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I’m getting numbers from a database. Some are stored as double in the database and some are stored as string.

What I want to do is count the decimal number of caracters so : 345.34938 would give me a result of 5.

As I said, some of my double come from the database as double and some as string. I’m wondering if there could be any kind of problem when casting the string numbers to double, hence giving me wrong result when trying to count the decimals.

I think I should be ok but I’m afraid that in some situations I’ll end up receiving wrong double numbers when they’re casted from the string (thinking about having 1.9999999 instead of 2.0, things like that)...

Is there any kind of risk that casting my number from string to double would give me strange result when stored as double in my application ? Am I being to frisky around that ?

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  • You are missing a language tag...
    – PhiLho
    Dec 14, 2012 at 15:34
  • Oh yeah, Thank you PhiLho ! Fixed !
    – Andy M
    Dec 14, 2012 at 15:46
  • Why do you want to count them? You obviously know the risks involved, so maybe there's another way to solve the real problem?
    – D Stanley
    Dec 14, 2012 at 15:48
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    A double doesn't really have the concept of decimal digits. If that concept is important for you, use decimal or string. Dec 14, 2012 at 15:49
  • @DStanley Actually, I'm guessing there could be a risk but I'm not sure... I have difficulty to see how a cast from string to double could be a problem... What are the cases in which there could be a problem... Do you have an example ?
    – Andy M
    Dec 18, 2012 at 7:21

1 Answer 1

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Consider converting the string representations to System.Decimal with the decimal.Parse method. Because for a decimal there's a much better correspondence between the value of the number and its string representation. Also, it can handle more digits.

A System.Decimal will preserve trailing zeros present in the string (like "2.7500"), which a System.Double will not.

But if your strings never have more than 15 digits in total (including digits before the decimal point .), your approach with double will probably work. But the exact number represented almost always differs from "what you see" with a double, so the number of decimal figures is to be understood as what double.ToString() shows...

Maybe it's easier to just use the string directly, like

int numberOfDecimals = myString.Length - (myString.IndexOf('.') + 1);
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    I would use the decimal.TryParse() instead of decimal.Parse(), in case the parsing fails.
    – Bob.
    Dec 14, 2012 at 16:53
  • @Bob Very good idea. There might be cases, of course, where you can guarantee that it will parse, but if there's any doubt, certainly use TryParse. Dec 14, 2012 at 19:03

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