vote up 7 vote down star
3

Hi,

I am wondering if there is a method or format string I'm missing in .NET to convert the following:

   1 to 1st
   2 to 2nd
   3 to 3rd
   4 to 4th
  11 to 11th
 101 to 101st
 111 to 111th

This link has a bad example of the basic principle involved in writing your own function, but I am more curious if there is an inbuilt capacity I'm missing.

Solution

Scott Hanselman's answer is the accepted one because it answers the question directly.

For a solution however, see this great answer.

flag

They're called ordinal numbers (1st, 2nd, etc.) as opposed to cardinal numbers (1,2,3, etc.), FYI. – pc1oad1etter Sep 16 '08 at 4:15
This was answered quite elegantly here: stackoverflow.com/questions/20156/… – Portman Sep 17 '08 at 14:32
Yeah I noticed your answer. – Graphain Sep 18 '08 at 0:41

8 Answers

vote up 14 vote down check

No, there is no inbuilt capability in the .NET Base Class Library.

link|flag
vote up 35 vote down

It's a function which is a lot simpler than you think. Though there might be a .NET function already in existence for this, the following function (written in PHP) does the job. It shouldn't be too hard to port it over.

function ordinal($num) {
    $ones = $num % 10;
    $tens = floor($num / 10) % 10;
    if ($tens == 1) {
        $suff = "th";
    } else {
        switch ($ones) {
            case 1 : $suff = "st"; break;
            case 2 : $suff = "nd"; break;
            case 3 : $suff = "rd"; break;
            default : $suff = "th";
        }
    }
    return $num . $suff;
}
link|flag
Cool function. I almost thought it didn't work until I tried it :-) – Graphain Sep 16 '08 at 4:03
And I almost thought it didn't work again :P – Graphain Sep 16 '08 at 4:12
What about localization? – macbirdie Sep 16 '08 at 21:26
Localization will mean that you have to create separate functions for each language. In german, you could just append "ter", but "1ter" "2ter" "3ter" looks really bad even though it's grammatically correct. In french, it's a bit better, but there is no universal way for every language. – Michael Stum Sep 17 '08 at 9:14
vote up 4 vote down

This has already been covered but I'm unsure how to link to it. Here is the code snippit:

	public static string Ordinal(this int number)
	{
		var ones = number % 10;
		var tens = Math.Floor (number / 10f) % 10;
		if (tens == 1)
		{
			return number + "th";
		}

		switch (number % 10)
		{
			case 1: return number + "st";
			case 2: return number + "nd";
			case 3: return number + "rd";
			default: return number + "th";
		}
	}

FYI: This is as an extension method. If your .NET version is less than 3.5 just remove the this keyword

[EDIT]: Thanks for pointing that it was incorrect, that's what you get for copy / pasting code :)

link|flag
Doesn't work. 1011 % 10 == 1. 1011st is incorrect. – Graphain Sep 16 '08 at 4:00
+1 for extension method – Even Mien Apr 27 at 12:33
I like how you declare the ones variable and never use it. – John Gietzen May 8 at 20:14
vote up -3 vote down

I think the ordinal suffix is hard to get... you basically have to write a function that uses a switch to test the numbers and add the suffix.

There's no reason for a language to provide this internally, especially when it's locale specific.

You can do a bit better than that link when it comes to the amount of code to write, but you have to code a function for this...

link|flag
Given all the currency localisation strings etc. it seems a little stretch to add ordinal suffix. – Graphain Sep 16 '08 at 4:06
vote up 11 vote down

@nickf: Here is the PHP function in C#:

public static string Ordinal(int number)
{
	string suffix = String.Empty;

	int ones = number % 10;
	int tens = (int)Math.Floor(number / 10M) % 10;

	if (tens == 1)
	{
		suffix = "th";
	}
	else
	{
		switch (ones)
		{
			case 1:
				suffix = "st";
				break;

			case 2:
				suffix = "nd";
				break;

			case 3:
				suffix = "rd";
				break;

			default:
				suffix = "th";
				break;
		}
	}
	return String.Format("{0}{1}", number, suffix);
}
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Ha thanks, just about to post the code I wrote out. Yours beats mine anyway with the String.Format bit I think. – Graphain Sep 16 '08 at 4:21
vote up 3 vote down

This has already been asked, and answered:

Ordinals in C#

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

else if (choice=='q') {qtr++;

                   switch (qtr)
                  {  case(2): strcpy(qtrs,"nd");break;
                     case(3): {strcpy(qtrs,"rd");
                               cout<<"End of First Half!!!";
                               cout<<" hteam "<<"["<<hteam<<"] "<<hs;
                               cout<<" vteam "<<" ["<<vteam;
                               cout<<"] ";
                               cout<<vs;dwn=1;yd=10;

                               if (beginp=='H') team='V';
                               else             team='H';
                               break;
                               }
                   case(4): strcpy(qtrs,"th");break;
link|flag
vote up 2 vote down

Here's a Microsoft SQL Server Function version:

CREATE FUNCTION [Internal].[GetNumberAsOrdinalString]
(
    @num int
)
RETURNS nvarchar(max)
AS
BEGIN

    DECLARE @Suffix nvarchar(2);
    DECLARE @Ones int;  
    DECLARE @Tens int;

    SET @Ones = @num % 10;
    SET @Tens = FLOOR(@num / 10) % 10;

    IF @Tens = 1
    BEGIN
        SET @Suffix = 'th';
    END
    ELSE
    BEGIN

    SET @Suffix = 
        CASE @Ones
            WHEN 1 THEN 'st'
            WHEN 2 THEN 'nd'
            WHEN 3 THEN 'rd'
            ELSE 'th'
        END
    END

    RETURN CONVERT(nvarchar(max), @num) + @Suffix;
END
link|flag
I just wrote that function almost verbatim! Differences: master db, cast instead of convert, and I use slightly different indenting. Great minds, I guess... – John Gietzen May 8 at 20:21

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