237

I know a few ways of how to check if a string contains only digits:
RegEx, int.parse, tryparse, looping, etc.

Can anyone tell me what the fastest way to check is?

I need only to CHECK the value, no need to actually parse it.

By "digit" I mean specifically ASCII digits: 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9.

This is not the same question as Identify if a string is a number, since this question is not only about how to identify, but also about what the fastest method for doing so is.

7
  • 2
    w/o just measuring I would guess int.tryparse
    – kenny
    Sep 18, 2011 at 11:13
  • Probably a loop written in assembly that reads native-word-sized chunks of data from the string into a register and then performs a range-check on each byte in the register.
    – aroth
    Sep 18, 2011 at 11:14
  • 57
    simply return str.All(Char.IsDigit);
    – Mohsen
    Oct 23, 2013 at 5:45
  • 4
    int.TryParse does not check if string contains only digits! Strings like " -13 " (with minus and spaces) will be parsed successfully.
    – aleyush
    May 6, 2014 at 7:28
  • What do you mean by digits? Any unicode character that's considered a digit, or only the ten ASCII digits? Dec 8, 2014 at 10:23

22 Answers 22

335
bool IsDigitsOnly(string str)
{
    foreach (char c in str)
    {
        if (c < '0' || c > '9')
            return false;
    }

    return true;
}

Will probably be the fastest way to do it.

21
  • 24
    There's also char.IsDigit()
    – Keith
    Feb 5, 2013 at 8:14
  • 36
    @Keith IsDigit returns true for about three-hundred more characters. Including full width decimal digits 0123... (common in China and Japan) and digits from other cultures e.g. ০১২௧௨௩௪꘤꘥꘦꘧꘨ and plenty more. Sep 18, 2013 at 9:08
  • 81
    if anyone cares, this can certainly be reduced to a one-liner -> return str.All(c => c >= '0' && c <= '9'); Feb 6, 2014 at 14:07
  • 23
    You could simply do this too: return str.All(char.IsDigit);. Hooray for method groups!
    – Icemanind
    Aug 27, 2014 at 18:10
  • 12
    Please note that empty string isn't a vaild number.
    – Danon
    Mar 14, 2015 at 21:29
126

You could do this simply using LINQ:

return str.All(char.IsDigit);

  1. .All returns true for empty strings and throws an exception for null strings.
  2. char.IsDigit is true for all Unicode digit characters.
3
  • 7
    char.IsDigit matches numerous unicode digits from various locales (see fileformat.info/info/unicode/category/Nd/list.htm). Also, your answer uses LINQ so it unlikely to be the fastest way to do it. It might be sufficient for most usecases though. Sep 12, 2018 at 11:55
  • 1
    @StephenHolt Yes you are right, I realize that is not necessarily the fastest, but it's probably the easiest to write.
    – Uday
    Sep 13, 2018 at 5:09
  • Yep, fair point. I also wrote a similar answer (see below) a few years ago, although my version just tested if the char was between '0' and '9' to eliminate chars from other locales. That will depend on the exact requirements. Sep 18, 2018 at 9:29
81

Here's some benchmarks based on 1000000 parses of the same string:

Updated for release stats:

IsDigitsOnly: 384588
TryParse:     639583
Regex:        1329571

Here's the code, looks like IsDigitsOnly is faster:

class Program
{
    private static Regex regex = new Regex("^[0-9]+$", RegexOptions.Compiled);

    static void Main(string[] args)
    {
        Stopwatch watch = new Stopwatch();
        string test = int.MaxValue.ToString();
        int value;

        watch.Start();
        for(int i=0; i< 1000000; i++)
        {
            int.TryParse(test, out value);
        }
        watch.Stop();
        Console.WriteLine("TryParse: "+watch.ElapsedTicks);

        watch.Reset();
        watch.Start();
        for (int i = 0; i < 1000000; i++)
        {
            IsDigitsOnly(test);
        }
        watch.Stop();
        Console.WriteLine("IsDigitsOnly: " + watch.ElapsedTicks);

        watch.Reset();
        watch.Start();
        for (int i = 0; i < 1000000; i++)
        {
            regex.IsMatch(test);
        }
        watch.Stop();
        Console.WriteLine("Regex: " + watch.ElapsedTicks);

        Console.ReadLine();
    }

    static bool IsDigitsOnly(string str)
    {
        foreach (char c in str)
        {
            if (c < '0' || c > '9')
                return false;
        }

        return true;
    }
}

Of course it's worth noting that TryParse does allow leading/trailing whitespace as well as culture specific symbols. It's also limited on length of string.

