On Sun, Jun 18, 2023 at 9:28 AM Steve Matzura wrote:
> Sorry, Joshua, I don't understand. One's a filename, one's an extension
> number. How are they the same? In other words, why would
> 'enter-ext-of-person' be considered a filename? I would think
> 'enter-ext-of-person' would be an extension
Sorry, Joshua, I don't understand. One's a filename, one's an extension
number. How are they the same? In other words, why would
'enter-ext-of-person' be considered a filename? I would think
'enter-ext-of-person' would be an extension number.
On 6/17/2023 7:27 PM, Joshua C. Colp wrote:
On
On Sat, Jun 17, 2023 at 7:48 PM Steve Matzura wrote:
> OK, this is how I thought it's supposed to work. It just confounded me why
> the book would say the Playback() and Background() syntax were the same,
> then in the very next paragraph give an example that belied that claim.
>
The syntax is
OK, this is how I thought it's supposed to work. It just confounded me
why the book would say the Playback() and Background() syntax were the
same, then in the very next paragraph give an example that belied that
claim.
On 6/17/2023 1:46 PM, Doug Lytle wrote:
On 6/17/23 08:47, Steve Matzura
On 6/17/23 08:47, Steve Matzura wrote:
Both Background() and WaitExten() allow the caller to enter DTMF
digits. Asterisk then attempts to find an extension in the current
context that matches the digits that the caller entered. If Asterisk
finds a match, it will send the call to that
Doug,
This is where the weeds start growing.
On 6/17/2023 4:55 AM, Doug Lytle wrote:
For both capabilities, you can use Background() instead of Playback()
for audio prompts. Background() allows for interrupting the prompts
and continue on with your dialplan.
Understood. From the book:
On 6/16/23 20:29, Steve Matzura wrote:
As always, thanks in advance for a kick in the right direction.
For both capabilities, you can use Background() instead of Playback()
for audio prompts. Background() allows for interrupting the prompts and
continue on with your dialplan.
Doug--
You all know the story--give the customer/client what they ask for, and
if they like it, they'll be back for more. Such is just so with my
one-trick-pony answering-machine project. Now the other two musicians in
my virtual band want the following capabilities:
1. The ability to dial the main