A phone number library for PHP.
This library is a thin wrapper around giggsey/libphonenumber-for-php, itself a port of Google's libphonenumber.
It provides an equivalent functionality, with the following implementation differences:
PhoneNumber
is an immutable class; it can be safely passed around without having to worry about the risk for it to be changed;PhoneNumber
is not just a mere data container, but provides all the methods to parse, format and validate phone numbers; it transparently encapsulatesPhoneNumberUtil
.
This library is installable via Composer:
composer require brick/phonenumber
This library requires PHP 7.1 or later. for PHP 5.6 and PHP 7.0 support, use version 0.1
.
While this library is still under development, it is well tested and should be stable enough to use in production environments.
The current releases are numbered 0.x.y
. When a non-breaking change is introduced (adding new methods, optimizing existing code, etc.), y
is incremented.
When a breaking change is introduced, a new 0.x
version cycle is always started.
It is therefore safe to lock your project to a given release cycle, such as 0.4.*
.
If you need to upgrade to a newer release cycle, check the release history for a list of changes introduced by each further 0.x.0
version.
All the classes lie in the Brick\PhoneNumber
namespace.
To obtain an instance of PhoneNumber
, use the parse()
method:
- Using an international number:
PhoneNumber::parse('+33123456789')
; - Using a national number and a country code:
PhoneNumber::parse('01 23 45 67 89', 'FR')
;
The parse()
method is quite permissive with numbers; it basically attempts to match a country code,
and validates the length of the phone number for this country.
If a number is really malformed, it throws a PhoneNumberParseException
:
use Brick\PhoneNumber\PhoneNumber;
use Brick\PhoneNumber\PhoneNumberParseException;
try {
$number = PhoneNumber::parse('+333');
}
catch (PhoneNumberParseException $e) {
// 'The string supplied is too short to be a phone number.'
}
In most cases, it is recommended to perform an extra step of validation with isValidNumber()
or isPossibleNumber()
:
if (! $number->isPossibleNumber()) {
// a more lenient and faster check than `isValidNumber()`
}
if (! $number->isValidNumber()) {
// strict check relying on up-to-date metadata library
}
As a rule of thumb, do the following:
- When the number comes from user input, do a full validation:
parse()
and catchPhoneNumberParseException
, then callisValidNumber()
(orisPossibleNumber()
for a more lenient check) if no exception occurred; - When the number is later retrieved from your database, and has been validated before, you can just perform a blind
parse()
.
You can use format()
with constants from the PhoneNumberFormat class:
$number = PhoneNumber::parse('+41446681800');
$number->format(PhoneNumberFormat::E164); // +41446681800
$number->format(PhoneNumberFormat::INTERNATIONAL); // +41 44 668 18 00
$number->format(PhoneNumberFormat::NATIONAL); // 044 668 18 00
$number->format(PhoneNumberFormat::RFC3966); // tel:+41-44-668-18-00
You may want to present a phone number to an audience in a specific country, with the correct international
prefix when required. This is what formatForCallingFrom()
does:
$number = PhoneNumber::parse('+447123456789');
$number->formatForCallingFrom('GB'); // 07123 456789
$number->formatForCallingFrom('FR'); // 00 44 7123 456789
$number->formatForCallingFrom('US'); // 011 44 7123 456789
In certain cases, it is possible to know the type of a phone number (fixed line, mobile phone, etc.), using
the getNumberType()
method, which returns a constant from the PhoneNumberType class:
PhoneNumber::parse('+336123456789')->getNumberType(); // PhoneNumberType::MOBILE
PhoneNumber::parse('+33123456789')->getNumberType(); // PhoneNumberType::FIXED_LINE
If the type is unknown, the PhoneNumberType::UNKNOWN
value is returned.
Check the PhoneNumberType
class for all possible values.
You can extract the following information from a phone number:
$number = PhoneNumber::parse('+447123456789');
echo $number->getRegionCode(); // GB
echo $number->getCountryCode(); // 44
echo $number->getNationalNumber(); // 7123456789
You can get an example number for a country code and an optional number type (defaults to fixed line). This can be useful to use as a placeholder in an input field, for example:
echo PhoneNumber::getExampleNumber('FR'); // +33123456789
echo PhoneNumber::getExampleNumber('FR', PhoneNumberType::MOBILE); // +33612345678
The return type of getExampleNumber()
is a PhoneNumber
instance, so you can format it as you like:
echo PhoneNumber::getExampleNumber('FR')->formatForCallingFrom('FR'); // 01 23 45 67 89
If no example phone number is available for the country code / number type combination, a PhoneNumberException
is thrown.
Casting a PhoneNumber
to string returns its E164 representation (+
followed by digits), so the following are equivalent:
(string) $phoneNumber
$phoneNumber->format(PhoneNumberFormat::E164)
You can serialize a PhoneNumber
to string, then recover it using parse()
without a country code:
$phoneNumber = PhoneNumber::parse('02079834000', 'GB');
$phoneNumberAsString = (string) $phoneNumber; // +442079834000
$phoneNumber2 = PhoneNumber::parse($phoneNumberAsString);
$phoneNumber2->isEqualTo($phoneNumber); // true
You can use PhoneNumber
objects in your Doctrine entities using the brick/phonenumber-doctrine package.