Malaysian Postcode Regex for Go
/^[0-9]{5}$/What this pattern does
This page provides a lightweight, single-purpose regular expression for matching malaysian postcode, ported and verified for Go. A rigorously tested regex reduces debugging time and protects your application from edge-case failures. The snippet below is ready to drop into your Go project — whether you're validating in a Gin handler, a gRPC service, or a command-line tool.
Go Implementation
// Malaysian Postcode
// ReDoS-safe | RegexVault — Localization > Postal Codes
package validation
import "regexp"
var malaysianPostcodeRe = regexp.MustCompile(`^[0-9]{5}$`)
func ValidateMalaysianPostcode(s string) bool {
return malaysianPostcodeRe.MatchString(s)
}
// Example
// fmt.Println(ValidateMalaysianPostcode("50000")) // trueTest Cases
Matches (Valid) | Rejects (Invalid) |
|---|---|
50000 | 5000 |
10000 | 500001 |
88000 | ABCDE |
93000 | 5000A |
01000 | — |
When to use this pattern
This pattern is drawn from the Localization > Postal Codes category and carries a ReDoS-safe certification. That matters for Go developers because Go's RE2 engine is inherently safe from catastrophic backtracking, but this pattern has been additionally verified for correctness. RegexVault audits patterns against known backtracking attack vectors, ensuring you have the necessary context before using this regex in a high-stakes production environment.
Common Pitfalls
Malaysia, Indonesia, and Singapore all use simple numeric postcodes of different lengths (5, 5, 6 digits respectively). Country context is essential for disambiguation.
Technical Notes
Malaysian postcode ranges by state: Perlis 01000-02800, Kedah 05000-09810, Kuala Lumpur 50000-60000, Sabah 88000-91300, Sarawak 93000-98859. Pos Malaysia manages the database.
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