1

I am to display New Zealand and Australian bank accounts in reports, formatted according to a custom format supplied by the user. For example, NZ bank accounts can be 00-0000-0000000-000 with the last digit (bank account suffix) being optional. There are two parts of the format:

  • Placement of dashes
  • 2 digit prefix

Sample formatted bank accounts can be 01-1234-1234567-55 and 01-1234-1234567-002. The bank accounts are stored in the database without any formatting. When I tried String.Format("{0:00-0000-0000000-00#}",121234123456712) it does not return the expected 12-1234-1234567-12 but 01-2123-4123456-712.

Understandably I could always test the length of the bank account and do a switch statement, but the format is user defined.

The following ensures the dashes are placed correctly and the suffix is correct:

// ensure there is a format to use and a bank account is present
if (bankaccountformat != "" && bankaccountformat.Contains('-') && bankaccount != "")
{
  int i = 0;
  foreach (char dash in bankaccountformat)
  {
    // add dash in bank account, if bank account is long enough
    if (dash == '-' && bankaccount.Length > i)
    {
      bankaccount = bankaccount.Insert(i, "-");
    }
    i++;
  }
}

The issue is not if the account is valid or not, it is the formatting. Please let me know of a better way to format the account.

1 Answer 1

0

You do not mention which programming language you use. Anyhow, it seems you use an array. That can be tricky.

In BASH I would use string manipulation, like in this script (fmat):

#!/bin/bash

#only numbers allowed
[[ ! "$1" =~ ^[0-9]+$ ]] && echo "Error: enter numbers only" && exit

s=$1
l=${#s}
r=l-13

#minimal number of digits is 13, maximum 16
[[ r -lt 0 || r -gt 3 ]] && echo "Error: enter 13-16 digits" && exit

#first 13 digits
a=${s:0:2}"-"${s:2:4}"-"${s:6:7}

#when 14-16 digits
a=$a"-"${s:13:r}

echo $a

fmat 011234123456755 gives 01-1234-1234567-55

fmat 0112341234567002 gives 01-1234-1234567-002

fmat 0112341234567 gives 01-1234-1234567

If you use something else than BASH, then at least this gives some hints.

2
  • I forgot to mention that I am m using C# Jun 5, 2013 at 2:19
  • Oh, string manipulation in C# is easy too. I don't use C# so I can't provide a script but I hope you get the idea.
    – linuph
    Jun 5, 2013 at 2:48

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.