14
  • Parsing a number definitely takes more time than just checking each digit, as you're performing base conversion.
    – user684934
    Sep 18, 2011 at 11:21
  • 2
    1000 parses of the same string should take almost no time at all, by the way, well under the time where natural noise renders the results insignificant. I'd expect to have to parse it a million times to get useful timings.
    – Jon Skeet
    Sep 18, 2011 at 11:46
  • Downvoted because the benchmark is way too short to be useful and you didn't spot that your method is giving the wrong answer even for the sample you're testing. The sample string is composed only of digits, but because it's too long for an int, TryParse is returning false.
    – Jon Skeet
    Sep 18, 2011 at 11:51
  • It's a lot closer with 1m. Ah good point about the length, I missed that. Sep 18, 2011 at 11:55
  • 3
    Ooh, with /o+ on compilation, it's now over 5 times faster than int.TryParse. Just to check, you're not running in the debugger are you?
    – Jon Skeet
    Sep 18, 2011 at 12:13
35

The char already has an IsDigit(char c) which does this:

 public static bool IsDigit(char c)
    {
      if (!char.IsLatin1(c))
        return CharUnicodeInfo.GetUnicodeCategory(c) == UnicodeCategory.DecimalDigitNumber;
      if ((int) c >= 48)
        return (int) c <= 57;
      else
        return false;
    }

You can simply do this:

var theString = "839278";
bool digitsOnly = theString.All(char.IsDigit);
4
  • If you cared to check for Unicode digits you shouldn't have cast a char to a int just because it's bad code, even for faster code.
    – user823959
    Sep 17, 2013 at 17:05
  • 2
    @user823959: I am not sure what you mean. Char.IsDigit is part of the mscorelib: msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/0t641e58.aspx
    – flayn
    Sep 18, 2013 at 11:38
  • Gerhard sorry, my mistake.
    – user823959
    Sep 21, 2013 at 19:41
  • This is more concise than looping, but on my machine, over a million iterations, for loop is always faster by ~1.5 times Nov 13, 2014 at 6:07
34

Can be about 20% faster by using just one comparison per char and for instead of foreach:

bool isDigits(string s) 
{ 
    if (s == null || s == "") return false; 

    for (int i = 0; i < s.Length; i++) 
        if ((s[i] ^ '0') > 9) 
            return false; 

    return true; 
}

Code used for testing (always profile because the results depend on hardware, versions, order, etc.):

