Maybe I’m missing something, but I think this makes sense.
You selected the UK, but are entering a number with US dailing code. So it’s an invalid number in the UK, but it’s a possible phone number since you could select the US instead?
Also usually when you select the country separately, wouldn’t you omit the country specific dailing code?
Yeah, I’m in the uk and it was the default cc. I entered a us fictitious number, which gave that error. No variations of uk numbers, with or without the international prefix would work either. This was just the funniest of the validation errors.
And if it can validate international numbers, why ask for the country code separately?
The US number is not valid due to the following rules: “Using 0 or 1 as the first digit of an area code or central office code is invalid, as is a 9 as the middle digit of an area code; these are trunk prefixes or reserved for North American Numbering Plan expansion.“ *
I’m sure you tried other numbers, but the number in the image fails due to that specific reason.
Nice to know. It was the sites “e.g.” number under the input field so I just copied and pasted.
Maybe I’m misunderstanding, but the 1 st the beginning here is the country code is it not? I don’t get why the number isn’t accepted (can someone in the UK from North America not keep using their number?)
If you want a fake number and in the UK look up the OFCOM tv number ranges. They are like the US 555 numbers valid but non connected in post cases.
If that’s a “possibly” valid UK number, they’re obviously harder than I thought.
Have you tried calling the new number for the emergency services recently? Fortunately there’s a little jingle to help you remember it.
Invalid but possible