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// Check for extra numbers at the end.// TODO: This is the place to start when trying to support extraction of multiple phone number// from split notations (+41 79 123 45 67 / 68).candidate = trimAfterFirstMatch(PhoneNumberUtil.SECOND_NUMBER_START_PATTERN, candidate);
// Regular expression of characters typically used to start a second phone number for the purposes// of parsing. This allows us to strip off parts of the number that are actually the start of// another number, such as for: (530) 583-6985 x302/x2303 -> the second extension here makes this// actually two phone numbers, (530) 583-6985 x302 and (530) 583-6985 x2303. We remove the second// extension so that the first number is parsed correctly.//// Matches a slash (\ or /) followed by a space followed by an `x`.//constSECOND_NUMBER_START_PATTERN=/[\\/] *x/
Steps to reproduce
Use findPhoneNumbersInText to find a phone number with multiple extensions, such as:
US +16888888888,,9988776#,,654321#
Observed result
It can only detect the first extension, the other extensions are ignored.
Expected result
findPhoneNumbersInText should return multiple extensions information rather than only return the first extension.
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