static bool isDigitsFr(string s) { if (s == null || s == "") return false; for (int i = 0; i < s.Length; i++) if (s[i] < '0' || s[i] > '9') return false; return true; }
static bool isDigitsFu(string s) { if (s == null || s == "") return false; for (int i = 0; i < s.Length; i++) if ((uint)(s[i] - '0') > 9) return false; return true; }
static bool isDigitsFx(string s) { if (s == null || s == "") return false; for (int i = 0; i < s.Length; i++) if ((s[i] ^ '0') > 9) return false; return true; }
static bool isDigitsEr(string s) { if (s == null || s == "") return false; foreach (char c in s) if (c < '0' || c > '9') return false; return true; }
static bool isDigitsEu(string s) { if (s == null || s == "") return false; foreach (char c in s) if ((uint)(c - '0') > 9) return false; return true; }
static bool isDigitsEx(string s) { if (s == null || s == "") return false; foreach (char c in s) if ((c ^ '0') > 9) return false; return true; }
static void test()
{
    var w = new Stopwatch(); bool b; var s = int.MaxValue + ""; int r = 12345678*2; var ss = new SortedSet<string>(); //s = string.Concat(Enumerable.Range(0, 127).Select(i => ((char)i ^ '0') < 10 ? 1 : 0));
    w.Restart(); for (int i = 0; i < r; i++) b = s.All(char.IsDigit); w.Stop(); ss.Add(w.Elapsed + ".All .IsDigit"); 
    w.Restart(); for (int i = 0; i < r; i++) b = s.All(c => c >= '0' && c <= '9'); w.Stop(); ss.Add(w.Elapsed + ".All <>"); 
    w.Restart(); for (int i = 0; i < r; i++) b = s.All(c => (c ^ '0') < 10); w.Stop(); ss.Add(w.Elapsed + " .All ^"); 
    w.Restart(); for (int i = 0; i < r; i++) b = isDigitsFr(s); w.Stop(); ss.Add(w.Elapsed + " for     <>");
    w.Restart(); for (int i = 0; i < r; i++) b = isDigitsFu(s); w.Stop(); ss.Add(w.Elapsed + " for     -");
    w.Restart(); for (int i = 0; i < r; i++) b = isDigitsFx(s); w.Stop(); ss.Add(w.Elapsed + " for     ^");
    w.Restart(); for (int i = 0; i < r; i++) b = isDigitsEr(s); w.Stop(); ss.Add(w.Elapsed + " foreach <>");
    w.Restart(); for (int i = 0; i < r; i++) b = isDigitsEu(s); w.Stop(); ss.Add(w.Elapsed + " foreach -");
    w.Restart(); for (int i = 0; i < r; i++) b = isDigitsEx(s); w.Stop(); ss.Add(w.Elapsed + " foreach ^");
    MessageBox.Show(string.Join("\n", ss)); return;
}

Results on Intel i5-3470 @ 3.2GHz, VS 2015 .NET 4.6.1 Release mode and optimizations enabled:

time    method          ratio
0.7776  for     ^       1.0000 
0.7984  foreach -       1.0268 
0.8066  foreach ^       1.0372 
0.8940  for     -       1.1497 
0.8976  for     <>      1.1543 
0.9456  foreach <>      1.2160 
4.4559  .All <>         5.7303 
4.7791  .All ^          6.1458 
4.8539  .All. IsDigit   6.2421 

For anyone tempted to use the shorter methods, note that

16

If you are concerned about performance, use neither int.TryParse nor Regex - write your own (simple) function (DigitsOnly or DigitsOnly2 below, but not DigitsOnly3 - LINQ seems to incur a significant overhead).

Also, be aware that int.TryParse will fail if the string is too long to "fit" into int.

This simple benchmark...

class Program {

    static bool DigitsOnly(string s) {
        int len = s.Length;
        for (int i = 0; i < len; ++i) {
            char c = s[i];
            if (c < '0' || c > '9')
                return false;
        }
        return true;
    }

    static bool DigitsOnly2(string s) {
        foreach (char c in s) {
            if (c < '0' || c > '9')
                return false;
        }
        return true;
    }

    static bool DigitsOnly3(string s) {
        return s.All(c => c >= '0' && c <= '9');
    }

    static void Main(string[] args) {

        const string s1 = "916734184";
        const string s2 = "916734a84";

        const int iterations = 1000000;
        var sw = new Stopwatch();

        sw.Restart();
        for (int i = 0 ; i < iterations; ++i) {
            bool success = DigitsOnly(s1);
            bool failure = DigitsOnly(s2);
        }
        sw.Stop();
        Console.WriteLine(string.Format("DigitsOnly: {0}", sw.Elapsed));

        sw.Restart();
        for (int i = 0; i < iterations; ++i) {
            bool success = DigitsOnly2(s1);
            bool failure = DigitsOnly2(s2);
        }
        sw.Stop();
        Console.WriteLine(string.Format("DigitsOnly2: {0}", sw.Elapsed));

