CUSIPs are a 9-digit alphanumeric code for uniquely identifying a financial security.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CUSIP
They were invented in the 1964, and given the reliability of data transmission in the 60's, the 9th digit is actually a check digit used to confirm the validity of the first 8 characters. Sometimes, even today, you might find reason to want to validate a CUSIP, or perhaps a company or service obnoxiously decides to only transmit the 8-character CUSIP, even though this defeats the purpose of a check digit.
The procedure to generate the check digit is:
Convert non-numeric digits to values according to their ordinal position in the alphabet plus 9 (A=10, B=11,...Z=35) and converting the characters *=36, @=37, #=38.
Multiply every even digit by 2
If the result of the multiplication is a two-digit number, add the digits together. (12 = 1 + 2 = 3)
Get the sum of all values.
Get the floored value of this operation: (10 - (sum modulo 10)) modulo 10.
What is the best/simplest way to get this value in C#?