I have a TextBoxD1.Text
and I want to convert it to an int
to store it in a database.
How can I do this?
Try this:
int x = Int32.Parse(TextBoxD1.Text);
or better yet:
int x = 0;
Int32.TryParse(TextBoxD1.Text, out x);
Also, since Int32.TryParse
returns a bool
you can use its return value to make decisions about the results of the parsing attempt:
int x = 0;
if (Int32.TryParse(TextBoxD1.Text, out x))
{
// you know that the parsing attempt
// was successful
}
If you are curious, the difference between Parse
and TryParse
is best summed up like this:
The TryParse method is like the Parse method, except the TryParse method does not throw an exception if the conversion fails. It eliminates the need to use exception handling to test for a FormatException in the event that s is invalid and cannot be successfully parsed. - MSDN
Int64.Parse()
. If the input is non-int, then you will get an execption and a stack trace with Int64.Parse
, or the boolean False
with Int64.TryParse()
, so you'd need an if statement, like if (Int32.TryParse(TextBoxD1.Text, out x)) {}
.
Convert.ToInt32( TextBoxD1.Text );
Use this if you feel confident that the contents of the text box is a valid int
. A safer option is
int val = 0;
Int32.TryParse( TextBoxD1.Text, out val );
This will provide you with some default value you can use. Int32.TryParse
also returns a Boolean value indicating whether it was able to parse or not, so you can even use it as the condition of an if
statement.
if( Int32.TryParse( TextBoxD1.Text, out val ){
DoSomething(..);
} else {
HandleBadInput(..);
}
Convert.ToInt32(text)
and I'm confident that there's a number in there, but Visual Studio is yelling at me that it Cannot implicitly convert the string to int. Please help.
Apr 6, 2021 at 15:46
text
? Are there white spaces? Do you need to trim? Is the value out of range for an int?
Apr 6, 2021 at 18:46
int.TryParse()
It won't throw if the text is not numeric.
int myInt = int.Parse(TextBoxD1.Text)
Another way would be:
bool isConvertible = false;
int myInt = 0;
isConvertible = int.TryParse(TextBoxD1.Text, out myInt);
The difference between the two is that the first one would throw an exception if the value in your textbox can't be converted, whereas the second one would just return false.
code
int NumericJL; bool isNum = int.TryParse(nomeeJobBand, out NumericJL); if (isNum)//The the retured JL is able to pasred to int then go ahead for comparison { if (!(NumericJL >= 6)) { //Nominate } //else {}}
Dec 30, 2015 at 14:21
Be careful when using Convert.ToInt32()
on a char!
It will return the UTF-16 code of the character!
If you access the string only in a certain position using the [i]
indexing operator, it will return a char
and not a string
!
String input = "123678";
^
|
int indexOfSeven = 4;
int x = Convert.ToInt32(input[indexOfSeven]); // Returns 55
int x = Convert.ToInt32(input[indexOfSeven].toString()); // Returns 7
You need to parse the string, and you also need to ensure that it is truly in the format of an integer.
The easiest way is this:
int parsedInt = 0;
if (int.TryParse(TextBoxD1.Text, out parsedInt))
{
// Code for if the string was valid
}
else
{
// Code for if the string was invalid
}
Enjoy it...
int i = 0;
string s = "123";
i =int.Parse(s);
i = Convert.ToInt32(s);
int x = 0;
int.TryParse(TextBoxD1.Text, out x);
The TryParse statement returns a boolean representing whether the parse has succeeded or not. If it succeeded, the parsed value is stored into the second parameter.
See Int32.TryParse Method (String, Int32) for more detailed information.
While there are already many solutions here that describe int.Parse
, there's something important missing in all the answers. Typically, the string representations of numeric values differ by culture. Elements of numeric strings such as currency symbols, group (or thousands) separators, and decimal separators all vary by culture.