        sw.Restart();
        for (int i = 0; i < iterations; ++i) {
            bool success = DigitsOnly3(s1);
            bool failure = DigitsOnly3(s2);
        }
        sw.Stop();
        Console.WriteLine(string.Format("DigitsOnly3: {0}", sw.Elapsed));

        sw.Restart();
        for (int i = 0; i < iterations; ++i) {
            int dummy;
            bool success = int.TryParse(s1, out dummy);
            bool failure = int.TryParse(s2, out dummy);
        }
        sw.Stop();
        Console.WriteLine(string.Format("int.TryParse: {0}", sw.Elapsed));

        sw.Restart();
        var regex = new Regex("^[0-9]+$", RegexOptions.Compiled);
        for (int i = 0; i < iterations; ++i) {
            bool success = regex.IsMatch(s1);
            bool failure = regex.IsMatch(s2);
        }
        sw.Stop();
        Console.WriteLine(string.Format("Regex.IsMatch: {0}", sw.Elapsed));

    }

}

...produces the following result...

DigitsOnly: 00:00:00.0346094
DigitsOnly2: 00:00:00.0365220
DigitsOnly3: 00:00:00.2669425
int.TryParse: 00:00:00.3405548
Regex.IsMatch: 00:00:00.7017648
15

Function with empty validation:

public static bool IsDigitsOnly(string str)
  {             
        return !string.IsNullOrEmpty(str) && str.All(char.IsDigit);
  }
12

I like Linq and to make it exit on first mismatch you can do this

string str = '0129834X33';
bool isAllDigits = !str.Any( ch=> ch < '0' || ch > '9' );
11

if it is a single string :

if (str.All(Char.IsDigit))
{
  // string contains only digits
}

if it is a list of strings :

if (lstStr.All(s => s.All(Char.IsDigit)))
{
  // List of strings contains only digits
}
1
8

You can do this in a one line LINQ statement. OK, I realise this is not necessarily the fastest, so doesn't technically answer the question, but it's probably the easiest to write:

str.All(c => c >= '0' && c <= '9')
6
  • 4
    str.All(char.IsDigit) is even easier to write, but of course not equivalent to your code. Sep 17, 2013 at 17:01
  • I tried to test this: pastebin.com/PuWBp9n1 on release no debugger of course... and it seems WAYYYY faster. @Jon Skeet can you provide some insight? str.All(c => c >= '0' && c <= '9') seems WAY faster than IsDigit
    – Nahum
    Sep 18, 2013 at 6:19
  • 1
    @NahumLitvin IsDigit supports unicode. So depending on which time-memory trade-offs Microsoft chose when implementing it, the check might be quite expensive. I assume that it forwards to native code, that transition can be quite expensive as well. Sep 18, 2013 at 9:15
  • @CodesInChaos when you said it was "not equivalent to my code" I went to check what else might match, and it turns out that digits in other locales (e.g. Arabic) would match in your version. I guess it is something that OP would need to consider, whether such digits are valid or not. When doing int.TryParse, I think that would not accept strings containing such characters. Sep 19, 2013 at 14:26
  • LINQ is the slowest way to accomplish anything. If you want to apply a blanket rule to coding, assume the more high level & functionality something offers, the slower it is.
    – TravisO
    Apr 3, 2017 at 15:56
8

Probably the fastest way is:

myString.All(c => char.IsDigit(c))

Note: it will return True in case your string is empty which is incorrect (if you not considering empty as valid number/digit )

7

This should work:

Regex.IsMatch("124", "^[0-9]+$", RegexOptions.Compiled)

int.Parse or int.TryParse won't always work, because the string might contain more digits that an int can hold.

If you are going to do this check more than once it is useful to use a compiled regex - it takes more time the first time, but is much faster after that.

