This is probably dumb but it's giving me a hard time. I need to convert/format a double to string with a mandatory decimal point.
1 => 1.0
0.2423423 => 0.2423423
0.1 => 0.1
1234 => 1234.0
Basically, I want to output all decimals but also make sure the rounded values have the redundant .0 too. I am sure there is a simple way to achieve this.
Use double.ToString("N1"):
double d1 = 1d;
double d2 = 0.2423423d;
double d3 = 0.1d;
double d4 = 1234d;
Console.WriteLine(d1.ToString("N1"));
Console.WriteLine(d2.ToString("N1"));
Console.WriteLine(d3.ToString("N1"));
Console.WriteLine(d4.ToString("N1"));
Demo
Standard Numeric Format Strings
The Numeric ("N") Format Specifier
Update
(1.234).ToString("N1") produces 1.2 and in addition to removing additional decimal digits, it also adds a thousands separator
Well, perhaps you need to implement a custom NumberFormatInfo object which you can derive from the current CultureInfo and use in double.ToString:
var culture = CultureInfo.CurrentCulture;
var customNfi = (NumberFormatInfo)culture.NumberFormat.Clone();
customNfi.NumberDecimalDigits = 1;
customNfi.NumberGroupSeparator = "";
Console.WriteLine(d1.ToString(customNfi));
Note that you need to clone it since it's readonly by default.
Demo
There is not a built in method to append a mandatory .0 to the end of whole numbers with the .ToString() method, as the existing formats will truncate or round based on the number of decimal places you specify.
My suggestion is to just roll your own implementation with an extension method
public static String ToDecmialString(this double source)
{
if ((source % 1) == 0)
return source.ToString("f1");
else
return source.ToString();
}
And the usage:
double d1 = 1;
double d2 = 0.2423423;
double d3 = 0.1;
double d4 = 1234;
Console.WriteLine(d1.ToDecimalString());
Console.WriteLine(d2.ToDecimalString());
Console.WriteLine(d3.ToDecimalString());
Console.WriteLine(d4.ToDecimalString());
Results in this output:
1.0
0.2423423
0.1
1234.0
You could do something like this: if the number doesn't have decimal points you can format its output to enforce one decimal 0 and if it has decimal places, just use ToString();
double a1 = 1;
double a2 = 0.2423423;
string result = string.Empty;
if(a1 - Math.Floor(a1) >0.0)
result = a1.ToString();
else
result = a1.ToString("F1");
if (a2 - Math.Floor(a2) > 0.0)
result = a2.ToString();
else
result = a2.ToString("F1");
When you use "F" as formatting, the output won't contain thousands separator and the number that follows it specifies the number of decimal places.
Use ToString("0.0###########################").
It does work. I found it in duplicate of your question decimal ToString formatting which gives at least 1 digit, no upper limit
Double provides a method ToString() where you can pass an IFormatProvider-object stating how you want your double to be converted.
Additionally, it should display trailing 0 at all costs.
value = 16034.125E21;
// Display value using the invariant culture.
Console.WriteLine(value.ToString(CultureInfo.InvariantCulture));
// Display value using the en-GB culture.
Console.WriteLine(value.ToString(CultureInfo.CreateSpecificCulture("en-GB")));
// Display value using the de-DE culture.
Console.WriteLine(value.ToString(CultureInfo.CreateSpecificCulture("de-DE")));
// This example displays the following output to the console:
// -16325.62015
// -16325.62015
// -16325,62015
// 1.6034125E+25
// 1.6034125E+25
// 1,6034125E+25
Here is the documentation from MSDN.
You can cast to string and then appen ".0" if there was no decimal point given
string sValue=doubleValue.ToString();
if(!sValue.Contains('.'))
sValue+=".0";
EDIT:
As mentioned in the comments '.' may not be the decimal seperator in the current culture. Refer to this article to retrieve the actual seperator if you want make your code save for this case.
Related
I need to display a number with commas and a decimal point.
Eg:
Case 1 : Decimal number is 432324 (This does not have commas or decimal points).
Need to display it as: 432,324.00.
Not: 432,324
Case 2 : Decimal number is 2222222.22 (This does not have commas).
