97

Using C#, I want to get the total amount of RAM that my computer has. With the PerformanceCounter I can get the amount of Available ram, by setting:

counter.CategoryName = "Memory";
counter.Countername = "Available MBytes";

But I can't seem to find a way to get the total amount of memory. How would I go about doing this?

Update:

MagicKat: I saw that when I was searching, but it doesn't work - "Are you missing an assembly or reference?". I've looked to add that to the References, but I don't see it there.

18 Answers 18

190

Add a reference to Microsoft.VisualBasic and a using Microsoft.VisualBasic.Devices;.

The ComputerInfo class has all the information that you need.

7
  • 11
    Why on earth was this voted down? Voted back up! This is the easiest way to do it, and yes you can this from C#.
    – Paul Batum
    Sep 19, 2008 at 20:12
  • 56
    +1: Some people have an aversion to referencing the Microsoft.VisualBasic namespace from C#, even though it's really just another assembly that's installed as a part of everything else.
    – Bevan
    Jan 20, 2009 at 20:00
  • 2
    Return negative junk value on Windows7 64bit with 8gb ram. Thats why you got down voted?
    – Piotr Kula
    Sep 15, 2012 at 15:44
  • 7
    For anyone leery of using (new ComputerInfo()).TotalPhysicalMemory, it works fine on a system with even more memory than that. Its return type is unsigned long, so a negative number is not possible without an (invalid) cast. Jul 11, 2015 at 0:04
  • 8
    var totalGBRam = Convert.ToInt32((new ComputerInfo().TotalPhysicalMemory / (Math.Pow(1024, 3))) + 0.5);
    – Sean
    Jun 23, 2017 at 13:17
67

The Windows API function GlobalMemoryStatusEx can be called with p/invoke:

  [StructLayout(LayoutKind.Sequential, CharSet = CharSet.Auto)]
  private class MEMORYSTATUSEX
  {
     public uint dwLength;
     public uint dwMemoryLoad;
     public ulong ullTotalPhys;
     public ulong ullAvailPhys;
     public ulong ullTotalPageFile;
     public ulong ullAvailPageFile;
     public ulong ullTotalVirtual;
     public ulong ullAvailVirtual;
     public ulong ullAvailExtendedVirtual;
     public MEMORYSTATUSEX()
     {
        this.dwLength = (uint)Marshal.SizeOf(typeof(NativeMethods.MEMORYSTATUSEX));
     }
  }


  [return: MarshalAs(UnmanagedType.Bool)]
  [DllImport("kernel32.dll", CharSet = CharSet.Auto, SetLastError = true)]
  static extern bool GlobalMemoryStatusEx([In, Out] MEMORYSTATUSEX lpBuffer);

Then use like:

ulong installedMemory;
MEMORYSTATUSEX memStatus = new MEMORYSTATUSEX();
if( GlobalMemoryStatusEx( memStatus))
{ 
   installedMemory = memStatus.ullTotalPhys;
}

Or you can use WMI (managed but slower) to query TotalPhysicalMemory in the Win32_ComputerSystem class.

11
  • 2
    That's not working... long ramuse = (long)stat.TotalPhysical; long ramavailable = (long)stat.AvailablePhysical; long ramtotal = ramavailable + ramuse; int percent = (int)( (float)ramuse / ramtotal * 100); percent is telling me "70" and total is constantly changing, give or take 100. should be 72%
    – Joel
    Sep 19, 2008 at 20:29
  • 6
    The code works, only you dont need to use 'NativeMethods' to get the size of the object, you simply can say like this: this.dwLength = (uint)Marshal.SizeOf(this); and it works the same (I had trouble with using NativeMethods so this fix now works).
    – Cipi
    Apr 14, 2010 at 10:02
  • 2
    "NativeMethods" is the namespace of the type. The call to SizeOf can be changed if you prefer. Apr 14, 2010 at 13:11
  • 2
    @Corelgott Useless because it gives up to date information? I mean, everytime I check the weather channel it gives different information, but I wouldn't go so far as to call it totally useless. I'm not even sure what you would want this function to do if it didn't return potentially different information each time - should it "lock" the results after the first invocation and then return stale data after that? In what way would that be more useful? Jun 24, 2013 at 14:07
  • 3
    A bit late to the party but I happened upon this thread and this answer is not correct. GlobalMemoryStatusEx doesn't necessarily (and often won't) give the actual amount of RAM installed on the machine, it gives the amount that is available to the OS which is almost always different than the amount installed due to reserved memory for drivers, etc. To get the actual amount of RAM installed you would want to call the GetPhysicallyInstalledSystemMemory function which returns the proper total RAM. msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/desktop/… Oct 21, 2014 at 0:37
65

