19

Is there a better way than this to check if a DataColumn in a DataTable is numeric (coming from a SQL Server database)?

  Database db = DatabaseFactory.CreateDatabase();
  DbCommand cmd = db.GetStoredProcCommand("Get_Some_Data");
  DataSet ds = db.ExecuteDataSet(cmd);

  foreach (DataTable tbl in ds.Tables) {
    foreach (DataColumn col in tbl.Columns) {
      if (col.DataType == typeof(System.Single)
        || col.DataType == typeof(System.Double)
        || col.DataType == typeof(System.Decimal)
        || col.DataType == typeof(System.Byte)
        || col.DataType == typeof(System.Int16)
        || col.DataType == typeof(System.Int32)
        || col.DataType == typeof(System.Int64)) {
        // this column is numeric
      } else {
        // this column is not numeric
      }
    }
  }

3 Answers 3

44

There is no good way to check if the type is numeric except comparing it to the actual types.
This is especially true if the definition of numeric is a bit different (in your case, according to code, - unsigned integers are not numerics).

Another thing is that DataColumn.DataType according to MSDN only supports following types:

  • Boolean
  • Byte
  • Char
  • DateTime
  • Decimal
  • Double
  • Int16
  • Int32
  • Int64
  • SByte
  • Single
  • String
  • TimeSpan
  • UInt16
  • UInt32
  • UInt64
  • Byte[]

The bolded types are numerics (as I define it) so you need to make sure you check them.

I personally would write an extension method for the DataColumn type (not for the TYPE!).
I hate the if...then..else thing so instead I use a SETS-based approach, like this:

public static bool IsNumeric(this DataColumn col) {
  if (col == null)
    return false;
  // Make this const
  var numericTypes = new [] { typeof(Byte), typeof(Decimal), typeof(Double),
        typeof(Int16), typeof(Int32), typeof(Int64), typeof(SByte),
        typeof(Single), typeof(UInt16), typeof(UInt32), typeof(UInt64)};
  return numericTypes.Contains(col.DataType);
}

And the usage would be:

if (col.IsNumeric()) ....

which is easy enough for me

7
  • I didn't include the unsigned integer types because they weren't listed in msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms131092%28SQL.90%29.aspx but I do like your approach. Nov 12, 2009 at 23:11
  • @JustinStolle, I would better include the unsigned types according to the MSDN page I provided. The page you reference is the SQL Server 2005 specific. Nov 12, 2009 at 23:14
  • 1
    @Dmitriy, makes sense, thank you! FYI, you are missing a comma after "typeof(Double)" in your code sample. Nov 12, 2009 at 23:20
  • Fixed that. That's the copy-paste's fault, not mine :) Nov 13, 2009 at 0:42
  • 2
    @Vincent, you don't need ArrayList. You can just do Array.IndexOf(numericTypes, col.DataType) != -1 Jan 10, 2010 at 22:02
2

Another method without using Arrays, just by one line of code:

return col != null && ",Byte,Decimal,Double,Int16,Int32,Int64,SByte,Single,UInt16,UInt32,UInt64,".Contains("," + col.DataType.Name + ",", StringComparison.Ordinal);

This can be used either as a normal helper method or as an extension method.

2
  • This is very inefficient! And incorrect for weird types called mal or nt16, for example. Sep 21, 2023 at 14:42
  • @MicheldeRuiter Did you measure its efficiency? string.Contains() is very fast, probably faster than a loop through items of an array! about the data types, although we know those weird data types like nt16 not exist, but if you want to make the code bullet proof, you can add also a comma at beginning (as shown in edited post). Sep 26, 2023 at 11:26
1

Maybe you could make it shorter with:

System.Type theType = col.DataType AS System.Type
if(theType  == System.Single || theType  == System.Double...) {}
0

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.