Need to display it as: 2,222,222.22
I tried ToString("#,##0.##"), but it is not formatting it correctly.
int number = 1234567890;
number.ToString("#,##0.00");
You will get the result 1,234,567,890.00.
Maybe you simply want the standard format string "N", as in
number.ToString("N")
It will use thousand separators, and a fixed number of fractional decimals. The symbol for thousands separators and the symbol for the decimal point depend on the format provider (typically CultureInfo) you use, as does the number of decimals (which will normally by 2, as you require).
If the format provider specifies a different number of decimals, and if you don't want to change the format provider, you can give the number of decimals after the N, as in .ToString("N2").
Edit: The sizes of the groups between the commas are governed by the
CultureInfo.CurrentCulture.NumberFormat.NumberGroupSizes
array, given that you don't specify a special format provider.
Try with
ToString("#,##0.00")
From MSDN
*The "0" custom format specifier serves as a zero-placeholder symbol. If the value that is being formatted has a digit in the position where the zero appears in the format string, that digit is copied to the result string; otherwise, a zero appears in the result string. The position of the leftmost zero before the decimal point and the rightmost zero after the decimal point determines the range of digits that are always present in the result string.
The "00" specifier causes the value to be rounded to the nearest digit preceding the decimal, where rounding away from zero is always used. For example, formatting 34.5 with "00" would result in the value 35.*
I had the same problem. I wanted to format numbers like the "General" format in spreadsheets, meaning show decimals if they're significant, but chop them off if not. In other words:
1234.56 => 1,234.56
1234 => 1,234
It needs to support a maximum number of places after the decimal, but don't put trailing zeros or dots if not required, and of course, it needs to be culture friendly. I never really figured out a clean way to do it using String.Format alone, but a combination of String.Format and Regex.Replace with some culture help from NumberFormatInfo.CurrentInfo did the job (LinqPad C# Program).
string FormatNumber<T>(T number, int maxDecimals = 4) {
return Regex.Replace(String.Format("{0:n" + maxDecimals + "}", number),
#"[" + System.Globalization.NumberFormatInfo.CurrentInfo.NumberDecimalSeparator + "]?0+$", "");
}
void Main(){
foreach (var test in new[] { 123, 1234, 1234.56, 123456.789, 1234.56789123 } )
Console.WriteLine(test + " = " + FormatNumber(test));
}
Produces:
123 = 123
1234 = 1,234
1234.56 = 1,234.56
123456.789 = 123,456.789
1234.56789123 = 1,234.5679
Try with
ToString("#,##0.###")
Produces:
1234.55678 => 1,234.556
1234 => 1,234
For Razor View:
$#string.Format("{0:#,0.00}",item.TotalAmount)
CultureInfo us = new CultureInfo("en-US");
TotalAmount.ToString("N", us)
Your question is not very clear but this should achieve what you are trying to do:
decimal numericValue = 3494309432324.00m;
string formatted = numericValue.ToString("#,##0.00");
Then formatted will contain: 3,494,309,432,324.00
All that is needed is "#,0.00", c# does the rest.
Num.ToString("#,0.00"")
The "#,0" formats the thousand separators
"0.00" forces two decimal points
If you are using string variables you can format the string directly using a : then specify the format (e.g. N0, P2, etc).