Add a reference to Microsoft.VisualBasic.dll, as someone mentioned above. Then getting total physical memory is as simple as this (yes, I tested it):

static ulong GetTotalMemoryInBytes()
{
    return new Microsoft.VisualBasic.Devices.ComputerInfo().TotalPhysicalMemory;
}
5
  • 4
    @ppumkin, in what version of .NET, and in what version of Visual Studio? When I run it in VS 2012 using .NET 4.5 on a 64-bit machine with 8 GB of RAM, it works fine. I get back 8520327168.
    – Ryan Lundy
    Feb 1, 2013 at 18:08
  • .NET 4, VS2010 32bit on Windows Pro 7 64bit
    – Piotr Kula
    Feb 1, 2013 at 22:07
  • 2
    Works fine on x64.You are using a 32 bit VS that is probably compiling 32 bit binaries that wont see full memory size. Aug 22, 2014 at 4:01
  • 2
    When using this in Visual Studio 2017 with C# .Net 4.6.1, I did have to add a reference for Microsoft.VisualBasic to get this to work. Project > Add Reference >> Assemblies > Check Microsoft.VisualBasic >> OK
    – WebLuke
    May 2, 2018 at 15:01
  • I noticed a difference between GetPhysicallyInstalledSystemMemory and Microsoft.VisualBasic.Devices.ComputerInfo().TotalPhysicalMemory new FileSizeStruct(34173231104) {31.8 GB} ByteCount: 34173231104 ByteSize: GB Size: 31.8 new FileSizeStruct(34359738368) {32 GB} ByteCount: 34359738368 ByteSize: GB Size: 32
    – fanuc_bob
    May 4, 2018 at 20:55
45

All the answers here, including the accepted one, will give you the total amount of RAM available for use. And that may have been what OP wanted.

But if you are interested in getting the amount of installed RAM, then you'll want to make a call to the GetPhysicallyInstalledSystemMemory function.

From the link, in the Remarks section:

The GetPhysicallyInstalledSystemMemory function retrieves the amount of physically installed RAM from the computer's SMBIOS firmware tables. This can differ from the amount reported by the GlobalMemoryStatusEx function, which sets the ullTotalPhys member of the MEMORYSTATUSEX structure to the amount of physical memory that is available for the operating system to use. The amount of memory available to the operating system can be less than the amount of memory physically installed in the computer because the BIOS and some drivers may reserve memory as I/O regions for memory-mapped devices, making the memory unavailable to the operating system and applications.

Sample code:

[DllImport("kernel32.dll")]
[return: MarshalAs(UnmanagedType.Bool)]
static extern bool GetPhysicallyInstalledSystemMemory(out long TotalMemoryInKilobytes);

static void Main()
{
    long memKb;
    GetPhysicallyInstalledSystemMemory(out memKb);
    Console.WriteLine((memKb / 1024 / 1024) + " GB of RAM installed.");
}
2
  • 1
    Thank you! I was looking for exactly this but everywhere I can only see how to find the total available memory rather than the installed one.
    – S. M.
    Dec 17, 2018 at 15:30
  • 1
    It doesn't work well on my virtual machine though, despite functioning perfectly on the main one.
    – S. M.
    Dec 17, 2018 at 16:10
33

For those who are using .net Core 3.0 there is no need to use PInvoke platform in order to get the available physical memory. The GC class has added a new method GC.GetGCMemoryInfo that returns a GCMemoryInfo Struct with TotalAvailableMemoryBytes as a property. This property returns the total available memory for the garbage collector.(same value as MEMORYSTATUSEX)

var gcMemoryInfo = GC.GetGCMemoryInfo();
long installedMemory = gcMemoryInfo.TotalAvailableMemoryBytes;
// it will give the size of memory in MB
var physicalMemory = (double) installedMemory / 1048576.0;
4
  • My favorite answer. Thanks. Apr 20, 2020 at 15:57
  • 7
    FYI, if your app is compiled for x86 / 32-bit process but running on a 64-bit machine, then this will not return the true total system memory installed. In my case, instead of returning 32 GB it returned 2 GB. Mar 25, 2021 at 20:06
  • Note that you'll also need a 'using system;' for this code to work. Dec 6, 2021 at 10:48
  • 1
    This does give installed capacity on local machine, however when this piece of code is inside Azure Function, it is not giving correct value, something to be aware of. Mar 24, 2023 at 13:23
32

