E.123


E.123 is an international standard by the standardization sector of the International Telecommunications Union, entitled Notation for national and international telephone numbers, e-mail addresses and Web addresses. It provides guidelines for the presentation of telephone numbers, email addresses, and web addresses in print, on letterheads, and similar purposes.
As described by the ITU, in E.123: "+" is the "International Prefix Symbol" used in "Telephone number, E.123 international notation

Example formats

Telephone number

In the international telephone number notation, the leading plus serves as an international prefix symbol, and is immediately followed by the country code. The user or the telephone system should replace the + symbol with international dialing prefix used in the caller's location.
Parentheses are used in national notation to indicate digits that are sometimes not dialed, such as area code in variable-length dialing numbering plans. Parentheses are not allowed in the international notation, according to the standard, as international callers use fixed number dialing.
For digit grouping, E.123 specifically recommends that:
No recommendation is made for grouping rules for digits in the local number, instead some examples of commonly used groupings are shown.
In national notation, the trunk prefix can be included with the area code if required by national writing conventions; trunk prefix is included in most European countries whenever they use fixed or variable dialing, but is omitted in USA and Canada where phone numbers only indicate optional area code.
A tilde indicates an additional dial tone that the user should wait for.
A slash with spaces on either side may be used to indicate alternative ending for numbers.
The non-dialable PBX extension number should be separated by words "extension" or "ext." in the national language after the phone number.
When the PBX is capable of direct inward dialing, the extension number should be written directly after the phone number, without using any distinct symbols. If there is a need to indicate in-dialing capability of the telephone number, a number of dots corresponding to the length of the extension number can be added at the end.

Microsoft telephone number format

canonical address format for telephone numbers derives from E.123 international notation by allowing explicit indication of area code with parentheses.
The canonical format is used by the Telephony API, a Windows programming interface for dial-up fax, modem, and telephone equipment. Depending on the user's current location, the Windows' Dial-Up Networking component applies a set of dialing rules to transform the canonical phone number into a locally dialable calling sequence for the modem device. The dialing rules may include variable-length dialing for area code, trunk access and international access prefixes, central office/service access numbers, and calling cards tone numbers.
With this approach, phone numbers stored in the phone book remain unchanged when the user moves to a different geographical location or selects a different phone service provider.
The calling sequence can contain dialable numbers such as digits 09 and DTMF tones ABCD*#, formatting characters ␣ . -, and control characters ! P T, W @ $ ? ;, which correspond to the Dial command of the Hayes AT command set.

Emergency contact information

A standardized language-independent way to identify a next-of-kin in a mobile handset’s directory, in case of an emergency, has in May 2008 been adopted as a new clause in Recommendation E.123.
It proposes to store emergency contact numbers prefixed with Arabic numerals in the form “0nxxxx”; “n” is a digit from 1 through 9 and “xxxx” is any meaningful descriptive character string in any language or script.
In the handset's directory this would be displayed as "01Anna" or "01Spouse" enabling easy identification by the emergency services. The handset’s directory entry would contain the actual number of the person to call in case of emergency.
This scheme is a language-independent version of the "ICE" scheme that became popular in certain parts of the world from 2005 onwards.