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awesome-phonenumber
Advanced tools
The awesome-phonenumber npm package is a comprehensive library for parsing, formatting, and validating phone numbers. It supports a wide range of international phone number formats and provides utilities for handling phone number data effectively.
Parsing Phone Numbers
This feature allows you to parse a phone number from a string and create a PhoneNumber object. The example demonstrates how to parse a US phone number.
const PhoneNumber = require('awesome-phonenumber');
const pn = new PhoneNumber('+12025550123');
console.log(pn.getNumber()); // Outputs: +12025550123
Formatting Phone Numbers
This feature allows you to format phone numbers in different formats such as E.164, international, and national. The example shows how to format a US phone number in various formats.
const PhoneNumber = require('awesome-phonenumber');
const pn = new PhoneNumber('+12025550123');
console.log(pn.getNumber('e164')); // Outputs: +12025550123
console.log(pn.getNumber('international')); // Outputs: +1 202-555-0123
console.log(pn.getNumber('national')); // Outputs: (202) 555-0123
Validating Phone Numbers
This feature allows you to validate whether a phone number is valid or not. The example demonstrates how to check the validity of a US phone number.
const PhoneNumber = require('awesome-phonenumber');
const pn = new PhoneNumber('+12025550123');
console.log(pn.isValid()); // Outputs: true
Getting Region Code
This feature allows you to get the region code of a phone number. The example shows how to retrieve the region code for a US phone number.
const PhoneNumber = require('awesome-phonenumber');
const pn = new PhoneNumber('+12025550123');
console.log(pn.getRegionCode()); // Outputs: US
Getting Country Code
This feature allows you to get the country code of a phone number. The example demonstrates how to retrieve the country code for a US phone number.
const PhoneNumber = require('awesome-phonenumber');
const pn = new PhoneNumber('+12025550123');
console.log(pn.getCountryCode()); // Outputs: 1
libphonenumber-js is a simpler and smaller alternative to Google's libphonenumber library. It provides similar functionalities for parsing, formatting, and validating phone numbers. Compared to awesome-phonenumber, libphonenumber-js is more lightweight and may be preferable for projects where bundle size is a concern.
google-libphonenumber is a comprehensive library developed by Google for parsing, formatting, and validating international phone numbers. It is the most feature-rich and widely used library for phone number handling. Compared to awesome-phonenumber, google-libphonenumber offers more extensive support and features but comes with a larger bundle size.
The phone package is a simple library for parsing and formatting phone numbers. It is less feature-rich compared to awesome-phonenumber but provides basic functionalities for handling phone numbers. It is suitable for projects that require minimal phone number processing capabilities.
This library is a pre-compiled version of Google's libphonenumber
, with a slightly simpler interface. It has a minimal footprint - is by far the smallest libphonenumber-based library available on npmjs, and has no dependencies.
TypeScript typings are provided within the package.
Uses libphonenumber v8.13.32
parsePhoneNumber
is an object
{ regionCode: 'SE' }
instead of a region code stringtoJSON( )
on v3Since this library is pre-compiled, it doesn't depend on the closure compiler, and needs not load it on start. This makes the library faster and saves you a lot of space. It also means this library is trivial to use in any webpack
project (or using any other means to run in the browser).
Among all the popular phone number using Google's libphonenumber
(or mimicing it), only this one, google-libphonenumber
and libphonenumber-js
have decent README's with examples. This may have changed since first doing these benchmarks.
A library should be quick to load (require()
), quick to parse first time and all consecutive times. It shouldn't bloat your node_modules
, and it should have a small memory footprint, if possible.
The following is the result of a test program which loads the library, then parses a phone number, and then once again. It's called 100 times for each library and the mean values are shown here. Parsing a phone number first time might be slower because of initially compiling/optimizing regular expressions and whatnot. Parsing a phone number a second time will show the speed of likely all future parsing within that process.
Action | awesome-phonenumber 2.56.0 (lib 8.12.29) | google-libphonenumber 3.2.22 (lib 8.12.27) | libphonenumber-js 1.9.23 (lib -) |
---|---|---|---|
Load library first time | 11.0 ms ✅ | 29.67 ms | 32.87 ms |
Parse first phone number | 4.3 ms | 4.01 ms | 3.43 ms ✅ |
⇒ Load + parse first number | 15.3 ms ✅ | 33.68 ms | 36.3 ms |
Parse second phone number | 0.78 ms ✅ | 0.97 ms | 0.92 ms |
Increased memory usage | 5.12 M ✅ | 9.99 M | 5.86 M |
node_modules size | 296 K ✅ | 600 K | 7.6 M |
node_modules files | 8 | 7 ✅ | 653 |
import { parsePhoneNumber } from 'awesome-phonenumber'
const pn = parsePhoneNumber( '0707123456', { regionCode: 'SE' } );
// or on e164 format:
const pn = parsePhoneNumber( '+46707123456' );
// pn is now the same as:
const pn = {
valid: true,
number: {
input: '0707123456',
e164: '+46707123456',
international: '+46 70 712 34 56',
national: '070-712 34 56',
rfc3966: 'tel:+46-70-712-34-56',
significant: '707123456',
},
possibility: 'is-possible',
regionCode: 'SE',
possible: true,
canBeInternationallyDialled: true,
type: 'mobile',
countryCode: 46,
typeIsMobile: true,
typeIsFixedLine: false,
};
The return type is ParsedPhoneNumber
which is either a ParsedPhoneNumberValid
or a ParsedPhoneNumberInvalid
. The valid
property identifies whether the parsing was successful or not, hence which type is returned.
