Provided by: pnc_0.9.4-3build1_amd64 bug

NAME

       pnc - a command-line tool for phone number manipulation

SYNOPSIS

       pnc COMMAND [OPTIONS] INPUT

COMMANDS

       valid  Tests  whether  the  phone number given as INPUT is a valid number or short number.
              Returns 0 (SUCCESS) if the number is valid, 1 (ERROR) otherwise. Valid options: -c,
              -v (verbose, default off).

       info   Displays information about the phone number given as INPUT. Valid option: -c.

       format Formats  a  telephone  number  given  as  INPUT  to the specified standard (E164 by
              default), result on stdout. Valid options: -c, -f.

       find   Finds phone number in some text given as INPUT, result  on  stdout  (one  line  per
              number found).  Valid options: -c, -f, -l.

       dialout
              Formats  a  phone  number  given as INPUT in e164 format for out-of-country dialing
              purposes. Valid options: -c, -l.

OPTIONS

       -c COUNTRY-CODE
              If set, the phone number(s) given in INPUT will be considered as being dialed  from
              the  country  specified  by the 2 uppercase letters COUNTRY-CODE (e.g.  "FR", "US",
              ...). If this option is not set, pnc will look for  numbers  in  the  international
              format.

       -f FORMAT
              Sets   the   phone   number  output  format.  FORMAT  must  be  one  of  e164,  int
              (international), nat (national), or teluri (RFC3966 tel URI). The default value  is
              e164.

       -l LENIENCY
              Sets the phone number search leniency in INPUT. LENIENCY must be one of:

              possible
                     Phone numbers accepted are possible, but not necessarily valid.

              valid  (default  value)  Phone  numbers  accepted  are  possible and valid. Numbers
                     written in national format must have their national-prefix present if it  is
                     usually written for a number of this type.

              strict Phone  numbers accepted are valid and are grouped in a possible way for this
                     locale. For example, a US number written as "65 02 53  00  00"  and  "650253
                     0000"  are not accepted at this leniency level, whereas "650 253 0000", "650
                     2530000" or "6502530000" are. Numbers with more than one '/' symbol  in  the
                     national significant number are also dropped at this level.

              exact  Phone  numbers  accepted  are  valid and are grouped in the same way that we
                     would have formatted it, or as a single block.  For  example,  a  US  number
                     written  as  "650  2530000"  is not accepted at this leniency level, whereas
                     "650 253 0000" or "6502530000" are. Numbers with more than  one  '/'  symbol
                     are also dropped at this level.

                     (see
                     https://javadoc.io/doc/com.googlecode.libphonenumber/libphonenumber/8.4.1
                     for more details)

RETURN STATUS

       pnc  returns  0  on  successful  operations, 1 if an error occurred (option error, parsing
       error).

AUTHOR

       pnc is a fork of pn <https://github.com/Orange-OpenSource/pn>  written  by  Camille  Oudot
       <camille.oudot@orange.com>

       pnc is maintained by the Sxmo project: <https://sxmo.org>. You can find the source code at
       <https://sxmo.org/source>

COPYRIGHT

       Original code (pn)  used  the  Apache-2.0  license.   Copyright  (C)  2021  Camille  Oudot
       <camille.oudot@orange.com>

       pnc is licensed under the GPL-3.0-only license.  Copyright (C) 2022 Sxmo Contributors

       This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of
       the GNU General Public License version 3 as published by the Free Software Foundation

       This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY  WARRANTY;
       without  even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
       See the GNU General Public License for more details.

       You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program.
       If not, see <https://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.

                                                                                           PNC(1)