decimal Number = 2000.55512016465m;
$"{Number:N}" #Outputs 2,000.55512016465
You can also specify the number of decimal places to show by adding a number to the end like
$"{Number:N1}" #Outputs 2,000.5
$"{Number:N2}" #Outputs 2,000.55
$"{Number:N3}" #Outputs 2,000.555
$"{Number:N4}" #Outputs 2,000.5551
string Mynewcurrency = DisplayIndianCurrency("7743450.00");
private string DisplayIndianCurrency(string EXruppesformate)
{
string fare = EXruppesformate;
decimal parsed = decimal.Parse(fare, CultureInfo.InvariantCulture);
CultureInfo hindi = new CultureInfo("en-IN");
// string text = string.Format(hindi, "{0:c}", parsed);if you want <b>Rs 77,43,450.00</b>
string text = string.Format(hindi, "{0:N}", parsed); //if you want <b>77,43,450.00</b>
return ruppesformate = text;
}
For anyone looking at this now, and getting the "No overload for method 'ToString' takes 1 argument" when using:
TotalNumber.ToString("N")
My solution has been to use :
TotalNumber.Value.ToString("N")
I often get stuck on this when working directly inside an MVC View, the following wasn't working:
#Model.Sum(x => x.Number).ToString("N")
Whereas this works:
#Model.Sum(x => x.Number).Value.ToString("N")
I need to convert some value into decimal. i have done with the below:
Double calculateinputPower="somegivenvalue";
String valuePower="somevalue";
Double calculatePower = Double.Parse(valuePower);
calculatePower = calculatePower - calculateinputPower + calculateErp * 1;
calculatePower = Double.Parse(String.Format("{0:0.0}", calculatePower));
valuePower = System.Convert.ToString(calculatePower);
ERP.Text = valuePower;
if my output value is like
ex:66.2356 -> 66.2 , 32.568 -> 32.5 , 22.35264 ->22.3
i am getting the format which i need exactly but if the output value is like
22,33,11,66,55 something like this then i want convert that value to
22->22.0
33->33.0
11->11.0
66->66.0 how can i get this in C#.
i used myVal.ToString("F"); then i am getting 0.00
if i use ToString("N2"); then i am getting 1,000.00
but i don't want money format or 0.00 format
What exactly i need is single .0 if the value is non decimal.
Just use .ToString("0.0") (Note this uses rounding so 22.26 -> 22.3)
double i = 22.23;
double j = 45;
string si = i.ToString("0.0"); //22.2
string sj = j.ToString("0.0"); //45.0
Try in this way:
valuePower = calculatePower.ToString("F1");
To learn more, follow this link
You need to look at the documentation for the format strings you're using.
You've tried F, which says as you've not specified the precision that the "Default precision specifier: Defined by NumberFormatInfo.NumberDecimalDigits.", which is 2 in your case.
You've tried N2, which says that the 2 is the "Precision specifier: Desired number of decimal places.".
As you only want a single decimal place, use F1 or N1, depending on your formatting requirements.
var number1 = 66.2356d;
var number2 = 66d;
var string1 = number1.ToString("N1"); // 66.2
var string2 = number2.ToString("N1"); // 66.0
See this fiddle.
The problem:
Let's assume you are using a dot "." as a decimal separator in your regional setting and have coded a string with a comma.
string str = "2,5";
What happens when you decimal.TryParse(str, out somevariable); it?
somevariable will assume 0.
What can you do to solve it?
1-
You can
decimal.TryParse(str, NumberStyles.Any, CultureInfo.InvariantCulture, out somevariable);
And it will return 25, and not 2.5 which is wrong.
2-
You can
decimal.TryParse(str.Replace(",","."), out num);
And it will return the proper value, BUT, if the user uses "," as a decimal separator it will not work.
Possible solution that I can't make it work:
Get the user decimal separator in regional settings:
char sepdec = Convert.ToChar(CultureInfo.CurrentCulture.NumberFormat.NumberDecimalSeparator);
And make somehow the replace from ",",sepdec , that way it would stay a comma if its a comma, and replace by an actual dot if the user uses dots.
Hints?
Edit: Many users posted useful information, lately, using the arguments NumberStyles.Any, CultureInfo.GetCultureInfo("pt-PT") on a tryParse wouldn't work if your separator is set to "," So it pretty much doesnt fullfill the premise of making a tryparse "universal".
I'll work around this, if anyone has more hints you'r welcome
I know the thread is a little bit older, but I try to provide an answer.
I use regular expression to determine the used number format in the string.