2
  • 3
    this is wrong, it returns true if theres even one digit. though the complied idea is awesome.
    – Nahum
    Sep 18, 2011 at 11:34
  • 1
    This is by far the slowest method, but is the best solution based on unknown size of string. As mentioned the regex also needs a tweak. Sep 18, 2011 at 11:37
7

This might be coming super late!, but I'm sure it will help someone, as it helped me.

        private static bool IsDigitsOnly(string str)
        {
            return str.All(c => c >= '0' && c <= '9');
        }
3

You can try using Regular Expressions by testing the input string to have only digits (0-9) by using the .IsMatch(string input, string pattern) method in C#.

using System;
using System.Text.RegularExpression;

public namespace MyNS
{
    public class MyClass
    {
        public void static Main(string[] args)
        {
             string input = Console.ReadLine();
             bool containsNumber = ContainsOnlyDigits(input);
        }

        private bool ContainOnlyDigits (string input)
        {
            bool containsNumbers = true;
            if (!Regex.IsMatch(input, @"/d"))
            {
                containsNumbers = false;
            }
            return containsNumbers;
        }
    }
}

Regards

1
  • 3
    Hi jason and welcome to Stackoverflow. Thank you for answering but notice that the question was about the fastest way. Regular expressions are relatively slow this was discussed in other answers.
    – Nahum
    Apr 25, 2014 at 5:35
1

this will work perfectly, there is many other ways but this would work

bool IsDigitsOnly(string str)
    {
        if (str.Length > 0)//if contains characters
        {
            foreach (char c in str)//assign character to c
            {
                if (c < '0' || c > '9')//check if its outside digit range
                    return false;
            }
        }else//empty string
        {
            return false;//empty string 
        }

        return true;//only digits
    }
1

I did small changes @TheCodeKing's answer.

It seems that ;

for int type fastest way is TryParse

for long type fastest way is Regex.

My results below (ticks)

For int:

TryParse Max: 355788
IsDigitsOnly Max: 787013
Regex Max: 1297691

TryParse Avg: 186007
IsDigitsOnly Avg: 430963
Regex Avg: 464657,79

TryParse Min: 162742
IsDigitsOnly Min: 335646
Regex Min: 452121


For float :

TryParse Max : 3151995
IsDigitsOnly Max: 1392740
Regex Max : 1283451

TryParse Avg: 1391636
IsDigitsOnly Avg: 824029
Regex Avg: 501176

TryParse Min: 1187410
IsDigitsOnly Min: 706646
Regex Min: 476204

Code for long:

using System.Diagnostics;
using System.Text.RegularExpressions;

class Program
{
    private static Regex regex = new Regex("^[0-9]+$", RegexOptions.Compiled);

    static void Main(string[] args)
    {
        Stopwatch watch = new Stopwatch();
        watch.Start();
        watch.Stop();
        watch.Reset();
        List<TimeSpan> tryparse = new List<TimeSpan>();
        List<TimeSpan> isdigitsonly = new List<TimeSpan>();
        List<TimeSpan> regexss = new List<TimeSpan>();

        for (int say = 0; say < 1000; say++)
        { 
            float value;

            string test = Random.Shared.NextInt64(1000,long.MaxValue).ToString();
            watch.Start();
            for (int i = 0; i < 1000000; i++)
            {
                float.TryParse(test, out value);
            }
            watch.Stop();
            //Console.WriteLine("TryParse: " + watch.Elapsed);
            tryparse.Add(watch.Elapsed);

            watch.Reset();
            watch.Start();
            for (int i = 0; i < 1000000; i++)
            {
                IsDigitsOnly(test);
            }
            watch.Stop();
            //Console.WriteLine("IsDigitsOnly: " + watch.Elapsed);
            isdigitsonly.Add(watch.Elapsed);
            watch.Reset();
            watch.Start();
            for (int i = 0; i < 1000000; i++)
            {
                regex.IsMatch(test);
            }
            watch.Stop();
            regexss.Add(watch.Elapsed);
            watch.Reset();
            //   Console.WriteLine("Regex: " + watch.Elapsed);
     