If you happen to be using Mono, then you might be interested to know that Mono 2.8 (to be released later this year) will have a performance counter which reports the physical memory size on all the platforms Mono runs on (including Windows). You would retrieve the value of the counter using this code snippet:

using System;
using System.Diagnostics;

class app
{
   static void Main ()
   {
       var pc = new PerformanceCounter ("Mono Memory", "Total Physical Memory");
       Console.WriteLine ("Physical RAM (bytes): {0}", pc.RawValue);
   }
}

If you are interested in C code which provides the performance counter, it can be found here.

2
  • works fine on any linux system, even on ARM systems.
    – harry4516
    Jan 8, 2017 at 12:47
  • @harry4516 on my Ubuntu system, PerformanceCounter is not supported
    – Carlos Liu
    Dec 29, 2020 at 8:18
16

Another way to do this, is by using the .NET System.Management querying facilities:

string Query = "SELECT Capacity FROM Win32_PhysicalMemory";
ManagementObjectSearcher searcher = new ManagementObjectSearcher(Query);

UInt64 Capacity = 0;
foreach (ManagementObject WniPART in searcher.Get())
{
    Capacity += Convert.ToUInt64(WniPART.Properties["Capacity"].Value);
}

return Capacity;
2
  • This is throwing a System.Management.ManagementException Out of Memory on my machine. Any ideas?
    – Amar
    Aug 3, 2017 at 15:39
  • 2
    I like this one. No need to reference Microsoft.VisualBasic.Devices. And as one-liner var Capacity = new ManagementObjectSearcher("SELECT Capacity FROM Win32_PhysicalMemory").Get().Cast<ManagementObject>().Sum(x => Convert.ToInt64(x.Properties["Capacity"].Value));
    – VDWWD
    Aug 2, 2019 at 18:22
7

you can simply use this code to get those information, just add the reference

using Microsoft.VisualBasic.Devices;

and the simply use the following code

    private void button1_Click(object sender, EventArgs e)
    {
        getAvailableRAM();
    }

    public void getAvailableRAM()
    {
        ComputerInfo CI = new ComputerInfo();
        ulong mem = ulong.Parse(CI.TotalPhysicalMemory.ToString());
        richTextBox1.Text = (mem / (1024*1024) + " MB").ToString();
    }
1
  • 1
    not found in .net 4.6 version. I mean it gives ComputerInfo namespace is not found. even more... namespace 'Devices' is doesnt exist.
    – gumuruh
    May 13, 2020 at 7:46
6
// use `/ 1048576` to get ram in MB
// and `/ (1048576 * 1024)` or `/ 1048576 / 1024` to get ram in GB
private static String getRAMsize()
{
    ManagementClass mc = new ManagementClass("Win32_ComputerSystem");
    ManagementObjectCollection moc = mc.GetInstances();
    foreach (ManagementObject item in moc)
    {
       return Convert.ToString(Math.Round(Convert.ToDouble(item.Properties["TotalPhysicalMemory"].Value) / 1048576, 0)) + " MB";
    }

    return "RAMsize";
}
5

You could use 'WMI'.

I found a 'snippet'.

Set objWMIService = GetObject("winmgmts:" _
& "{impersonationLevel=impersonate}!\\" _ 
& strComputer & "\root\cimv2") 
Set colComputer = objWMIService.ExecQuery _
("Select * from Win32_ComputerSystem")

For Each objComputer in colComputer 
  strMemory = objComputer.TotalPhysicalMemory
Next
1
  • Note that Set is no longer needed for VB.NET, is this VB6 code?
    – jrh
    Jan 18, 2017 at 19:20
4

Solution working on Linux (.Net Core). Inspired by GitHub/Hardware.Info. Optimized to have minimal memory allocation and avg retrieval takes 0.020 ms.

