# PhonyRails [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/joost/phony_rails.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/joost/phony_rails) [![Coverage Status](https://coveralls.io/repos/joost/phony_rails/badge.svg)](https://coveralls.io/r/joost/phony_rails) ![Dependencies Status](https://img.shields.io/gemnasium/joost/phony_rails.svg) ![Gem](https://img.shields.io/gem/v/phony_rails.svg) This small Gem adds useful methods to your Rails app to validate, display and save phone numbers. It uses the super awesome Phony gem (https://github.com/floere/phony). Find version information in the [CHANGELOG](CHANGELOG.md). ## Installation Add this line to your application's Gemfile: ```ruby gem 'phony_rails' # Include phony_rails after mongoid (if you use mongoid, see issue #66 on github). ``` And then execute: ``` $ bundle ``` Or install it yourself as: ``` $ gem install phony_rails ``` ## Usage ### Normalization / Model Usage #### ActiveRecord For **ActiveRecord**, in your model add: ```ruby class SomeModel < ActiveRecord::Base # Normalizes the attribute itself before validation phony_normalize :phone_number, default_country_code: 'US' # Normalizes attribute before validation and saves into other attribute phony_normalize :phone_number, as: :phone_number_normalized_version, default_country_code: 'US' # Creates method normalized_fax_number that returns the normalized version of fax_number phony_normalized_method :fax_number end ``` #### Mongoid For **Mongoid**, in keeping with Mongoid plug-in conventions you must include the `Mongoid::Phony` module: ```ruby class SomeModel include Mongoid::Document include Mongoid::Phony # methods are same as ActiveRecord usage end ``` #### General info The `:default_country_code` options is used to specify a country_code when normalizing. PhonyRails will also check your model for a country_code method to use when normalizing the number. So `'070-12341234'` with `country_code` 'NL' will get normalized to `'+317012341234'`. You can also do-it-yourself and call: ```ruby # Options: # :country_code => The country code we should use (forced). # :default_country_code => Some fallback code (eg. 'NL') that can be used as default (comes from phony_normalize_numbers method). PhonyRails.normalize_number('some number', country_code: 'NL') PhonyRails.normalize_number('+4790909090', country_code: 'SE') # => '+464790909090' (forced to +46) PhonyRails.normalize_number('+4790909090', default_country_code: 'SE') # => '+4790909090' (still +47 so not changed) ``` The country_code should always be a ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_3166-1_alpha-2). ### Validation In your model use the Phony.plausible method to validate an attribute: ```ruby validates :phone_number, phony_plausible: true ``` or the helper method: ```ruby validates_plausible_phone :phone_number ``` this method use other validators under the hood to provide: * presence validation using `ActiveModel::Validations::PresenceValidator` * format validation using `ActiveModel::Validations::FormatValidator` so we can use: ```ruby validates_plausible_phone :phone_number, presence: true validates_plausible_phone :phone_number, with: /^\+\d+/ validates_plausible_phone :phone_number, without: /^\+\d+/ validates_plausible_phone :phone_number, presence: true, with: /^\+\d+/ ``` the i18n key is `:improbable_phone`. Languages supported by default: de, en, fr, it, ja, kh, nl, tr, ua and ru. You can also validate if a number has the correct country number: ```ruby validates_plausible_phone :phone_number, country_number: '61' ``` or correct country code: ```ruby validates_plausible_phone :phone_number, country_code: 'AU' ``` You can validate against the normalized input as opposed to the raw input: ```ruby phony_normalize :phone_number, as: :phone_number_normalized, default_country_code: 'US' validates_plausible_phone :phone_number, normalized_country_code: 'US' ``` #### Allowing records country codes to not match phone number country codes You may have a record specifying one country (via a `country_code` attribute) but using a phone number from another country. For example, your record may be from Japan but have a phone number from the Philippines. By default, `phony_rails` will consider your record's `country_code` as part of the validation. If that country doesn't match the country code in the phone number, validation will fail. Additionally, `phony_normalize` will always add the records country code as the country number (eg. the user enters '+81xxx' for Japan and the records `country_code` is 'DE' then `phony_normalize` will change the number to '+4981'). You can turn this off by adding `enforce_record_country: false` to the validation options. The country_code will then only be added if no country code is specified. If you want to allow records from one country to have phone numbers from a different one, there are a couple of options you can use: `ignore_record_country_number` and `ignore_record_country_code`. Use them like so: ```ruby validates :phone_number, phony_plausible: { ignore_record_country_code: true, ignore_record_country_number: true } ``` Obviously, you don't have to use both, and you may not need or want to set either. ### Display / Views In your views use: ```erb <%= "311012341234".phony_formatted(format: :international, spaces: '-') %> <%= "+31-10-12341234".phony_formatted(format: :international, spaces: '-') %> <%= "+31(0)1012341234".phony_formatted(format: :international, spaces: '-') %> ``` To first normalize the String to a certain country use: ```erb <%= "010-12341234".phony_formatted(normalize: :NL, format: :international, spaces: '-') %> ``` To return nil when a number is not valid: ```ruby "123".phony_formatted(strict: true) # => nil ``` You can also use the bang method (phony_formatted!): ```ruby number = "010-12341234" number.phony_formatted!(normalize: :NL, format: :international) number # => "+31 10 123 41234" ``` You can also easily normalize a phone number String: ```ruby "+31 (0)30 1234 123".phony_normalized # => '31301234123' "(0)30 1234 123".phony_normalized # => '301234123' "(0)30 1234 123".phony_normalized(country_code: 'NL') # => '301234123' ``` ### Find by normalized number Say you want to find a record by a phone number. Best is to normalize user input and compare to an attribute stored in the db. ```ruby Home.find_by_normalized_phone_number(PhonyRails.normalize_number(params[:phone_number])) ``` ## Contributing 1. Fork it 2. Create your feature branch (`git checkout -b my-new-feature`) 3. Commit your changes (`git commit -am 'Added some feature'`) 4. Push to the branch (`git push origin my-new-feature`) 5. Create new Pull Request Don't forget to add tests and run rspec before creating a pull request :) See all contributors on https://github.com/joost/phony_rails/graphs/contributors.