The regex also matches numbers without decimal separators ("12345").
var numberString = "1,234.56"; // en
// var numberString = "1.234,56"; // de
var cultureInfo = CultureInfo.InvariantCulture;
// if the first regex matches, the number string is in us culture
if (Regex.IsMatch(numberString, #"^(:?[\d,]+\.)*\d+$"))
{
cultureInfo = new CultureInfo("en-US");
}
// if the second regex matches, the number string is in de culture
else if (Regex.IsMatch(numberString, #"^(:?[\d.]+,)*\d+$"))
{
cultureInfo = new CultureInfo("de-DE");
}
NumberStyles styles = NumberStyles.Number;
bool isDouble = double.TryParse(numberString, styles, cultureInfo, out number);
HTH
Thomas
I just want to say that HTH Thomas solution worked really well in my project, except for when trying to parse negative decimal numbers with commas. One solution to this, which is probably not optimized because I don't fully understand the regex Ismatch code, but that works is adding the possibility of finding a "-" before the number in the ifs statements, like this:
var cultureInfo = CultureInfo.InvariantCulture;
if (Regex.IsMatch(equation.inputFieldsTexts[i], #"^(:?[\d,]+\.)*\d+$") || Regex.IsMatch(equation.inputFieldsTexts[i], #"^(:?[-\d,]+\.)*\d+$"))
{
cultureInfo = new CultureInfo("en-US");
}
// if the second regex matches, the number string is in DE culture
if (Regex.IsMatch(equation.inputFieldsTexts[i], #"^(:?[\d.]+,)*\d+$") || Regex.IsMatch(equation.inputFieldsTexts[i], #"^(:?[-\d.]+,)*\d+$"))
{
cultureInfo = new CultureInfo("de-DE");
}
The solution I use is to simply show the user what the parsed value is.
I have a custom TextBox control which verifies the input when the control loses focus and such. If the control expects a floating point value (which is a property), then it will try to parse the value entered. If the TryParse succeeds, I display the out value in the control's text.
This way, when a user enters 12.3 the value might change to 123 because in the current culture 12,3 is expected. It's then up to them to decide to correct this.
How about this method:
clean the string from anything else than numbers, dot, comma and negative sign
take the last index of dot or comma
split the clean string and remove all thousands separators from the first part
convert both parts to integer
change the sign of the second part if necessary
add the first part with the second part divided by decimal places
public static bool TryParseDoubleUniversal(this string s, out double result) {
result = 0.0;
if (string.IsNullOrEmpty(s)) return false;
var clean = new string(s.Where(x => char.IsDigit(x) || x == '.' || x == ',' || x == '-').ToArray());
var iOfSep = clean.LastIndexOfAny(new[] { ',', '.' });
var partA = clean.Substring(0, iOfSep).Replace(",", string.Empty).Replace(".", string.Empty);
var partB = clean.Substring(iOfSep + 1);
if (!int.TryParse(partA, out var intA)) return false;
if (!int.TryParse(partB, out var intB)) return false;
if (intA < 0) intB *= -1;
var dp = double.Parse("1".PadRight(partB.Length + 1, '0'));
result = intA + intB / dp;
return true;
}
The question is old but since it was my first hit on Google. And the approach in How to change symbol for decimal point in double.ToString()? seems to be a valid solution you can use the NumberFormatInfo to set the decimal separator like this:
string value = "3,2";
NumberFormatInfo nfi = new NumberFormatInfo();
nfi.NumberDecimalSeparator = ",";
decimal.TryParse(value, NumberStyles.Any, nfi, out decimal dec);
I found a solution, I'm a beginner on this regional and comma-dots theme so if you have comments to improve the understanding of this please be welcome.
We start of by getting what decimal separator the user has set in his regional options outside before the Form{InitializeComponent();} (I want a universal variable that will allow me to correct the code)
char sepdec = Convert.ToChar(CultureInfo.CurrentCulture.NumberFormat.NumberDecimalSeparator);
In the tryParse, to get it to behave universally we will read the dots and commas in the string, and turn them into the decimal separator we defined as sepdec
decimal.TryParse(str.Replace(",",sepdec.ToString()).Replace(".",sepdec.ToString()), out somevariable);
I hope this helps, please comment improvement suggestions!
In Android Xamarin, I ran into the same issue several times. Some solutions worked until the Android got upgraded into a new version, then the problem came out again. So I came with an universal solution, which works fine. I read the numeric input as text, then parse it into decimal with a custom parser.