            Console.Write("---------------------% " + (Convert.ToDecimal( say)/ 999 * 100).ToString("N2") + "---------------------------");
            Console.CursorLeft = 0;
        }
        Console.WriteLine();
        Console.WriteLine($"TryParse: {tryparse.Max(t => t.Ticks)}");
        Console.WriteLine($"IsDigitsOnly: {isdigitsonly.Max(t => t.Ticks)}");
        Console.WriteLine($"Regex: {regexss.Max(t => t.Ticks)}");
        Console.WriteLine();

        Console.WriteLine($"TryParse Avg: {tryparse.Average(t => t.Ticks)}");
        Console.WriteLine($"IsDigitsOnly Avg: {isdigitsonly.Average(t => t.Ticks)}");
        Console.WriteLine($"Regex Avg: {regexss.Average(t => t.Ticks)}");
        Console.WriteLine();
        Console.WriteLine($"TryParse Min: {tryparse.Min(t => t.Ticks)}");
        Console.WriteLine($"IsDigitsOnly Min: {isdigitsonly.Min(t => t.Ticks)}");
        Console.WriteLine($"Regex Min: {regexss.Min(t => t.Ticks)}");
        Console.ReadLine();
    }

    static bool IsDigitsOnly(string str)
    {
        foreach (char c in str)
        {
            if (c < '0' || c > '9')
                return false;
        }

        return true;
    }
}
0

Another approach!

string str = "12345";
bool containsOnlyDigits = true;
try { if(Convert.ToInt32(str) < 0){ containsOnlyDigits = false; } }
catch { containsOnlyDigits = false; }

Here, if the statement Convert.ToInt32(str) fails, then string does not contain digits only. Another possibility is that if the string has "-12345" which gets converted to -12345 successfully, then there is a check for verifying that the number converted is not less than zero.

2
  • If all the characters must be digits and cannot lead with the - sign then this would not work. If you aren't concerned with leading or trailing spaces and your string was short enough, you could try either Convert.ToUInt32 or UInt32.tryparse but this wouldn't work for long enough strings. Dec 11, 2020 at 17:22
  • This will fail for a valid number string that does not fit in "int32" Jul 10, 2022 at 14:35
0

Since .NET 7, we now have char.IsAsciiDigit() created exactly for this purpose.

https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/api/system.char.isasciidigit?view=net-8.0

-1

Try this code:

bool isDigitsOnly(string str)
{
   try
   {
      int number = Convert.ToInt32(str);
      return true;
   }
   catch (Exception)
   {
      return false;
   }
}
4
  • Can you explain why your solution is better than the ones already provided? Jun 3, 2017 at 13:49
  • Because the time order of running this code [o(1)] is less than others [o(n)] Jun 6, 2017 at 4:00
  • I would be very surprised if Convert.ToInt32 would run faster than o(n). Do you have any evidence to support this assumption?
    – BDL
    Jun 30, 2017 at 12:11
  • 1
    it might be faster if str is actually a number, but it would probably be slower in case of Exeption. Also it's not answering the question because it won't work if str is number bigger than int.MaxValue. Feb 18, 2018 at 20:07
-3

What about char.IsDigit(myChar)?

0
-3

Very Clever and easy way to detect your string is contains only digits or not is this way:

string s = "12fg";

if(s.All(char.IsDigit))
{
   return true; // contains only digits
}
else
{
   return false; // contains not only digits
}
1
  • The if condition is unnecessary, so is two return statements, you can just return the s.All... But there are other issues such as with empty strings. May 12, 2020 at 22:57
-3
public bool CheckforDigits(string x)
{    
    int tr;  
    return x.All(r=> int.TryParse(r.ToString(), out tr));
}
3
  • Although this code might solve the problem, you should add an explanation why/how it works. And please explain why you think that this code is better than the ones already provided.
    – BDL
    Jun 30, 2017 at 12:04
  • 1
    In addition: Your code returns True for empty strings.
    – BDL
    Jun 30, 2017 at 12:18
  • This will fail for a valid number string that does not fit in "int32" Jul 10, 2022 at 14:38

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