private static readonly object _linuxMemoryLock = new();
private static readonly char[] _arrayForMemInfoRead = new char[200];

public static void GetBytesCountOnLinux(out ulong availableBytes, out ulong totalBytes)
{
    lock (_linuxMemoryLock) // lock because of reusing static fields due to optimization
    {
        totalBytes = GetBytesCountFromLinuxMemInfo(token: "MemTotal:", refreshFromFile: true);
        availableBytes = GetBytesCountFromLinuxMemInfo(token: "MemAvailable:", refreshFromFile: false);
    }
}

private static ulong GetBytesCountFromLinuxMemInfo(string token, bool refreshFromFile)
{
    // NOTE: Using the linux file /proc/meminfo which is refreshed frequently and starts with:
    //MemTotal:        7837208 kB
    //MemFree:          190612 kB
    //MemAvailable:    5657580 kB

    var readSpan = _arrayForMemInfoRead.AsSpan();

    if (refreshFromFile)
    {
        using var fileStream = new FileStream("/proc/meminfo", FileMode.Open, FileAccess.Read, FileShare.ReadWrite);

        using var reader = new StreamReader(fileStream, Encoding.UTF8, leaveOpen: true);

        reader.ReadBlock(readSpan);
    }

    var tokenIndex = readSpan.IndexOf(token);

    var fromTokenSpan = readSpan.Slice(tokenIndex + token.Length);

    var kbIndex = fromTokenSpan.IndexOf("kB");

    var notTrimmedSpan = fromTokenSpan.Slice(0, kbIndex);

    var trimmedSpan = notTrimmedSpan.Trim(' ');

    var kBytesCount = ulong.Parse(trimmedSpan);

    var bytesCount = kBytesCount * 1024;

    return bytesCount;
}

Linux and Windows together - for easy copy paste. Windows code taken from the accepted answer.

public static void GetRamBytes(out ulong availableBytes, out ulong totalBytes)
{
    if (RuntimeInformation.IsOSPlatform(OSPlatform.Linux))
    {
        GetBytesCountOnLinux(out availableBytes, out totalBytes);
    }
    else if (RuntimeInformation.IsOSPlatform(OSPlatform.Windows))
    {
        GetBytesCountOnWindows(out availableBytes, out totalBytes);
    }
    else
    {
        throw new NotImplementedException("Not implemented for OS: " + Environment.OSVersion);
    }
}

private static readonly object _winMemoryLock = new();
private static readonly MEMORYSTATUSEX _memStatus = new();

private static void GetBytesCountOnWindows(out ulong availableBytes, out ulong totalBytes)
{
    lock (_winMemoryLock) // lock because of reusing the static class _memStatus
    {
        GlobalMemoryStatusEx(_memStatus);

        availableBytes = _memStatus.ullAvailPhys;
        totalBytes = _memStatus.ullTotalPhys;
    }
}

[StructLayout(LayoutKind.Sequential, CharSet = CharSet.Auto)]
private class MEMORYSTATUSEX
{
    public uint dwLength;
    public uint dwMemoryLoad;
    public ulong ullTotalPhys;
    public ulong ullAvailPhys;
    public ulong ullTotalPageFile;
    public ulong ullAvailPageFile;
    public ulong ullTotalVirtual;
    public ulong ullAvailVirtual;
    public ulong ullAvailExtendedVirtual;

    public MEMORYSTATUSEX()
    {
        this.dwLength = (uint)Marshal.SizeOf(typeof(MEMORYSTATUSEX));
    }
}

[return: MarshalAs(UnmanagedType.Bool)]
[DllImport("kernel32.dll", CharSet = CharSet.Auto, SetLastError = true)]
private static extern bool GlobalMemoryStatusEx([In] [Out] MEMORYSTATUSEX lpBuffer);
2

This function (ManagementQuery) works on Windows XP and later:

private static string ManagementQuery(string query, string parameter, string scope = null) {
    string result = string.Empty;
    var searcher = string.IsNullOrEmpty(scope) ? new ManagementObjectSearcher(query) : new ManagementObjectSearcher(scope, query);
    foreach (var os in searcher.Get()) {
        try {
            result = os[parameter].ToString();
        }
        catch {
            //ignore
        }

        if (!string.IsNullOrEmpty(result)) {
            break;
        }
    }

    return result;
}

Usage:

Console.WriteLine(BytesToMb(Convert.ToInt64(ManagementQuery("SELECT TotalPhysicalMemory FROM Win32_ComputerSystem", "TotalPhysicalMemory", "root\\CIMV2"))));
2
  • 2
    where does that BytesToMb function come from? Jan 18, 2017 at 21:08
  • @dlatikay it's inner fuction: private static double BytesToMb(long bytes) { return Math.Round(bytes / 1024d / 1024d, 2); }
    – Lance
    Jan 19, 2017 at 8:51
2

Compatible with .Net and Mono (tested with Win10/FreeBSD/CentOS)

