In data formats where all underlying types are strings, numeric types must be converted to a standardized string format which can be compared alphabetically. For example, a short for the value 27 could be represented as 00027 if there are no negatives.
What's the best way to represent a double as a string? In my case I can ignore negatives, but I'd be curious how you'd represent the double in either case.
UPDATE
Based on Jon Skeet's suggestion, I'm now using this, though I'm not 100% sure it'll work correctly:
static readonly string UlongFormatString = new string('0', ulong.MaxValue.ToString().Length);
public static string ToSortableString(this double n)
{
return BitConverter.ToUInt64(BitConverter.GetBytes(BitConverter.DoubleToInt64Bits(n)), 0).ToString(UlongFormatString);
}
public static double DoubleFromSortableString(this string n)
{
return BitConverter.Int64BitsToDouble(BitConverter.ToInt64(BitConverter.GetBytes(ulong.Parse(n)), 0));
}
UPDATE 2
I have confirmed what Jon suspected - negatives don't work using this method. Here is some sample code:
void Main()
{
var a = double.MaxValue;
var b = double.MaxValue/2;
var c = 0d;
var d = double.MinValue/2;
var e = double.MinValue;
Console.WriteLine(a.ToSortableString());
Console.WriteLine(b.ToSortableString());
Console.WriteLine(c.ToSortableString());
Console.WriteLine(d.ToSortableString());
Console.WriteLine(e.ToSortableString());
}
static class Test
{
static readonly string UlongFormatString = new string('0', ulong.MaxValue.ToString().Length);
public static string ToSortableString(this double n)
{
return BitConverter.ToUInt64(BitConverter.GetBytes(BitConverter.DoubleToInt64Bits(n)), 0).ToString(UlongFormatString);
}
}
Which produces the following output:
09218868437227405311
09214364837600034815
00000000000000000000
18437736874454810623
18442240474082181119
Clearly not sorted as expected.
UPDATE 3
The accepted answer below is the correct one. Thanks guys!