From: "Robert DeVries" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Thu, 8 Feb 2007 13:09:06 -0800
When using a SIP phone with Asterisk, hitting the # key (pound or hash
depending on where in the world you happen to be) tells Asterisk that there
are no more digits coming, and to put the call through immediately based on
the digits already entered. This is the same functionality as the PSTN (at
least in North America).
Not quite. This behaviour is more than likely a configurable feature in a
hard SIP phone. (At least in my GrandStream it is.) When you dial into
PSTN, it doesn't matter what else you punch after matching the dial plans
your telco configured at their end (NANP in North America, usually 7- and
10-digit; cell phones do 9-digit because there is no concept of "dial", only
"send"). # is used as a customary terminator only in some IVR systems.
(Banking, calling card, ...)
However, DISA just sees the # as another digit, and therefore pressing #
produces an error. I suppose it would be possible to write something in
the dial plan that looks for a # then strips the # and puts the call
through, but I'm curious if there is any other way to do this. For one
thing, this would require having a special context for DISA, rather than
just having DISA place calls through an existing context.
Not necessarily. You only have to program your existing context to handle
trailing # when it comes along. For example, this simplistic example
ignores trailing #'s:
exten => _Z., 1, GotoIf($[${EXTEN:-1} = #]?${EXTEN:1},1:2)
exten => _Z., 2, whatever...
You can use regular expressions to do more sophisticated handling. Note
this example will not emulate a common IVR convention of stop reading when #
is pressed; that one is implemented in Read(). You'll have to decide
whether Read() is more appropriate for your application. (Read() will force
users to press #, I think.)
Hope this helps.
Yuan Liu
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