If you want to create a robust way to parse a string to an integer, it's therefore important to take the culture information into account. If you don't, the current culture settings will be used. That might give a user a pretty nasty surprise -- or even worse, if you're parsing file formats. If you just want English parsing, it's best to simply make it explicit, by specifying the culture settings to use:
var culture = CultureInfo.GetCulture("en-US");
int result = 0;
if (int.TryParse(myString, NumberStyles.Integer, culture, out result))
{
// use result...
}
For more information, read up on CultureInfo, specifically NumberFormatInfo on MSDN.
You can write your own extension method
public static class IntegerExtensions
{
public static int ParseInt(this string value, int defaultValue = 0)
{
int parsedValue;
if (int.TryParse(value, out parsedValue))
{
return parsedValue;
}
return defaultValue;
}
public static int? ParseNullableInt(this string value)
{
if (string.IsNullOrEmpty(value))
{
return null;
}
return value.ParseInt();
}
}
And wherever in code just call
int myNumber = someString.ParseInt(); // Returns value or 0
int age = someString.ParseInt(18); // With default value 18
int? userId = someString.ParseNullableInt(); // Returns value or null
In this concrete case
int yourValue = TextBoxD1.Text.ParseInt();
StringExtensions
instead of IntegerExtensions
, since these extension methods act on a string
and not on an int
?
Conversion of string
to int
can be done for: int
, Int32
, Int64
and other data types reflecting integer data types in .NET
Below example shows this conversion:
This shows (for info) data adapter element initialized to int value. The same can be done directly like,
int xxiiqVal = Int32.Parse(strNabcd);
Ex.
string strNii = "";
UsrDataAdapter.SelectCommand.Parameters["@Nii"].Value = Int32.Parse(strNii );
As explained in the TryParse documentation, TryParse() returns a Boolean which indicates that a valid number was found:
bool success = Int32.TryParse(TextBoxD1.Text, out val);
if (success)
{
// Put val in database
}
else
{
// Handle the case that the string doesn't contain a valid number
}
You can convert string to int many different type methods in C#
First one is mostly use :
string test = "123";
int x = Convert.ToInt16(test);
if int value is higher you should use int32 type.
Second one:
int x = int.Parse(text);
if you want to error check, you can use TryParse method. In below I add nullable type;
int i=0;
Int32.TryParse(text, out i) ? i : (int?)null);
Enjoy your codes....
int i = Convert.ToInt32(TextBoxD1.Text);
//May be quite some time ago but I just want throw in some line for any one who may still need it
int intValue;
string strValue = "2021";
try
{
intValue = Convert.ToInt32(strValue);
}
catch
{
//Default Value if conversion fails OR return specified error
// Example
intValue = 2000;
}
You can use either,
int i = Convert.ToInt32(TextBoxD1.Text);
or
int i = int.Parse(TextBoxD1.Text);
You can do like below without TryParse or inbuilt functions:
static int convertToInt(string a)
{
int x = 0;
for (int i = 0; i < a.Length; i++)
{
int temp = a[i] - '0';
if (temp != 0)
{
x += temp * (int)Math.Pow(10, (a.Length - (i+1)));
}
}
return x;
}
You also may use an extension method, so it will be more readable (although everybody is already used to the regular Parse functions).
public static class StringExtensions
{
/// <summary>
/// Converts a string to int.
/// </summary>
/// <param name="value">The string to convert.</param>
/// <returns>The converted integer.</returns>
public static int ParseToInt32(this string value)
{
return int.Parse(value);
}
/// <summary>
/// Checks whether the value is integer.
/// </summary>
/// <param name="value">The string to check.</param>
/// <param name="result">The out int parameter.</param>
/// <returns>true if the value is an integer; otherwise, false.</returns>
public static bool TryParseToInt32(this string value, out int result)
{
return int.TryParse(value, out result);
}
}
And then you can call it that way:
If you are sure that your string is an integer, like "50".
int num = TextBoxD1.Text.ParseToInt32();
If you are not sure and want to prevent crashes.
int num;
if (TextBoxD1.Text.TryParseToInt32(out num))
{
//The parse was successful, the num has the parsed value.
