Chapter 10. Deeper into the Dialplan
For a list of all the ways technology has failed to improve the quality of life, please press three.
Alice Kahn
Alrighty. You’ve got the basics of dialplans down, but you know there’s more to come. If you don’t have Chapter 6 sorted out yet, please go back and give it another read. We’re about to get into more advanced topics.
Expressions and Variable Manipulation
As we begin our dive into the deeper aspects of dialplans, it is time to introduce you to a few tools that will greatly add to the power you can exercise in your dialplan. These constructs add incredible intelligence to your dialplan by enabling it to make decisions based on different criteria you define. Put on your thinking cap, and let’s get started.
Note
Throughout this chapter we use best practices that have been developed over the years in
dialplan creation. The primary one you’ll notice is that all the first
priorities start with the NoOp()
application (which simply means No Operation; nothing functional will
happen). The other one is that all following lines will start with
same => n
, which is a shortcut
that says, “Use the same extension as was just previously defined.”
Additionally, the indentation is two spaces.
Basic Expressions
Expressions are combinations of variables, operators, and values that
you string together to produce a result. An expression can test values,
alter strings, or perform mathematical calculations. Let’s say we have a
variable called COUNT
. In plain English, ...
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