Using ComputerInfo source code and PerformanceCounters for Mono and as backup for .Net:

using System;
using System.Diagnostics;
using System.Runtime.InteropServices;
using System.Security;

public class SystemMemoryInfo
{
    private readonly PerformanceCounter _monoAvailableMemoryCounter;
    private readonly PerformanceCounter _monoTotalMemoryCounter;
    private readonly PerformanceCounter _netAvailableMemoryCounter;

    private ulong _availablePhysicalMemory;
    private ulong _totalPhysicalMemory;

    public SystemMemoryInfo()
    {
        try
        {
            if (PerformanceCounterCategory.Exists("Mono Memory"))
            {
                _monoAvailableMemoryCounter = new PerformanceCounter("Mono Memory", "Available Physical Memory");
                _monoTotalMemoryCounter = new PerformanceCounter("Mono Memory", "Total Physical Memory");
            }
            else if (PerformanceCounterCategory.Exists("Memory"))
            {
                _netAvailableMemoryCounter = new PerformanceCounter("Memory", "Available Bytes");
            }
        }
        catch
        {
            // ignored
        }
    }

    public ulong AvailablePhysicalMemory
    {
        [SecurityCritical]
        get
        {
            Refresh();

            return _availablePhysicalMemory;
        }
    }

    public ulong TotalPhysicalMemory
    {
        [SecurityCritical]
        get
        {
            Refresh();

            return _totalPhysicalMemory;
        }
    }

    [SecurityCritical]
    [DllImport("Kernel32", CharSet = CharSet.Auto, SetLastError = true)]
    private static extern void GlobalMemoryStatus(ref MEMORYSTATUS lpBuffer);

    [SecurityCritical]
    [DllImport("Kernel32", CharSet = CharSet.Auto, SetLastError = true)]
    [return: MarshalAs(UnmanagedType.Bool)]
    private static extern bool GlobalMemoryStatusEx(ref MEMORYSTATUSEX lpBuffer);

    [SecurityCritical]
    private void Refresh()
    {
        try
        {
            if (_monoTotalMemoryCounter != null && _monoAvailableMemoryCounter != null)
            {
                _totalPhysicalMemory = (ulong) _monoTotalMemoryCounter.NextValue();
                _availablePhysicalMemory = (ulong) _monoAvailableMemoryCounter.NextValue();
            }
            else if (Environment.OSVersion.Version.Major < 5)
            {
                var memoryStatus = MEMORYSTATUS.Init();
                GlobalMemoryStatus(ref memoryStatus);

                if (memoryStatus.dwTotalPhys > 0)
                {
                    _availablePhysicalMemory = memoryStatus.dwAvailPhys;
                    _totalPhysicalMemory = memoryStatus.dwTotalPhys;
                }
                else if (_netAvailableMemoryCounter != null)
                {
                    _availablePhysicalMemory = (ulong) _netAvailableMemoryCounter.NextValue();
                }
            }
            else
            {
                var memoryStatusEx = MEMORYSTATUSEX.Init();

                if (GlobalMemoryStatusEx(ref memoryStatusEx))
                {
                    _availablePhysicalMemory = memoryStatusEx.ullAvailPhys;
                    _totalPhysicalMemory = memoryStatusEx.ullTotalPhys;
                }
                else if (_netAvailableMemoryCounter != null)
                {
                    _availablePhysicalMemory = (ulong) _netAvailableMemoryCounter.NextValue();
                }
            }
        }
        catch
        {
            // ignored
        }
    }

    private struct MEMORYSTATUS
    {
        private uint dwLength;
        internal uint dwMemoryLoad;
        internal uint dwTotalPhys;
        internal uint dwAvailPhys;
        internal uint dwTotalPageFile;
        internal uint dwAvailPageFile;
        internal uint dwTotalVirtual;
        internal uint dwAvailVirtual;

        public static MEMORYSTATUS Init()
        {
            return new MEMORYSTATUS
            {
                dwLength = checked((uint) Marshal.SizeOf(typeof(MEMORYSTATUS)))
            };
        }
    }

    private struct MEMORYSTATUSEX
    {
        private uint dwLength;
        internal uint dwMemoryLoad;
        internal ulong ullTotalPhys;
        internal ulong ullAvailPhys;
        internal ulong ullTotalPageFile;
        internal ulong ullAvailPageFile;
        internal ulong ullTotalVirtual;
        internal ulong ullAvailVirtual;
        internal ulong ullAvailExtendedVirtual;

        public static MEMORYSTATUSEX Init()
        {
            return new MEMORYSTATUSEX
            {
                dwLength = checked((uint) Marshal.SizeOf(typeof(MEMORYSTATUSEX)))
            };
        }
    }
}
0

Nobody has mentioned GetPerformanceInfo yet. PInvoke signatures are available.

