Tiny JavaScript library, for making Phone call links, for modern mobile web browsers, this library is not needed, phone numbers are automatically detected, but on older ones, it's not, and if you manage to add a <a href='tel:XXX'>
it may be clickable by non-mobile users and the link will lead to a wrong web page.
The name is from telefonillo
means Call him
(in Algerian dialect), and I found that it means Door Phone
in Spanish.
TLDR: JS library for creating "click to call" links for mobile users.
- Replaces a selector containing the phone number with a clickable
<a href=tel://###>
if the visitor is on mobile device. - Accepts a decryption functions, you can write a crypted phone numbers in your markup to avoid crawlers, then pass your decryption function to Telefonilo contructor so it decrypt the phone number.
Have an issue? A better trick? Open an issue, we'd like to hear from you!
-
Inlude the
telefonilo.js
script in your HTML.<script src="dist/telefonilo.min.js"></script>
- Or, using a CDN
<script src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/telefonilo.js@1.0.1/dist/telefonilo.min.js" integrity="sha256-dHltx45U5E48U7ebYh/IR8UoQIKU5nzzYJluNLk+jLA=" crossorigin="anonymous"></script>
- Or if you prefere NPM:
npm i telefonilo.js
-
Instantiate Telefonilo by calling
Telefonilo();
. you can pass a selector of the tags containing phone numbers (ex:Telefonilo('#my-phone-number')
orTelefonilo('.phone-numbers')
) By default Telefonilo lookup for.phone-num
classes.
<div class="container">
<p>
If you're on a mobile phone you should click on<span class="phone">0123456789</span>
</p>
</div>
<script src="../dist/telefonilo.js"></script>
<script>Telefonilo('.phone'); </script>
To avoid spam and crawlers, you may want to encrypt phone numbers on your web pages. For example, you're using encryptionFct
to encrypt phone numbers when rendering your page:
function encryptionFct(str){
return str.split('').map(n => (n.charCodeAt(0)+5)).join('-')
}
// encryptionFct('0123456789') Will return "53-54-55-56-57-58-59-60-61-62"
<p>
If you're on a mobile phone you should click on
<span class="phone">53-54-55-56-57-58-59-60-61-62</span>
</p>
Then you can load Telefonilo
and pass you decryption function, for example
<p>
If you're on a mobile phone you should click on
<span class="phone">53-54-55-56-57-58-59-60-61-62</span>
</p>
<script src="../dist/telefonilo.js"></script>
<script>
var decrypTionFct = function(str) {
return str.split('-').map(n => String.fromCharCode(n-5)).join('');
}
// Initialize Telefonilo inside a captcha-check callback, or after a certain time/event to avoid crawlers
Telefonilo('.phone', true, decrypTionFct);
</script>
- Open examples/example.html in any web browser.
- If you're not on mobile, you should see the phone number as a normal test.
- Press
Ctrl+Shift+M
, you should switch to the mobile view, you should see that the phone number became a clickable.
- Desktop users will see the output as you markup should render
If you're on a mobile phone you should click on 0123456789
- Mobile users will see a
<a href="tel://xxxx">
link to your phone number
If you're on a mobile phone you should click on 0123456789
<p>If you're on a mobile phone you should click on <span class="phone"><a href="tel://0123456789">0123456789</a></span></p>
# Running unit tests with Jest
$ npm test # Or: npm run watch-tests
# Getting the test coverage, it creates a [./coverage] directory
$ npm run coverage
The file src/telefonilo.js is not production-ready, it exports the private functions in order to test them. To use Telefonilo, you can find two files (minified and unminified verion) in dist/.
# Build with Gulp, it generates two files
$ npm run build
The generated dist/telefonilo.js
is a copy of src/telefonilo.js
without that peice of code that exports the private functions. To verify run:
$ diff src/telefonilo.js dist/telefonilo.js
- Write tests.
Doing...
- Setup a test API: Export private functions in developement mode, and strip that piece of code when building the minified function for production usage
- Accept phone number decryption functions as parameter for decrypting phone numbers (Might be a anti-crawlers solution).
This project is licensed under the GNU GPL v3.0 License - see the LICENSE file for details