Gordon Henderson schrieb: > It's relatively easy to get rid of the prefix in the UK. None of my PBXs > require you to dial 9 for an outside line, although if you do dial it, > it's silently dropped. > > We have 10 and 11 digit numbers here, but they're relatively easy to cope > with. Shorter codes like 118xxx are easy to cope with, as are the lesser > ones, 150, 151, 1471, etc. (just hard-code them in the dial-plan) You can > even get away from the local prefixes by insisting that all numbers start > with a zero - which is basically what you have to do with a mobile phone > in the UK anyway (dial the full 10 or 11 digits, starting with a zero),
If you require the users to always dial the area code then yes, that works. > Where I live, we have 5-digit local numbers (they start with a 7), and all > others start with something other than 7 and are 6 digits long. Not so in Germany at least. Depending on where you live the subscriber numbers (the part after the area code) might be anything from 3 (actually 2 for some PRIs but xx0 is the shortest number you can dial) to 8 digits. And they vary in length, even within the same local area. Philipp Kempgen -- AMOOCON 2009, May 4-5, Rostock / Germany -> http://www.amoocon.de Asterisk: http://the-asterisk-book.com - http://das-asterisk-buch.de AMOOMA GmbH - Bachstr. 126 - 56566 Neuwied -> http://www.amooma.de Geschäftsführer: Stefan Wintermeyer, Handelsregister: Neuwied B14998 -- _______________________________________________ -- Bandwidth and Colocation Provided by http://www.api-digital.com -- asterisk-users mailing list To UNSUBSCRIBE or update options visit: http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-users
