultRegion, phoneNumber); 2665 return phoneNumber; 2666 } 2667 2668 /** 2669 * Same as{@link #parseAndKeepRawInput(String, String)}, but accepts a mutable PhoneNumber as 2670 * a parameter to decrease object creation when invoked many times. 2671 */ 2672 public void parseAndKeepRawInput(String numberToParse, String defaultRegion, 2673 PhoneNumber phoneNumber) 2674 throws NumberParseException { 2675 parseHelper(numberToParse, defaultRegion, true, true, phoneNumber); 2676 } 2677 2678 /** 2679 * Returns an iterable over all {@link PhoneNumberMatch PhoneNumberMatches} in {@code text}. This 2680 * is a shortcut for {@link #findNumbers(CharSequence, String, Leniency, long) 2681 * getMatcher(text, defaultRegion, Leniency.VALID, Long.MAX_VALUE)}. 2682 * 2683 * @param text the text to search for phone numbers, null for no text 2684 * @param defaultRegion region that we are expecting the number to be from. This is only used 2685 * if the number being parsed is not written in international format. The 2686 * country_code for the number in this case would be stored as that of 2687 * the default region supplied. May be null if only international 2688 * numbers are expected. 2689 */ 2690 public Iterable<PhoneNumberMatch> findNumbers(CharSequence text, String defaultRegion) { 2691 return findNumbers(text, defaultRegion, Leniency.VALID, Long.MAX_VALUE); 2692 } 2693 2694 /** 2695 * Returns an iterable over all {@link PhoneNumberMatch PhoneNumberMatches} in {@code text}. 2696 * 2697 * @param text the text to search for phone numbers, null for no text 2698 * @param defaultRegion region that we are expecting the number to be from. This is only used 2699 * if the number being parsed is not written in international format. The 2700 * country_code for the number in this case would be stored as that of 2701 * the default region supplied. May be null if only international 2702 * numbers are expected. 2703 * @param leniency the leniency to use when evaluating candidate phone numbers 2704 * @param maxTries the maximum number of invalid numbers to try before giving up on the 2705 * text. This is to cover degenerate cases where the text has a lot of 2706 * false positives in it. Must be {@code >= 0}. 2707 */ 2708 public Iterable<PhoneNumberMatch> findNumbers( 2709 final CharSequence text, final String defaultRegion, final Leniency leniency, 2710 final long maxTries) { 2711 2712 return new Iterable<PhoneNumberMatch>() { 2713 public Iterator<PhoneNumberMatch> iterator() { 2714 return new PhoneNumberMatcher( 2715 PhoneNumberUtil.this, text, defaultRegion, leniency, maxTries); 2716 } 2717 }; 2718 } 2719 2720 /** 2721 * Parses a string and fills up the phoneNumber. This method is the same as the public 2722 * parse() method, with the exception that it allows the default region to be null, for use by 2723 * isNumberMatch(). checkRegion should be set to false if it is permitted for the default region 2724 * to be null or unknown ("ZZ"). 2725 */ 2726 private void parseHelper(String numberToParse, String defaultRegion, boolean keepRawInput, 2727 boolean checkRegion, PhoneNumber phoneNumber) 2728 throws NumberParseException { 2729 if (numberToParse == null) { 2730 throw new NumberParseException(NumberParseException.ErrorType.NOT_A_NUMBER, 2731 "The phone number supplied was null."); 2732 } else if (numberToParse.length() > MAX_INPUT_STRING_LENGTH) { 2733 throw new NumberParseException(NumberParseException.ErrorType.TOO_LONG, 2734 "The string supplied was too long to parse."); 2735 } 2736 2737 StringBuilder nationalNumber = new StringBuilder(); 2738 buildNationalNumberForParsing(numberToParse, nationalNumber); 2739 2740 if (!isViablePhoneNumber(nationalNumber.toString())) { 2741 throw new NumberParseException(NumberParseException.ErrorType.NOT_A_NUMBER, 2742 "The string supplied did not seem to be a phone number."); 2743 } 2744 2745 // Check the region supplied is valid, or that the extracted number starts with some sort of + 2746 // sign so the number's region can be determined. 