Cisco Systems WRP400 Telephone Accessories User Manual


 
Configuring Voice Services
Configuring Dial Plans
ATA Administration Guide 63
4
Digit Sequence Examples
The following examples show digit sequences that you can enter in a dial plan.
In a complete dial plan entry, sequences are separated by a pipe character (|), and
the entire set of sequences is enclosed within parentheses.
EXAMPLE: ( [1-8]xx | 9, xxxxxxx | 9, <:1>[2-9]xxxxxxxxx | 8,
<:1212>xxxxxxx | 9, 1 [2-9] xxxxxxxxx | 9, 1 900 xxxxxxx ! |
9, 011xxxxxx. | 0 | [49]11 )
Extensions on your system
EXAMPLE: (
[1-8]xx | 9, xxxxxxx | 9, <:1>[2-9]xxxxxxxxx | 8,
<:1212>xxxxxxx | 9, 1 [2-9] xxxxxxxxx | 9, 1 900 xxxxxxx !
| 9, 011xxxxxx. | 0 | [49]11 )
[1-8]xx Allows a user dial any three-digit number that starts with the digits 1
through 8. If your system uses four-digit extensions, you would instead enter
the following string:
[1-8]xxx
,
(comma)
Enter a comma between digits to play an “outside
line” dial tone after a user-entered sequence.
EXAMPLE: 9, 1xxxxxxxxxx
An “outside line” dial tone is sounded after the
user presses 9, and the tone continues until the
user presses 1.
!
(exclamation point)
Enter an exclamation point to prohibit a dial
sequence pattern.
EXAMPLE: 1900xxxxxxx!
The system rejects any 11-digit sequence that
begins with 1900.
*xx
Enter an asterisk to allow the user to enter a 2-
digit star code.
S0 or L0
Enter S0 to reduce the short inter-digit timer to 0
seconds, or enter L0 to reduce the long inter-digit
timer to 0 seconds.
Digit Sequence Function