5
public static void Main(string[] args)
{
     int num = 1;
     string number = num.ToString();
     Console.WriteLine(number[0]);
     Console.WriteLine(number[0] + number[0]);
}

I expect the output of 1 and 11 but I'm getting 1 and 98. What am I missing?

1
  • 6
    That isn't string addition it is char addition. Using indexing returns a char not a string.
    – nurdyguy
    Aug 28, 2019 at 18:40

2 Answers 2

9

The type of number[0] is char, not string - you're not performing any string concatenation. Instead, you've got a char with value 49 (the UTF-16 value for '1'). There's no +(char, char) operator, so both operands are being promoted to int and you're performing integer addition.

So this line:

Console.WriteLine(number[0] + number[0]);

is effectively this:

char op1 = number[0];
int promoted1 = op1;

char op2 = number[0];
int promoted2 = op2;

int sum = promoted1 + promoted2;
Console.WriteLine(sum);

(It's possible that logically the promotion happens after both operands have been evaluated - I haven't checked the spec, and as it won't fail, it doesn't really matter.)

7

Because of [], this give the first char of the string.

number[0] + number[0] is doing 49 + 49 (the ascii code of char 1);

I think you want to do this :

public static void Main(string[] args)
{
    int num = 1;
    string number = num.ToString();
    Console.WriteLine(number);
    Console.WriteLine(number + number);
}
2

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.