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I have a bunch of data that I get as a string, and it needs to be formatted as a number (int).

So something like this: 128989899 needs to be displayed as 128,989,899

What would the correct way to achieve this?

PS: Currently existing questions do not address my question, before closing my question, please read it carefully or if you do close it, please provide a concise answer to what I am asking.

8
  • So to clarify, you receive strings containing data such as 128989899 and you wish to display this somewhere as a string, in the format 128,989,899?
    – Martin
    Feb 24, 2014 at 19:06
  • I have seen your previous question. What was wrong with the link suggested as duplicate and why you are now adding the VB warning?
    – varocarbas
    Feb 24, 2014 at 19:06
  • None of the formats in the link suggested achieve what I need.
    – sarsnake
    Feb 24, 2014 at 19:10
  • 1
    @Bonifacio2, please tell me how your link applies to my question and what I asked wrong. I am genuinely interested. Because none of the questions addressed my issue as I demonstrated below. Did you read my question? Do you answer c# questions here?
    – sarsnake
    Feb 24, 2014 at 19:27
  • 2
    There were enough clues for you to learn and derive the answers from the links provided. Also the point @Bonifacio2 made is not about who's right or wrong, it's about about educating ourselves on how to ask good questions and make the SO community better.
    – Chaitanya
    Feb 24, 2014 at 19:32

3 Answers 3

3

If I understand the question correctly, you have a string containing numbers stored as text.

You wish these to be displayed as comma-separated numbers such as 123,456,789.

Something along the lines of the following should help to achieve this, simply converting to an int and then back again into a string in the correct format:

string Input = "128989899";
int TempInt;
int.TryParse(Input, out TempInt);
string Output = TempInt.ToString("#,###");
2

Something like this:

var number = "128989899";
Console.WriteLine(String.Format("{0:N0}", Int32.Parse(number)));
5
  • @sarsnake note that this answer (very slight adapted) was also in the replicated link :)
    – varocarbas
    Feb 24, 2014 at 19:13
  • no, it wasn't. It had {0:N} format, but not {0:N0} which achieves different result. The point of this site is to answer the question asked not the question you think was asked.
    – sarsnake
    Feb 24, 2014 at 19:18
  • A small suggestion is to always use tryparse because it is more robust.
    – Chaitanya
    Feb 24, 2014 at 19:20
  • @sarsnake As commented right now in your other post, any alternative (proposed here or in the other link) works fine. You just have to convert the string into a number, via Parse/TryParse or Convert.ToInt32. But this was implicit; you should have asked rather than posting a new question.
    – varocarbas
    Feb 24, 2014 at 19:23
  • no. The alternative didn't work fine. Format mentioned in the alternative question gives me 128,989,899.00 and I need 128,989,899.
    – sarsnake
    Feb 24, 2014 at 20:38
1

Duplicate: string format numbers

int number = 1000000000;
string commaseperated = number.ToString("#,##0");
3
  • Can you please READ my question carefully? I have data coming in as string (not int); I could of course, convert it to to int, but I am asking whether this could be achieved without doing so.
    – sarsnake
    Feb 24, 2014 at 19:09
  • Yes, it COULD be achieve without converting to int... but it would be SO much easier and clear to convert to int then back to string.
    – Scottie
    Feb 24, 2014 at 19:11
  • @sarsnake - But the answer you accepted also converts the string to int as well! Feb 24, 2014 at 23:03

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