I have a string
in C# that is converted from a decimal
value using String.Format()
and rounds the number to 2 decimal places:
string result = "some stuff $" + String.Format("{0:0.00}", decValue);
So, the result
variable will look something like: some stuff $4.99
The result
variable is actually a larger string
with the decimal
value appended to the end of it. So, when I get the actual decimal
value back from the string, I'll do something like this:
string str = result;
str = str.Substring(str.LastIndexOf("$")+1);
decimal dec = decimal.Parse(str);
The problem is, the Substring()
method is leaving a literal curly brace }
on the end of the returned substring, so I can't actually parse it as a decimal:
4.99}
I can get rid of the brace manually, but I don't see why I should have to as it makes no sense as to why Substring()
is actually leaving the brace hanging on the end there.
str
before callingsubstring
to see what't the issue.result
doesn't contain curly brace.decValue
get the value?result
assignment, I'd say you might have a typo in your actual code. I would guess that you have an extra curly brace:string result = "some stuff $" + String.Format("{0:0.00}}", decValue);
(note the extra curly brace after "0.00") Also, I wouldn't useString.Format
just to use curly brace notation. You can just have:"someStuff $" + decValue.ToString("0.00")
or if you wish, useString.Format
around the whole thing:String.Format("someStuff ${0:0.00}", decValue);