2747 if (checkRegion && !checkRegionForParsing(nationalNumber.toString(), defaultRegion)) { 2748 throw new NumberParseException(NumberParseException.ErrorType.INVALID_COUNTRY_CODE, 2749 "Missing or invalid default region."); 2750 } 2751 2752 if (keepRawInput) { 2753 phoneNumber.setRawInput(numberToParse); 2754 } 2755 // Attempt to parse extension first, since it doesn't require region-specific data and we want 2756 // to have the non-normalised number here. 2757 String extension = maybeStripExtension(nationalNumber); 2758 if (extension.length() > 0) { 2759 phoneNumber.setExtension(extension); 2760 } 2761 2762 PhoneMetadata regionMetadata = getMetadataForRegion(defaultRegion); 2763 // Check to see if the number is given in international format so we know whether this number is 2764 // from the default region or not. 2765 StringBuilder normalizedNationalNumber = new StringBuilder(); 2766 int countryCode = 0; 2767 try { 2768 // TODO: This method should really just take in the string buffer that has already 2769 // been created, and just remove the prefix, rather than taking in a string and then 2770 // outputting a string buffer. 2771 countryCode = maybeExtractCountryCode(nationalNumber.toString(), regionMetadata, 2772 normalizedNationalNumber, keepRawInput, phoneNumber); 2773 } catch (NumberParseException e) { 2774 Matcher matcher = PLUS_CHARS_PATTERN.matcher(nationalNumber.toString()); 2775 if (e.getErrorType() == NumberParseException.ErrorType.INVALID_COUNTRY_CODE && 2776 matcher.lookingAt()) { 2777 // Strip the plus-char, and try again. 2778 countryCode = maybeExtractCountryCode(nationalNumber.substring(matcher.end()), 2779 regionMetadata, normalizedNationalNumber, 2780 keepRawInput, phoneNumber); 2781 if (countryCode == 0) { 2782 throw new NumberParseException(NumberParseException.ErrorType.INVALID_COUNTRY_CODE, 2783 "Could not interpret numbers after plus-sign."); 2784 } 2785 } else { 2786 throw new NumberParseException(e.getErrorType(), e.getMessage()); 2787 } 2788 } 2789 if (countryCode != 0) { 2790 String phoneNumberRegion = getRegionCodeForCountryCode(countryCode); 2791 if (!phoneNumberRegion.equals(defaultRegion)) { 2792 // Metadata cannot be null because the country calling code is valid. 2793 regionMetadata = getMetadataForRegionOrCallingCode(countryCode, phoneNumberRegion); 2794 } 2795 } else { 2796 // If no extracted country calling code, use the region supplied instead. The national number 2797 // is just the normalized version of the number we were given to parse. 2798 normalize(nationalNumber); 2799 normalizedNationalNumber.append(nationalNumber); 2800 if (defaultRegion != null) { 2801 countryCode = regionMetadata.getCountryCode(); 2802 phoneNumber.setCountryCode(countryCode); 2803 } else if (keepRawInput) { 2804 phoneNumber.clearCountryCodeSource(); 2805 } 2806 } 2807 if (normalizedNationalNumber.length() < MIN_LENGTH_FOR_NSN) { 2808 throw new NumberParseException(NumberParseException.ErrorType.TOO_SHORT_NSN, 2809 "The string supplied is too short to be a phone number."); 2810 } 2811 if (regionMetadata != null) { 2812 StringBuilder carrierCode = new StringBuilder(); 2813 maybeStripNationalPrefixAndCarrierCode(normalizedNationalNumber, regionMetadata, carrierCode); 2814 if (keepRawInput) { 2815 phoneNumber.setPreferredDomesticCarrierCode(carrierCode.toString()); 2816 } 2817 } 2818 int lengthOfNationalNumber = normalizedNationalNumber.length(); 2819 if (lengthOfNationalNumber < MIN_LENGTH_FOR_NSN) { 2820 throw new NumberParseException(NumberParseException.ErrorType.TOO_SHORT_NSN, 2821 "The string supplied is too short to be a phone number."); 2822 } 2823 if (lengthOfNationalNumber > MAX_LENGTH_FOR_NSN) { 2824 throw new NumberParseException(NumberParseException.ErrorType.TOO_LONG, 2825 "The string supplied is too long to be a phone number."); 2826 } 2827 if (normalizedNationalNumber.charAt(0) == '0') { 2828 phoneNumber.setItalianLeadingZero(true); 2829 } 2830 phoneNumber.setNationalNumber(Long.parseLong(normalizedNationalNumber.toString())); 2831 } 2832 2833 /** 2834 * Converts numberToParse to a form that we can parse and write it to nationalNumber if it is 2835 * written in RFC3966; otherwise extract a possible number out of it and write to nationalNumber. 