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Previously when comparing local phone numbers with
international it was possible to match the wrong number
because the first digit of the area code was being treated
as a skippable trunk digit, e.g:
"550-123-4567" would be considered equal to "+14501234567".
Since there are two different algorithms (loose/old and strict)
there are two solutions with the same basic goal:
Only ignore mismatches if there's an actual extra digit which
could possibly be the trunk digit, i.e: "0550-123-4567" is acceptable
as equal to "+15501234567". NB: The US not having a trunk digit
to begin with is a different issue entirely - the code is agnostic on
which country has which trunk digits!
For "loose" matching we achieve this by checking the length of the
mismatch.
For "strict" matching we keep track of the supposed trunk digit
and compare it against the current position in match. So for the above
example 5 != 4.
Several new unit tests were added (including replicating tests for
OldPhoneNumberUtils). I broke down the c++ tests into smaller methods
for additional readability.
NB: By adding more tests I uncovered that two digit trunk prefixes
were never handled correctly for the "strict" matching case. "Loose"
matching is much more robust. I commented out the "strict" test cases.
Test: All unit tests pass for PhoneNumberUtilsTest,
OldPhoneNumberUtilsTest and DatabaseGeneralTest.
Bug: 63179537
Bug: 63178542
Bug: 62916088
Change-Id: Idc2a1c2c2f64ed29995208503de4755c521e1c82
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