The custom parser is returning 0 when parsing into decimal is not possible. It does allow input text containing decimal number with either comma or dot, with no group separators:
public static decimal ParseTextToDecimal(string decimalText)
{
if (decimalText == String.Empty) return 0;
string temp = decimalText.Replace(',', '.');
var decText = temp.Split('.');
if (!Int32.TryParse(decText[0], out int integerPart)) return 0;
if (decText.Length == 1) return integerPart;
if (decText.Length == 2)
{
if (!Int32.TryParse(decText[1], out int decimalPart)) return 0;
decimal powerOfTen = 10m;
for (int i = 1; i < decText[1].Length; i++) powerOfTen *= 10;
return integerPart + decimalPart / powerOfTen;
}
return 0; // there were two or more decimal separators, which is a clear invalid input
}
I need to take a string object and convert it to a decimal to 4 dp.
So for example:
string val = "145.83011";
decimal sss = Math.Round(Convert.ToDecimal(val), 4);
bring back 145.8301 - good
However:
string val = "145.8300";
decimal sss = Math.Round(Convert.ToDecimal(val), 4);
brings back 145.83
I need it to be 145.8300
I need it in a decimal format so can't use string format options.
Thanks
rob
One option would be to use string manipulation three times:
Parse the original text to a decimal value (this will preserve the original number of decimal places)
Use string formatting to end up with a string with exactly 4 decimal places. (Math.Round ensures there are at most 4DP, but not exactly 4DP.)
Parse the result of the formatting to get back to a decimal value with exactly 4DP.
So something like this:
public static decimal Force4DecimalPlaces(string input)
{
decimal parsed = decimal.Parse(input, CultureInfo.InvariantCulture);
string intermediate = parsed.ToString("0.0000", CultureInfo.InvariantCulture);
return decimal.Parse(intermediate, CultureInfo.InvariantCulture);
}
I recoil from using string conversions like this, but the alternatives are relatively tricky. You could either get the raw bits, split out the different parts to find the mantissa and scale, then adjust appropriately... or you could potentially work out some sequence of arithmetic operations to get to the right scale. (Jeppe's approach of multiplying by 1.0000m may well be entirely correct - I just don't know whether it's documented to be correct. It would at least be worth adding in appropriate tests for the sorts of numbers you expect to see.)
Note that the above code will perform round up on halves, as far as I can tell, so 1.12345 will be converted to 1.1235 for example.
Sample with output in comments:
using System;
using System.Globalization;
class Test
{
static void Main()
{
Console.WriteLine(Force4DecimalPlaces("0.0000001")); // 0.0000
Console.WriteLine(Force4DecimalPlaces("1.000000")); // 1.0000
Console.WriteLine(Force4DecimalPlaces("1.5")); // 1.5000
Console.WriteLine(Force4DecimalPlaces("1.56789")); // 1.5679
}
public static decimal Force4DecimalPlaces(string input)
{
decimal parsed = decimal.Parse(input, CultureInfo.InvariantCulture);
string intermediate = parsed.ToString("0.0000", CultureInfo.InvariantCulture);
return decimal.Parse(intermediate, CultureInfo.InvariantCulture);
}
}
Both Convert.ToDecimal and decimal.Parse do preserve trailing zeroes in the string (a System.Decimal can have at most 28-29 digits in total, so in most cases there's still room for all the trailing zeroes).
And Math.Round(..., 4) preserves trailing zeroes up to the fourth place after the decimal period.
Therefore the premise of the question is wrong. Your example does bring back what you want.
In any case, consider specifying the overload that takes in an IFormatProvider as well, and give CultureInfo.InvariantCulture as argument. Then the conversion is independent of the local culture.
If instead you want to handle strings like "145.83" and append trailing zeroes that were not in the string, use:
string val = "145.83";
decimal sss = Math.Round(
decimal.Parse(val, CultureInfo.InvariantCulture) * 1.0000m,
4);
Epilog: If you don't like multiplying and dividing by numbers like 1.0000m, use decimal.GetBits to get the internal representation. Adjust the integer "part" by multiplying or dividing by the appropriate power of ten, and adjust the scale "part" by subtracting or adding the corresponding number. The scale counts the number of places to move the decimal point to the left, starting from the 96-bit integer.
