On Apr 13, 2010, at 4:26 PM, Bill Hernandez wrote:
>
> On Apr 13, 2010, at 5:18 PM, Keary Suska wrote:
>
>> Sorry, I missed that. Anyway, it may be because the format is being
>> interpreted using 10.4 behavior, in which case the format may not be valid
>> and may be ignored. Have you tried single-quoting all non-hash marks (pound
>> signs) to eliminate their special significance?
>>
>> You may need to watch out for integer overflow issues as well, if you are
>> targeting 32bit systems.
>>
>> Keary Suska
>
> Keary,
>
> //
> +---------+---------+---------+---------+---------+---------+---------+---------+
> - (void)awakeFromNib
> {
> // I have already run a routine to strip all non digits by this time
> NSString *strippedNumber = @"1234567890";
>
> NSString *phoneNumber;
> phoneNumber = [BHUtility bhFormatNumberString:strippedNumber
> withFormat:@"'('###')' ###'-'####"];
> NSLog(@"[4626] phoneNumber = %@", phoneNumber);
> }
> //
> +---------+---------+---------+---------+---------+---------+---------+---------+
>
> I tried changing the format to @"'('###')' ###'-'####" but the results were
> the same.
I think the issue remains that the format you are passing is not considered a
valid format, and is getting ignored. You can confirm this by providing a valid
number format for comparison. I tend to use a custom formatter for this
purpose, keeping the phone number as a string. It is more robust and allows for
non-U.S. number that may begin with 0.
HTH,
Keary Suska
Esoteritech, Inc.
"Demystifying technology for your home or business"
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