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Possible Duplicate:
A comprehensive regex for phone number validation

I have an unformatted phone number (guaranteed to be 10 digits) and an unformatted extension (could be null, blank or any number of numbers). I need to put them together into a "friendly" string. I thought I'd concatenate them, then format the concatenation using a Regex.Replace. Here's the unit test I'm using to try various regexes before I plug one in:

    [Test, Ignore("Sandbox, does not test production code")]
    public void TestPhoneRegex()
    {
        string number = "1234567890";
        string extension = "";

        var formattedContactNumber =
            Regex.Replace("{0} x{1}".FormatWith(number, extension),
                          @"^(\d{3})[ -]?(\d{3})[ -]?(\d{4})( x\d+)?",
                          @"$1-$2-$3$4");

        Debug.WriteLine("{0} x{1}".FormatWith(number, extension));
        Debug.WriteLine(formattedContactNumber);

        Assert.AreEqual("123-456-7890", formattedContactNumber);
    }

The expected formatted string is the formatted phone number, without the "x" and extension. However, the last capture group is matching the "x" with or without a number behind it, so instead of "123-456-7890" I get "123-456-7890 x". This is the last bit of development that needs to be tied down before a release. Help?

8
  • Remove the x from the group? (x \d+)? becomes [\sx]*?(\d+)? Feb 11, 2011 at 21:55
  • When you wrote exception, you meant extension, right?
    – Mark Byers
    Feb 11, 2011 at 21:56
  • 1
    Why would you format them after concatenation? Feb 11, 2011 at 21:57
  • 1
    I hate these phone number formatting things, because they always assume that everyone's number has the same number of digits (Nope!) in the same pattern (Nope!) Feb 11, 2011 at 22:14
  • 1
    @Donal, very true eh? Maybe he's making an app that only works in North America? The numbers here are all guaranteed to be 10 digits (excluding the country code and including the area code). Feb 11, 2011 at 22:46

3 Answers 3

13

I love regular expressions, don't get me wrong, but this does not seem like a useful area to apply them. All you are doing is adding dashes to a string of 10 numbers then adding an optional "x" followed by an extension. Simpler is better.

public static String beautifyPhoneNumber(String number, String extension)
{
    String beautifulNumber = number.Substring(0, 3) + "-" +
                             number.Substring(3, 3) + "-" +
                             number.Substring(6, 4);
    if (!String.IsNullOrEmpty(extension))
    {
        beautifulNumber += " x" + extension;
    }
    return beautifulNumber;
}
4

x isn't matched by your regex, so it isn't replaced put of the string. Try this regex instead:

@"^(\d{3})[ -]?(\d{3})[ -]?(\d{4}) x(\d*)

In the new regex x isn't optional - it will always be there according to your code (If you do want it to be optional you can use ?x?(\d*)). Also, we're using \d*, so make sure the last group will always match, even when it's empty.

1
  • 1
    This was the problem; because the end of the string was not matched, it was left untouched during replacement. I solved it a slightly different way, adding an uncaptured .*$ to indicate that I wanted to match (and replace) the whole string whether I captured the optional parts or not.
    – KeithS
    Feb 14, 2011 at 17:52
3

This is maybe not a direct answer to your question, but possibly helpful... We use this pattern:

public const string NorthAmericanPhonePattern = @"^(\+?(?<NatCode>1)\s*[-\/\.]?)?(\((?<AreaCode>\d{3})\)|(?<AreaCode>\d{3}))\s*[-\/\.]?\s*(?<Number1>\d{3})\s*[-\/\.]?\s*(?<Number2>\d{4})\s*(([xX]|[eE][xX][tT])\.?\s*(?<Ext>\d+))*$";

And then reformat with:

private static string PhoneNumberMatchEvaluator(Match match)
{
    // Format to north american style phone numbers "0 (000) 000-0000"
    //                                          OR  "(000) 000-0000"
    Debug.Assert(match.Success);
    if (match.Groups["NatCode"].Success)
    {
        return match.Result("${NatCode} (${AreaCode}) ${Number1}-${Number2}");
    }
    else
    {
        return match.Result("(${AreaCode}) ${Number1}-${Number2}");
    }
}

private static string FormatPhoneNumber(string phoneNumber)
{
    var regex = new Regex(NorthAmericanPhonePattern, RegexOptions.IgnoreCase);
    return regex.Replace(phoneNumber, new MatchEvaluator(PhoneNumberMatchEvaluator));
}

Note: In our case we have included the national code if they did, you could easily take that out. We have also not included the extension in there - as we shift it out and put into a different field if we find it.

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