The format of a successful parsing is:
interface ParsedPhoneNumberValid {
valid: true;
number: {
input: string;
international: string;
national: string;
e164: string;
rfc3966: string;
significant: string;
};
possibility: PhoneNumberPossibility; // a string union, see below
regionCode: string;
possible: boolean;
canBeInternationallyDialled: boolean;
type: PhoneNumberTypes; // a string union, see below
countryCode: number;
typeIsMobile: boolean;
typeIsFixedLine: boolean;
}
If the number failed to be parsed, or there was another error, the return type is:
interface ParsedPhoneNumberInvalid {
valid: false;
possible: false;
possibility: 'invalid';
error?: unknown;
};
import {
parsePhoneNumber,
getNumberFrom,
getExample,
getCountryCodeForRegionCode,
getRegionCodeForCountryCode,
getSupportedCallingCodes,
getSupportedRegionCodes,
getAsYouType,
} from 'awesome-phonenumber'
parsePhoneNumber( phoneNumber, { regionCode: string } )
parses a phone number as described above.
The first argument is the phone number to parse, on either national or international (e164, i.e. prefixed with a +
) form. If national form, the second argument is required to contain a regionCode
string property, e.g. 'SE' for Sweden, 'CH' for Switzerland, etc.
import { parsePhoneNumber, getNumberFrom } from 'awesome-phonenumber'
const pn = parsePhoneNumber( '0707654321', { regionCode: 'SE' } );
if ( pn.valid ) {
const fromJp = getNumberFrom( pn, 'JP' );
// fromJp is the number to call from Japan:
fromJp.number === "010 46 70 765 43 21";
}
The return value from getNumberFrom
is a PhoneNumberFrom
which is either a PhoneNumberFromValid
or a PhoneNumberFromInvalid
.
The PhoneNumberFromValid
is defined as:
interface PhoneNumberFromValid
{
valid: true;
number: string;
}
The PhoneNumberFromInvalid
is defined as:
interface PhoneNumberFromInvalid
{
valid: false;
error?: unknown;
}
Sometimes you want to display a formatted example phone number for a certain country (and maybe also a certain type of phone number). The getExample
function is used for this.
import { getExample } from 'awesome-phonenumber'
getExample( regionCode[, phoneNumberType] ); // Parsed phone number
The phoneNumberType
is any of the types defined above.
import { getExample } from 'awesome-phonenumber'
// Get an example Swedish phone number
const example = getExample( 'SE' ); // A ParsedPhoneNumberValid
const exampleMobile = getExample( 'SE', 'mobile' ); // A ParsedPhoneNumberValid
example.number.e164; // e.g. '+468123456'
exampleMobile.number.e164; // e.g. '+46701234567'
exampleMobile.number.national; // e.g. '070 123 45 67'
There are conversion functions between the 2-character ISO 3166-1 region codes (e.g. 'SE' for Sweden) and the corresponding country calling codes.
import {
getCountryCodeForRegionCode,
getRegionCodeForCountryCode,
getSupportedCallingCodes,
getSupportedRegionCodes,
} from 'awesome-phonenumber'
getCountryCodeForRegionCode( regionCode ); // -> countryCode
getRegionCodeForCountryCode( countryCode ); // -> regionCode
getCountryCodeForRegionCode( 'SE' ); // -> 46
getRegionCodeForCountryCode( 46 ); // -> 'SE'
getSupportedCallingCodes( ); // -> [ calling codes... ]
getSupportedRegionCodes( ); // -> [ region codes... ]
The API consists of the PhoneNumber
class which sometimes uses enums. These are:
type PhoneNumberTypes =
| 'fixed-line'
| 'fixed-line-or-mobile'
| 'mobile'
| 'pager'
| 'personal-number'
| 'premium-rate'
| 'shared-cost'
| 'toll-free'
| 'uan'
| 'voip'
| 'unknown'
type PhoneNumberPossibility =
| 'is-possible'
| 'invalid-country-code'
| 'too-long'
| 'too-short'
| 'unknown'
'international'
'national'
'e164'
'rfc3966'
'significant'
You can create an AsYouType
class with getAsYouType()
to format a phone number as it is being typed.
import { getAsYouType } from 'awesome-phonenumber'
const ayt = getAsYouType( 'SE' );
The returned class instance has the following methods
// Add a character to the end of the number
ayt.addChar( nextChar: string );
// Get the current formatted number
ayt.number( );
// Remove the last character
ayt.removeChar( );
// Replace the whole number with a new number (or an empty number if undefined)
ayt.reset( number?: string );
// Get a ParsedPhoneNumber object representing the current number
ayt.getPhoneNumber( );
All the functions above except getPhoneNumber( )
return the current formatted number as a string.
import { getAsYouType } from 'awesome-phonenumber'
const ayt = getAsYouType( 'SE' );
ayt.addChar( '0' ); // -> '0'
ayt.addChar( '7' ); // -> '07'
ayt.addChar( '0' ); // -> '070'
ayt.addChar( '7' ); // -> '070 7'
ayt.addChar( '1' ); // -> '070 71'
ayt.addChar( '2' ); // -> '070 712'
ayt.addChar( '3' ); // -> '070 712 3'
ayt.addChar( '4' ); // -> '070 712 34'
ayt.addChar( '5' ); // -> '070 712 34 5'
ayt.addChar( '6' ); // -> '070 712 34 56'
ayt.removeChar( ); // -> '070 712 34 5'
ayt.addChar( '7' ); // -> '070 712 34 57'
FAQs
Google's libphonenumber pre-compiled with the closure compiler
The npm package awesome-phonenumber receives a total of 395,111 weekly downloads. As such, awesome-phonenumber popularity was classified as popular.
We found that awesome-phonenumber demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
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