2836 */ 2837 private void buildNationalNumberForParsing(String numberToParse, StringBuilder nationalNumber) { 2838 int indexOfPhoneContext = numberToParse.indexOf(RFC3966_PHONE_CONTEXT); 2839 if (indexOfPhoneContext > 0) { 2840 int phoneContextStart = indexOfPhoneContext + RFC3966_PHONE_CONTEXT.length(); 2841 // If the phone context contains a phone number prefix, we need to capture it, whereas domains 2842 // will be ignored. 2843 if (numberToParse.charAt(phoneContextStart) == PLUS_SIGN) { 2844 // Additional parameters might follow the phone context. If so, we will remove them here 2845 // because the parameters after phone context are not important for parsing the 2846 // phone number. 2847 int phoneContextEnd = numberToParse.indexOf(';', phoneContextStart); 2848 if (phoneContextEnd > 0) { 2849 nationalNumber.append(numberToParse.substring(phoneContextStart, phoneContextEnd)); 2850 } else { 2851 nationalNumber.append(numberToParse.substring(phoneContextStart)); 2852 } 2853 } 2854 2855 // Now append everything between the "tel:" prefix and the phone-context. This should include 2856 // the national number, an optional extension or isdn-subaddress component. 2857 nationalNumber.append(numberToParse.substring( 2858 numberToParse.indexOf(RFC3966_PREFIX) + RFC3966_PREFIX.length(), indexOfPhoneContext)); 2859 } else { 2860 // Extract a possible number from the string passed in (this strips leading characters that 2861 // could not be the start of a phone number.) 2862 nationalNumber.append(extractPossibleNumber(numberToParse)); 2863 } 2864 2865 // Delete the isdn-subaddress and everything after it if it is present. Note extension won't 2866 // appear at the same time with isdn-subaddress according to paragraph 5.3 of the RFC3966 spec, 2867 int indexOfIsdn = nationalNumber.indexOf(RFC3966_ISDN_SUBADDRESS); 2868 if (indexOfIsdn > 0) { 2869 nationalNumber.delete(indexOfIsdn, nationalNumber.length()); 2870 } 2871 // If both phone context and isdn-subaddress are absent but other parameters are present, the 2872 // parameters are left in nationalNumber. This is because we are concerned about deleting 2873 // content from a potential number string when there is no strong evidence that the number is 2874 // actually written in RFC3966. 2875 } 2876 2877 /** 2878 * Takes two phone numbers and compares them for equality. 2879 * 2880 * <p>Returns EXACT_MATCH if the country_code, NSN, presence of a leading zero for Italian numbers 2881 * and any extension present are the same. 2882 * Returns NSN_MATCH if either or both has no region specified, and the NSNs and extensions are 2883 * the same. 2884 * Returns SHORT_NSN_MATCH if either or both has no region specified, or the region specified is 2885 * the same, and one NSN could be a shorter version of the other number. This includes the case 2886 * where one has an extension specified, and the other does not. 2887 * Returns NO_MATCH otherwise. 2888 * For example, the numbers +1 345 657 1234 and 657 1234 are a SHORT_NSN_MATCH. 2889 * The numbers +1 345 657 1234 and 345 657 are a NO_MATCH. 2890 * 2891 * @param firstNumberIn first number to compare 2892 * @param secondNumberIn second number to compare 2893 * 2894 * @return NO_MATCH, SHORT_NSN_MATCH, NSN_MATCH or EXACT_MATCH depending on the level of equality 2895 * of the two numbers, described in the method definition. 2896 */ 2897 public MatchType isNumberMatch(PhoneNumber firstNumberIn, PhoneNumber secondNumberIn) { 2898 // Make copies of the phone number so that the numbers passed in are not edited. 2899 PhoneNumber firstNumber = new PhoneNumber(); 2900 firstNumber.mergeFrom(firstNumberIn); 2901 PhoneNumber secondNumber = new PhoneNumber(); 2902 secondNumber.mergeFrom(secondNumberIn); 2903 // First clear raw_input, country_code_source and preferred_domestic_carrier_code fields and any 2904 // empty-string extensions so that we can use the proto-buffer equality method. 