Reputation: 1469
I have a number that I need to format as a telephone number. If I do
PhoneNumberUtils.formatNumber(numStr);
Then I get
888-555-1234
But what I need to get is
(888) 555-1234
How do I get the second one? Is there a standard android way?
Upvotes: 15
Views: 23860
Reputation: 8857
Working solution in 2020:
TelephonyManager telephonyManager = (TelephonyManager) getSystemService(Context.TELEPHONY_SERVICE);
String countryIso = telephonyManager.getNetworkCountryIso().toUpperCase();
phoneNumberTextView.setText(PhoneNumberUtils.formatNumber("3473214567", countryIso));
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 2496
Try to use regex. This will help you. As for me, i use this:
var result = "+1 888-555-1234"
if (Pattern.compile("^\\+[\\d]+\\s[\\d]{1,3}\\s[\\d]+").matcher(result).find()) {
result = result.replaceFirst(" ", "(").replaceFirst(" ", ")").replace(" ","-")
}
if(Pattern.compile("^\\+[\\d]+\\s[\\d]{1,3}-[\\d]+").matcher(result).find()){
result = result.replaceFirst(" ", "(").replaceFirst("-", ")")
}
Timber.d("$result")
output: +1(888)555-1234
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 1100
You simply use this and get you want :
new PhoneNumberFormattingTextWatcher()
or Have look at this url :
http://developer.android.com/reference/android/telephony/PhoneNumberFormattingTextWatcher.html
Upvotes: 4
Reputation: 1235
Don't know if you found what you were looking for, but I ended up writing a little method that takes the length of a string (since the phone numbers I get come from a web service and can be a variety of formats). I believe it should work (so far all my test cases have been with the first two options -- haven't tested the other two yet).
public static String FormatStringAsPhoneNumber(String input) {
String output;
switch (input.length()) {
case 7:
output = String.format("%s-%s", input.substring(0,3), input.substring(3,7));
break;
case 10:
output = String.format("(%s) %s-%s", input.substring(0,3), input.substring(3,6), input.substring(6,10));
break;
case 11:
output = String.format("%s (%s) %s-%s", input.substring(0,1) ,input.substring(1,4), input.substring(4,7), input.substring(7,11));
break;
case 12:
output = String.format("+%s (%s) %s-%s", input.substring(0,2) ,input.substring(2,5), input.substring(5,8), input.substring(8,12));
break;
default:
return null;
}
return output;
}
Upvotes: 12
Reputation: 26007
If you know the country for which you want to do it, you can use Google's open source library libphonenumber . Here is how you can format it:
String numberStr = "8885551234"
PhoneNumberUtil phoneUtil = PhoneNumberUtil.getInstance();
try {
PhoneNumber numberProto = phoneUtil.parse(numberStr, "US");
//Since you know the country you can format it as follows:
System.out.println(phoneUtil.format(numberProto, PhoneNumberFormat.NATIONAL));
} catch (NumberParseException e) {
System.err.println("NumberParseException was thrown: " + e.toString());
}
If you don't know the country then for numberStr
use E.164 format phone number and in place of country code use null.
Upvotes: 19
Reputation: 13483
If you have the String "888-555-1234"
- by using PhoneNumberUtils.formatNumber(numStr);
you can simply do this:
String numStr = "888-555-1234";
numStr = "(" + numStr.substring(0,3) + ") " + numStr.substring(4);
System.out.print(numStr); // (888) 555-1234
However, this is hard coded. You would need to make sure the String had a full 10 digits before doing so.
Upvotes: 3