}
To make it more dynamic, so you can parse it also to double, float, etc., you can make a generic extension.
You can convert a string to int in C# using:
Functions of convert class i.e. Convert.ToInt16()
, Convert.ToInt32()
, Convert.ToInt64()
or by using Parse
and TryParse
Functions. Examples are given here.
This would do
string x = TextBoxD1.Text;
int xi = Convert.ToInt32(x);
Or you can use
int xi = Int32.Parse(x);
You can convert string to an integer value with the help of parse method.
Eg:
int val = Int32.parse(stringToBeParsed);
int x = Int32.parse(1234);
In C# v.7 you could use an inline out parameter, without an additional variable declaration:
int.TryParse(TextBoxD1.Text, out int x);
In case you know the string is an integer do:
int value = int.Parse(TextBoxD1.Text);
In case you don't know the string is an integer do it safely with TryParse
.
In C# 7.0
you can use inline variable declaration.
Code:
if (int.TryParse(TextBoxD1.Text, out int value))
{
// Parse succeed
}
Drawback:
You cannot differentiate between a 0 value and a non parsed value.
The way I always do this is like this:
using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.ComponentModel;
using System.Data;
using System.Drawing;
using System.Linq;
using System.Text;
using System.Windows.Forms;
namespace example_string_to_int
{
public partial class Form1 : Form
{
public Form1()
{
InitializeComponent();
}
private void button1_Click(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
string a = textBox1.Text;
// This turns the text in text box 1 into a string
int b;
if (!int.TryParse(a, out b))
{
MessageBox.Show("This is not a number");
}
else
{
textBox2.Text = a+" is a number" ;
}
// Then this 'if' statement says if the string is not a number, display an error, else now you will have an integer.
}
}
}
This is how I would do it.
All the above answers are good but for information, we can use int.TryParse
which is safe to convert string to int, for example
// TryParse returns true if the conversion succeeded
// and stores the result in j.
int j;
if (Int32.TryParse("-105", out j))
Console.WriteLine(j);
else
Console.WriteLine("String could not be parsed.");
// Output: -105
TryParse never throws an exception—even on invalid input and null. It is overall preferable to int.Parse
in most program contexts.
Source: How to convert string to int in C#? (With Difference between Int.Parse and Int.TryParse)
METHOD 1
int TheAnswer1 = 0;
bool Success = Int32.TryParse("42", out TheAnswer1);
if (!Success) {
Console.WriteLine("String not Convertable to an Integer");
}
METHOD 2
int TheAnswer2 = 0;
try {
TheAnswer2 = Int32.Parse("42");
}
catch {
Console.WriteLine("String not Convertable to an Integer");
}
METHOD 3
int TheAnswer3 = 0;
try {
TheAnswer3 = Int32.Parse("42");
}
catch (FormatException) {
Console.WriteLine("String not in the correct format for an Integer");
}
catch (ArgumentNullException) {
Console.WriteLine("String is null");
}
catch (OverflowException) {
Console.WriteLine("String represents a number less than"
+ "MinValue or greater than MaxValue");
}
You can try the following. It will work:
int x = Convert.ToInt32(TextBoxD1.Text);
The string value in the variable TextBoxD1.Text will be converted into Int32 and will be stored in x.
While I agree on using the TryParse
method, a lot of people dislike the use of out
parameter (myself included). With tuple support having been added to C#, an alternative is to create an extension method that will limit the number of times you use out
to a single instance:
public static class StringExtensions
{
public static (int result, bool canParse) TryParse(this string s)
{
int res;
var valid = int.TryParse(s, out res);
return (result: res, canParse: valid);
}
}
(Source: C# how to convert a string to int)
If you're looking for the long way, just create your one method:
static int convertToInt(string a)
{
int x = 0;
Char[] charArray = a.ToCharArray();
int j = charArray.Length;
for (int i = 0; i < charArray.Length; i++)
{
j--;
int s = (int)Math.Pow(10, j);
x += ((int)Char.GetNumericValue(charArray[i]) * s);
}
return x;
}