This function makes the following system-wide information available:

  • CommitTotal
  • CommitLimit
  • CommitPeak
  • PhysicalTotal
  • PhysicalAvailable
  • SystemCache
  • KernelTotal
  • KernelPaged
  • KernelNonpaged
  • PageSize
  • HandleCount
  • ProcessCount
  • ThreadCount

PhysicalTotal is what the OP is looking for, although the value is the number of pages, so to convert to bytes, multiply by the PageSize value returned.

0

.NET has a memory amount limit that it can access. In Windows XP 2GB was the "hard ceiling". For instance: You could have 4 GB in it, and it would kill the app when it hit 2GB.

Also in 64 bit mode, there is a percentage of memory you can use out of the system, so I'm not sure if you can ask for the whole thing or if this is specifically guarded against.

5
  • /No/. Total physical memory means the actual memory physically installed. May 23, 2009 at 12:51
  • Actually, DevelopingChris is correct. If you call GlobalMemoryStatusEx on a XP machine with 4 Gig of Ram, it will report that there is only 3 Gig installed.
    – epotter
    Aug 7, 2009 at 17:46
  • Also, using WMI to query TotalPhysicalMemory in Win32_ComputerSystem or Win32_LogicalMemoryConfiguration also produces the wrong result.
    – epotter
    Aug 7, 2009 at 18:03
  • thank you, its not that I don't understand the question its that you have to use a different source for the information other than a .net library. Aug 7, 2009 at 20:20
  • This answer is the only one that makes sense. I tired it now on Win 64 8Gb ram using VisualBasic referenced. I get junk negative values.
    – Piotr Kula
    Sep 15, 2012 at 15:46
-2

Here is another, much more simply way, using .net:

// total memory
long totalPhysicalMemory = My.Computer.Info.TotalPhysicalMemory;

// unused memory
long availablePhysicalMemory = My.Computer.Info.AvailablePhysicalMemory;

// used memory
long usedMemory = totalPhysicalMemory - availablePhysicalMemory;
2
  • What namespace is that from? Is using a library?
    – Rafael
    May 2, 2023 at 13:31
  • documented here: learn.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/api/… - but its tied to vb.net so perhaps why this response is not getting any love :-)
    – Rob
    May 3, 2023 at 14:16
-3

var ram = new ManagementObjectSearcher("select * from Win32_PhysicalMemory") .Get().Cast<ManagementObject>().First();

|

var a = Convert.ToInt64(ram["Capacity"]) / 1024 / 1024 / 1024;

(richiede System.Managment.dll come riferimento, testato su C# con Framework 4.7.2)

questa procedura salva in "a" la ram totale presente in GB


ulong memory() { return new Microsoft.VisualBasic.Devices.ComputerInfo().TotalPhysicalMemory; }

|

var b = Convert.ToDecimal(memory()) / 1024 / 1024 / 1024;

(richiede Microsoft.VisualBasics.dll come riferimento, testato su C# Framework 4.7.2)

questa procedura salva in "b" il valore della ram in GB effettivamente disponibile


1
  • You should write the question in English.
    – CFreitas
    Mar 25, 2021 at 18:18
-4
/*The simplest way to get/display total physical memory in VB.net (Tested)

public sub get_total_physical_mem()

    dim total_physical_memory as integer

    total_physical_memory=CInt((My.Computer.Info.TotalPhysicalMemory) / (1024 * 1024))
    MsgBox("Total Physical Memory" + CInt((My.Computer.Info.TotalPhysicalMemory) / (1024 * 1024)).ToString + "Mb" )
end sub
*/


//The simplest way to get/display total physical memory in C# (converted Form http://www.developerfusion.com/tools/convert/vb-to-csharp)

public void get_total_physical_mem()
{
    int total_physical_memory = 0;

    total_physical_memory = Convert.ToInt32((My.Computer.Info.TotalPhysicalMemory) /  (1024 * 1024));
    Interaction.MsgBox("Total Physical Memory" + Convert.ToInt32((My.Computer.Info.TotalPhysicalMemory) / (1024 * 1024)).ToString() + "Mb");
}
1
  • 6
    That might be thanks to online Visual Basic to CShap converters. Jun 21, 2013 at 20:35

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