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Home/ Questions/Q 835759
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 15, 20262026-05-15T04:52:27+00:00 2026-05-15T04:52:27+00:00

I current have the following regular expression to accept any numeric value that is

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I current have the following regular expression to accept any numeric value that is seven digits

^\d{7}

How do I improve it so it will accept numeric values that are seven or ten digits?

Pass: 0123456, 1234567, 0123456789, 123467890
Fail: 123456, 12345678, 123456789

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-15T04:52:28+00:00Added an answer on May 15, 2026 at 4:52 am

    A simple solution is this:

    ^\d{7}(\d{3})?$
    

    There are at least two things to note with this solution:

    • In a unicode context \d may match far more than you intended (for example foreign characters that are digits in other non-Latin languages).
    • This regular expression contains a capturing group. You probably don’t want that. You can fix this by changing it to a non-capturing group (?: ... ).

    So for these reasons you may want to use this slightly longer expression instead:

    ^[0-9]{7}(?:[0-9]{3})?$
    

    Here’s a little testbed in C# so that you can see it works:

    for (int i = 0; i < 12; ++i)
    {
        string input = new string('0', i);
        bool isMatch = Regex.IsMatch(input, "^[0-9]{7}(?:[0-9]{3})?$");
        Console.WriteLine(i.ToString().PadLeft(2) + ": " + isMatch);
    }
    

    Result:

     0: False
     1: False
     2: False
     3: False
     4: False
     5: False
     6: False
     7: True
     8: False
     9: False
    10: True
    11: False
    
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