- From: Ashley Sheridan <ash@ashleysheridan.co.uk>
- Date: Wed, 07 Apr 2010 00:31:39 +0100
On Wed, 2010-04-07 at 01:28 +0200, Eduard Pascual wrote: > On Wed, Apr 7, 2010 at 1:10 AM, Ian Hickson <ian at hixie.ch> wrote: > > If there was a true standard, then the spec would refer to that, but as > > you say, it's very varied in practice. > > There is quite a standard, even if an implicit one: (almost) no punctuation. > Have you ever dialed a "(" or a "-" when phoning someone? In essence, > phone numbers are sequences of digits, and punctuation is only used as > a convenience to enhance readability. > There are two exceptions to this: "+" and letters are used as > replacement for numbers (the plus sign for the international call > code, the letters for specific digits to enable creating "branded" > numbers easier to memorize). > > Maybe I'm being too hasty with this idea but, since machines don't > really need the same readability aids as humans do, I'd suggest that > the UA simply removes everything other than "+" and alphanumeric > characters (and obviously adds nothing) when sending the field. I > don't care too much about what they do upon rendering the introduced > value (and I think it's probably fine if the browser adds some > formatting based on its own or the system's regional settings). The > server is only left with replacing letters and "+"; plus any > application-specific usage of the value itself (which, by then, will > be a string of digits; assumedly representing the sequence of digits > to dial). > > Other than that, the only safe alternative would be to leave the > values untouched, so the page can say what it wants, the user honor > it, and the server get it as expected; or gracefully degrade to an > error message that actually points to the user error (rather than an > error introduced by an UA trying to be out-smart the user). > > For sites that are ready to sanitize values from a specific locale; > but which are accessed through an UA with different settings (ie: on a > public place while abroad), the UA adding locale-specific stuff to a > phone value is very likely to render whole forms unusables. > > Regards, > Eduard Pascual Phone numbers can also validly include pause characters too. I remember back in the day saving such a number to quickly dial into my voicemail, rather than having to dial in, wait for the automated voice, press a digit, wait for some more robot speaking, press another number, etc. Also, not entirely sure, but would asterisks (*) and hashes (#) be included too? I was just going on what digits exist on a standard phone keypad. Thanks, Ash http://www.ashleysheridan.co.uk -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.whatwg.org/pipermail/whatwg-whatwg.org/attachments/20100407/2548803b/attachment.htm>
Received on Tuesday, 6 April 2010 16:31:39 UTC