NAME
Number::Phone::NANP - NANP-specific methods for Number::Phone
DESCRIPTION
This is a base class which encapsulates that information about phone numbers in the North American Numbering Plan (NANP) which are common to all NANP countries - that is, those whose international dialling code is +1.
Country-specific modules should inherit from this module and provide their own versions of methods as necessary. However, they should not provide an is_valid
method or a constructor.
SYNOPSIS
This module should not be used directly. It will be loaded as necessary by Number::Phone:
use Number::Phone;
my $phone_number = Number::Phone->new('+1 202 418 1440');
# $phone_number is now a Number::Phone::NANP::US
my $other_phone_number = Number::Phone->new('+1 866 623 2282');
# $phone_number is non-geographic so is a Number::Phone::NANP
METHODS
The following methods from Number::Phone are overridden:
- new
-
The constructor, you should never have to call this yourself. To create an object the canonical incantation is
Number::Phone-
new('+1 ...')>. - operator
-
For some countries operator data is available.
- data_source
-
Returns a string telling where and when the data for operators was last updated, looking something like:
"localcallingguide.com at Wed Sep 30 10:37:39 2020 UTC"
The current value of this is also documented in Number::Phone::Data.
- is_valid
-
The number is valid within the numbering scheme. It may or may not yet be allocated, or it may be reserved.
- is_geographic
-
NANP-globals like 1-800 aren't geographic, the rest are.
As a special case, 1-600 is non-geographic. So too will be 1-622/633/644/655/677/688 when they come in to service.
- is_mobile
-
NANP-globals like 1-800 aren't mobile. For most others we just don't know because the data isn't published. libphonenumber has data for *some* countries, so we use that if we can.
- is_fixed_line
-
NANP-globals are fixed lines, for the rest we generally don't know with some exceptions as per is_mobile above.
- is_drama
-
The number is a '555' number. Numbers with the D, E, and F digits set to 555 are not allocated to real customers, and are intended for use in fiction. eg 212 555 2368 for Ghostbusters.
NB, despite Ghostbusters above, only 555-0100 to 555-0199 are actually reserved.
- is_government
-
Area code 710 is reserved for the US Feds, but apparently only one number in the whole area code works.
- is_tollfree
-
The number is free to the caller. 800, 833, 844, 855, 866, 877 and 888 "area codes"
- is_specialrate
-
The number is charged at a higher rate than normal. The 900 "area code" and some parts of 242 and 246 (Bahamas and Barbados).
- is_personal
-
The number is a "personal" number. The 500, 533, 544, 566 and 577 "area codes".
- country_code
-
Returns 1.
- regulator
-
Returns informational text relevant to the whole NANP. Note that when this method is inherited by a subclass it returns undef meaning "not known", but returns information about the NANPA when called on an object of class Number::Phone::NANP.
- areacode
-
Return the area code for the number.
- areaname
-
Return the name for the area code, if applicable, otherwise returns undef. For instance, for a number beginning with +1 201 200 it would return "Jersey City, NJ".
- subscriber
-
Return the subscriber part of the number.
- format
-
Return a sanely formatted version of the number, complete with IDD code.
BUGS/FEEDBACK
Please report bugs at https://github.com/DrHyde/perl-modules-Number-Phone/issues, including, if possible, a test case.
I welcome feedback from users.
LICENCE
You may use, modify and distribute this software under the same terms as perl itself.
AUTHOR
David Cantrell <david@cantrell.org.uk>
Copyright 2012