2905 firstNumber.clearRawInput(); 2906 firstNumber.clearCountryCodeSource(); 2907 firstNumber.clearPreferredDomesticCarrierCode(); 2908 secondNumber.clearRawInput(); 2909 secondNumber.clearCountryCodeSource(); 2910 secondNumber.clearPreferredDomesticCarrierCode(); 2911 if (firstNumber.hasExtension() && 2912 firstNumber.getExtension().length() == 0) { 2913 firstNumber.clearExtension(); 2914 } 2915 if (secondNumber.hasExtension() && 2916 secondNumber.getExtension().length() == 0) { 2917 secondNumber.clearExtension(); 2918 } 2919 // Early exit if both had extensions and these are different. 2920 if (firstNumber.hasExtension() && secondNumber.hasExtension() && 2921 !firstNumber.getExtension().equals(secondNumber.getExtension())) { 2922 return MatchType.NO_MATCH; 2923 } 2924 int firstNumberCountryCode = firstNumber.getCountryCode(); 2925 int secondNumberCountryCode = secondNumber.getCountryCode(); 2926 // Both had country_code specified. 2927 if (firstNumberCountryCode != 0 && secondNumberCountryCode != 0) { 2928 if (firstNumber.exactlySameAs(secondNumber)) { 2929 return MatchType.EXACT_MATCH; 2930 } else if (firstNumberCountryCode == secondNumberCountryCode && 2931 isNationalNumberSuffixOfTheOther(firstNumber, secondNumber)) { 2932 // A SHORT_NSN_MATCH occurs if there is a difference because of the presence or absence of 2933 // an 'Italian leading zero', the presence or absence of an extension, or one NSN being a 2934 // shorter variant of the other. 2935 return MatchType.SHORT_NSN_MATCH; 2936 } 2937 // This is not a match. 2938 return MatchType.NO_MATCH; 2939 } 2940 // Checks cases where one or both country_code fields were not specified. To make equality 2941 // checks easier, we first set the country_code fields to be equal. 2942 firstNumber.setCountryCode(secondNumberCountryCode); 2943 // If all else was the same, then this is an NSN_MATCH. 2944 if (firstNumber.exactlySameAs(secondNumber)) { 2945 return MatchType.NSN_MATCH; 2946 } 2947 if (isNationalNumberSuffixOfTheOther(firstNumber, secondNumber)) { 2948 return MatchType.SHORT_NSN_MATCH; 2949 } 2950 return MatchType.NO_MATCH; 2951 } 2952 2953 // Returns true when one national number is the suffix of the other or both are the same. 2954 private boolean isNationalNumberSuffixOfTheOther(PhoneNumber firstNumber, 2955 PhoneNumber secondNumber) { 2956 String firstNumberNationalNumber = String.valueOf(firstNumber.getNationalNumber()); 2957 String secondNumberNationalNumber = String.valueOf(secondNumber.getNationalNumber()); 2958 // Note that endsWith returns true if the numbers are equal. 2959 return firstNumberNationalNumber.endsWith(secondNumberNationalNumber) || 2960 secondNumberNationalNumber.endsWith(firstNumberNationalNumber); 2961 } 2962 2963 /** 2964 * Takes two phone numbers as strings and compares them for equality. This is a convenience 2965 * wrapper for {@link #isNumberMatch(PhoneNumber, PhoneNumber)}. No default region is known. 2966 * 2967 * @param firstNumber first number to compare. Can contain formatting, and can have country 2968 * calling code specified with + at the start. 2969 * @param secondNumber second number to compare. Can contain formatting, and can have country 2970 * calling code specified with + at the start. 2971 * @return NOT_A_NUMBER, NO_MATCH, SHORT_NSN_MATCH, NSN_MATCH, EXACT_MATCH. See 2972 * {@link #isNumberMatch(PhoneNumber, PhoneNumber)} for more details. 2973 */ 2974 public MatchType isNumberMatch(String firstNumber, String secondNumber) { 2975 try { 2976 PhoneNumber firstNumberAsProto = parse(firstNumber, UNKNOWN_REGION); 2977 return isNumberMatch(firstNumberAsProto, secondNumber); 2978 } catch (NumberParseException e) { 2979 if (e.getErrorType() == NumberParseException.ErrorType.INVALID_COUNTRY_CODE) { 2980 try { 2981 PhoneNumber secondNumberAsProto = parse(secondNumber, UNKNOWN_REGION); 2982 return isNumberMatch(secondNumberAsProto, firstNumber); 2983 } catch (NumberParseException e2) { 2984 if (e2.getErrorType() == NumberParseException.ErrorType.INVALID_COUNTRY_CODE) { 2985 try { 2986 PhoneNumber firstNumberProto = new PhoneNumber(); 2987 PhoneNumber secondNumberProto = new PhoneNumber(); 2988 parseHelper(firstNumber, null, false, false, firstNumberProto); 2989 parseHelper(secondNumber, null, false, false, secondNumberProto); 2990 return isNumberMatch(firstNumberProto, secondNumberProto); 2991 } catch (NumberParseException e3) { 2992 // Fall through and return MatchType.NOT_A_NUMBER. 