I know this is really old, but I came to see if there was a better solution than I came up with back in the 80's. In C it'd be something like (untested code):
/* assumes 2 letter code is in upper case, returns 1 if valid or 0 if not */
int validate_state( const char *state )
{
if (state[0] == ' ' || state[1] == ' ' || state[2] != '\0') return 0;
return strstr("WVALAKSCARIDE CTNVTX NHINMNCOKY MSD MIA MOR WIL GAZ FL ME MD MA MT NE NJ NY ND OH PA UT WA WY", state) ? 1 : 0;
}
That could be written like this in C#:
/* assumes 2 letter code is in upper case */
bool ValidateState(string state)
{
const string ValidStatesMerged = "WVALAKSCARIDE CTNVTX NHINMNCOKY MSD MIA MOR WIL GAZ FL ME MD MA MT NE NJ NY ND OH PA UT WA WY";
if (state == null)
throw new ArgumentNullException(nameof(state));
if (state.Length != 2 || state[0] == ' ' || state[1] == ' ')
return false;
return ValidStatesMerged.IndexOf(state) >= 0;
}
As long as the state
string is in all caps, this uses no regex but only simple string functions. The trick is to make sure there are no invalid combos in there, but that's easy enough if you start with the list and re-arrange them so the end of one is the beginning of the next, like "WV"
then "VA"
, then remove the dupe letter so you end up with "WVA"
... continue until they're all in and hopefully the shortest string you can make.
It's not hard to adapt that to other languages; I need it in a bash script and will use a Perl command to do that with the above "search string".