I need to parse the string "1.2345E-02" (a number expressed in exponential notation) to a decimal data type, but Decimal.Parse("1.2345E-02") simply throws an error
It is a floating point number, you have to tell it that:
decimal d = Decimal.Parse("1.2345E-02", System.Globalization.NumberStyles.Float);
It works if you specify NumberStyles.Float:
decimal x = decimal.Parse("1.2345E-02", NumberStyles.Float);
Console.WriteLine(x); // Prints 0.012345
I'm not entirely sure why this isn't supported by default - the default is to use NumberStyles.Number, which uses the AllowLeadingWhite, AllowTrailingWhite, AllowLeadingSign, AllowTrailingSign, AllowDecimalPoint, and AllowThousands styles. Possibly it's performance-related; specifying an exponent is relatively rare, I suppose.
In addition to specifying the NumberStyles I would recommend that you use the decimal.TryParse function such as:
decimal result;
if( !decimal.TryParse("1.2345E-02", NumberStyles.Any, CultureInfo.InvariantCulture, out result) )
{
// do something in case it fails?
}
As an alternative to NumberStyles.Any you could use a specific set if you're certain of your formats. e.g:
NumberStyles.AllowExponent | NumberStyles.Float
decimal d = Decimal.Parse("1.2345E-02", System.Globalization.NumberStyles.Float);
Be cautious about the selected answer: there is a subtility specifying System.Globalization.NumberStyles.Float in Decimal.Parse which could lead to a System.FormatException because your system might be awaiting a number formated with ',' instead of '.'
For instance, in french notation, "1.2345E-02" is invalid, you have to convert it to "1,2345E-02" first.
In conclusion, use something along the lines of:
Decimal.Parse(valueString.Replace('.',','), System.Globalization.NumberStyles.Float);
The default NumberStyle for decimal.Parse(String) is NumberStyles.Number, so if you just want to add the functionality to allow exponents, then you can do a bitwise OR to include NumberStyles.AllowExponent.
decimal d = decimal
.Parse("1.2345E-02", NumberStyles.Number | NumberStyles.AllowExponent);
I've found that passing in NumberStyles.Float, in some cases, changes the rules by which the string is processed and results in a different output from NumberStyles.Number (the default rules used by decimal.Parse).
For example, the following code will generate a FormatException in my machine:
CultureInfo culture = new CultureInfo("");
culture.NumberFormat.NumberDecimalDigits = 2;
culture.NumberFormat.NumberDecimalSeparator = ".";
culture.NumberFormat.NumberGroupSeparator = ",";
Decimal.Parse("1,234.5", NumberStyles.Float, culture); // FormatException thrown here
I'd recommend using the input NumberStyles.Number | NumberStyles.AllowExponent, as this will allow exponential numbers and will still process the string under the decimal rules.
CultureInfo culture = new CultureInfo("");
culture.NumberFormat.NumberDecimalDigits = 2;
culture.NumberFormat.NumberDecimalSeparator = ".";
culture.NumberFormat.NumberGroupSeparator = ",";
Decimal.Parse("1,234.5",NumberStyles.Number | NumberStyles.AllowExponent, culture); // Does not generate a FormatException
To answer the poster's question, the right answer should instead be:
decimal x = decimal.Parse("1.2345E-02", NumberStyles.Number | NumberStyles.AllowExponent);
Console.WriteLine(x);
Warning about using NumberStyles.Any:
"6.33E+03" converts to 6330 as expected. In German, decimal points are represented by commas, but 6,33E+03 converts to 633000! This is a problem for my customers, as the culture that generates the data is not known and may be different than the culture that is operating on the data. In my case, I always have scientific notation, so I can always replace comma to decimal point before parsing, but if you are working with arbitrary numbers, like pretty-formatted numbers like 1,234,567 then that approach doesn't work.
You don't need to replace the dots (respectively the commas) just specify the input IFormatProvider:
float d = Single.Parse("1.27315", System.Globalization.NumberStyles.Float, new CultureInfo("en-US"));
float d = Single.Parse("1,27315", System.Globalization.NumberStyles.Float, new CultureInfo("de-DE"));
If you want to check and convert the exponent value use this
string val = "1.2345E-02";
double dummy;
bool hasExponential = (val.Contains("E") || val.Contains("e")) && double.TryParse(val, out dummy);
if (hasExponential)
{
decimal d = decimal.Parse(val, NumberStyles.Float);
}
Hope this helps someone.