In general, you need to specify the country, since several countries refer to telephone area codes as "STD codes." See the Related Questions below.
In the UK, 01388 is a County Durham area code, including Bishop Auckland and Stanhope.
The code is incomplete... 01380 is Devizes 01381 is Fortrose 01382 is Dundee 01383 is Dunfermline 01384 is Dudley 01386 is Evesham 01387 is Dumfries 013873 is Langholm 01388(2) is Stanhope 01388(3) is Bishop Auckland 01388(4) is Bishop Auckland 01388(5) is Stanhope 01388(6) is Bishop Auckland 01388(7) is Bishop Auckland 01388(8) is Bishop Auckland 01388(9) is Bishop Auckland 01389 is Dumbarton Source: British Telecom
In the UK, 0140 is an incomplete STD code (telephone area code); you need one more digit. In India, 0140 is an invalid STD code.
STD code for France is 0033
I'm guessing that you mean STD = Subscriber Trunk Dialling (telephone area code) rather than STD = Sexually Transmitted Disease. STD code is another term used in some country for telephone area codes. The purpose of a telephone area code is to group telephone numbers by geographic area. In many cases, at least some calls to numbers with the same STD code as the caller can be dialed without the STD code, allowing shorter dialing sequences for many local calls.
01409 area code Holsworthy
The std code starts with 022
01224246
01234245
THE STD CODE OF KULTI IS 0341.
In India, each city and state is assigned a Subscribing Trunk Dalling (STD) code. Once the city and state is provided, a STD code can be matched for that location.
#include<iostream> #include<conio.h> #include<string> int main() { std::cout << "Enter your 10 digit code: "; size_t code=0; size_t len=0; while (len<10) { char c = (char) _getch(); if (c=='0' && !code) // leading zero not permitted! continue; if (c>='0' && c<='9') { ++len; std::cout << c; c -= '0'; code *= 10; code += c; } } std::cout << "\n\nYou entered: " << code << '\n' << std::endl; }
There are a considerable number - each town has it own STD code