2993 } 2994 } 2995 } 2996 } 2997 } 2998 // One or more of the phone numbers we are trying to match is not a viable phone number. 2999 return MatchType.NOT_A_NUMBER; 3000 } 3001 3002 /** 3003 * Takes two phone numbers and compares them for equality. This is a convenience wrapper for 3004 * {@link #isNumberMatch(PhoneNumber, PhoneNumber)}. No default region is known. 3005 * 3006 * @param firstNumber first number to compare in proto buffer format. 3007 * @param secondNumber second number to compare. Can contain formatting, and can have country 3008 * calling code specified with + at the start. 3009 * @return NOT_A_NUMBER, NO_MATCH, SHORT_NSN_MATCH, NSN_MATCH, EXACT_MATCH. See 3010 * {@link #isNumberMatch(PhoneNumber, PhoneNumber)} for more details. 3011 */ 3012 public MatchType isNumberMatch(PhoneNumber firstNumber, String secondNumber) { 3013 // First see if the second number has an implicit country calling code, by attempting to parse 3014 // it. 3015 try { 3016 PhoneNumber secondNumberAsProto = parse(secondNumber, UNKNOWN_REGION); 3017 return isNumberMatch(firstNumber, secondNumberAsProto); 3018 } catch (NumberParseException e) { 3019 if (e.getErrorType() == NumberParseException.ErrorType.INVALID_COUNTRY_CODE) { 3020 // The second number has no country calling code. EXACT_MATCH is no longer possible. 3021 // We parse it as if the region was the same as that for the first number, and if 3022 // EXACT_MATCH is returned, we replace this with NSN_MATCH. 3023 String firstNumberRegion = getRegionCodeForCountryCode(firstNumber.getCountryCode()); 3024 try { 3025 if (!firstNumberRegion.equals(UNKNOWN_REGION)) { 3026 PhoneNumber secondNumberWithFirstNumberRegion = parse(secondNumber, firstNumberRegion); 3027 MatchType match = isNumberMatch(firstNumber, secondNumberWithFirstNumberRegion); 3028 if (match == MatchType.EXACT_MATCH) { 3029 return MatchType.NSN_MATCH; 3030 } 3031 return match; 3032 } else { 3033 // If the first number didn't have a valid country calling code, then we parse the 3034 // second number without one as well. 3035 PhoneNumber secondNumberProto = new PhoneNumber(); 3036 parseHelper(secondNumber, null, false, false, secondNumberProto); 3037 return isNumberMatch(firstNumber, secondNumberProto); 3038 } 3039 } catch (NumberParseException e2) { 3040 // Fall-through to return NOT_A_NUMBER. 3041 } 3042 } 3043 } 3044 // One or more of the phone numbers we are trying to match is not a viable phone number. 3045 return MatchType.NOT_A_NUMBER; 3046 } 3047 3048 /** 3049 * Returns true if the number can be dialled from outside the region, or unknown. If the number 3050 * can only be dialled from within the region, returns false. Does not check the number is a valid 3051 * number. 3052 * TODO: Make this method public when we have enough metadata to make it worthwhile. 3053 * 3054 * @param number the phone-number for which we want to know whether it is diallable from 3055 * outside the region 3056 */ 3057 // @VisibleForTesting 3058 boolean canBeInternationallyDialled(PhoneNumber number) { 3059 PhoneMetadata metadata = getMetadataForRegion(getRegionCodeForNumber(number)); 3060 if (metadata == null) { 3061 // Note numbers belonging to non-geographical entities (e.g. +800 numbers) are always 3062 // internationally diallable, and will be caught here. 3063 return true; 3064 } 3065 String nationalSignificantNumber = getNationalSignificantNumber(number); 3066 return !isNumberMatchingDesc(nationalSignificantNumber, metadata.getNoInternationalDialling()); 3067 } 3068 } 3069