package main
import (
"regexp"
"fmt"
)
func main() {
var re = regexp.MustCompile(`(?im)(?:^|(?<=[\D;a-zA-Z(),.:;?!"'`>]))(?!000|666|9)(?<![Oo][Rr][Dd][Ee][Rr].)(?<![Oo][Rr][Dd][Ee][Rr]..)(?<![Oo][Rr][Dd][Ee][Rr]...)(?<![Oo][Rr][Dd][Ee][Rr].[Nn][Uu][Mm][Bb][Ee][Rr].)(?<![Oo][Rr][Dd][Ee][Rr].[Nn][Uu][Mm][Bb][Ee][Rr]..)(?<![Oo][Rr][Dd][Ee][Rr].[Nn][Uu][Mm][Bb][Ee][Rr]...)(?<![Xx])\d{3}[ -.=\n\r]{0,10}(?!00)\d{2}[ -.=\n\r]{0,10}(?!0000)\d{4}(?:$|(?=[\Da-zA-Z(),.:;?!"'`<= ]))`)
var str = `Order numbers should not get detected if 'X or x' precedes the number. so this is working fine.
x123456789
X123456789
x123-456-789
X123-456-789
123-456-789
Need to modify the regex pattern to get the match for the list of ordernumbers written like below...along with the word (order number) should be case insensitive.
ordernumber123-456-789
order number123-456789
order number 123456789
123-456789
123456789
ordernumber-123456787
ordernumber - 123456789
ordernumber #123456789
ordernumber *anysplcharacter*123456789
`
for i, match := range re.FindAllString(str, -1) {
fmt.Println(match, "found at index", i)
}
}
Please keep in mind that these code samples are automatically generated and are not guaranteed to work. If you find any syntax errors, feel free to submit a bug report. For a full regex reference for Golang, please visit: https://golang.org/pkg/regexp/