How can I convert an int
datatype into a string
datatype in C#?
12 Answers
string myString = myInt.ToString();
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5My problem with this is that you lose type safety. myInt could be anything. Nothing here says take an integer and convert it to a string. myInt could be an object and an object can't be converted to a string. That's known at compile time, but it wouldn't even raise a runtime exception it would just allow bad data. Dec 15, 2016 at 16:29
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5@TimothyGonzalez That's an edge case, if you call .ToString() its usually because you need it to be a string and it can be a string.– EpicKipFeb 15, 2017 at 13:58
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53@nfgallimore It is not a valid edge case it is not even an edge case in this situation. The OP stated he had an int type he wanted converted to a string. If it is an int type, then plain and simple the value is an int. The compiler will insure that is the case. Not even sure how you went off on that tangent. The OP didn't ask how to make sure a random reference was an integer and then convert it to a string. Perhaps in that case you have a point, but that is not the case.– AaronMJun 22, 2018 at 23:46
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2@MehdiDehghani, data type
int
from the question would not be null. But for the sake of argument, data typeint?
could be null, but that would return an empty string, not throw. However, should the data type not beint
, but instead be anint?
boxed toobject
, then yes, it would throw if null. Nov 30, 2018 at 21:37 -
41The comments on this answer are ridiculous.– user1228Mar 22, 2019 at 15:16
string a = i.ToString();
string b = Convert.ToString(i);
string c = string.Format("{0}", i);
string d = $"{i}";
string e = "" + i;
string f = string.Empty + i;
string g = new StringBuilder().Append(i).ToString();
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6
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2Are all these solutions equally efficient? I'd imagine i.ToString() does some unnecessary boxing of the int, but perhaps that is optimised anyway. Sep 23, 2013 at 16:22
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54
.ToString()
is the most efficient way to do the conversion. All of the other methods presented here will eventually call.ToString()
anyway. Sep 24, 2013 at 7:47
Just in case you want the binary representation and you're still drunk from last night's party:
private static string ByteToString(int value)
{
StringBuilder builder = new StringBuilder(sizeof(byte) * 8);
BitArray[] bitArrays = BitConverter.GetBytes(value).Reverse().Select(b => new BitArray(new []{b})).ToArray();
foreach (bool bit in bitArrays.SelectMany(bitArray => bitArray.Cast<bool>().Reverse()))
{
builder.Append(bit ? '1' : '0');
}
return builder.ToString();
}
Note: Something about not handling endianness very nicely...
If you don't mind sacrificing a bit of memory for speed, you can use below to generate an array with pre-calculated string values:
static void OutputIntegerStringRepresentations()
{
Console.WriteLine("private static string[] integerAsDecimal = new [] {");
for (int i = int.MinValue; i < int.MaxValue; i++)
{
Console.WriteLine("\t\"{0}\",", i);
}
Console.WriteLine("\t\"{0}\"", int.MaxValue);
Console.WriteLine("}");
}
The ToString method of any object is supposed to return a string representation of that object.
int var1 = 2;
string var2 = var1.ToString();
Further on to @Xavier's response, here's a page that does speed comparisons between several different ways to do the conversion from 100 iterations up to 21,474,836 iterations.
It seems pretty much a tie between:
int someInt = 0;
someInt.ToString(); //this was fastest half the time
//and
Convert.ToString(someInt); //this was the fastest the other half the time
string str = intVar.ToString();
In some conditions, you do not have to use ToString()
string str = "hi " + intVar;
using System.ComponentModel;
TypeConverter converter = TypeDescriptor.GetConverter(typeof(int));
string s = (string)converter.ConvertTo(i, typeof(string));
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This answer turned up in the low quality review queue, presumably because you didn't explain the code. If you do explain it (in your answer), you are far more likely to get more upvotes—and the questioner actually learns something! Sep 10, 2014 at 15:00
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5@TheGuywithTheHat You'll notice that none of the answers here have any explanation of the code, particularly all the code samples in this highly-upvoted answer, because it's obvious what they all must be doing: converting an int to a string. Truthfully we don't need anything beyond the accepted answer --
i.ToString
-- the rest are only here for the sake of completeness and fun.– nmcleanSep 10, 2014 at 17:04 -
What is the advantage of this way to do it? It uses obscure classes and just makes it complicated for no benefit May 22, 2019 at 21:17
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2@reggaeguitar It's mostly a joke answer, we were purposely adding more and more obscure ways of doing one of the most basic tasks. But to your question, the advantage of this method would be if you didn't know the types in advance - instead of
typeof(int)
andtypeof(string)
you could have Type variables and it would find and use an appropriate converter whenever one exists.– nmcleanMay 23, 2019 at 11:56
None of the answers mentioned that the ToString()
method can be applied to integer expressions
Debug.Assert((1000*1000).ToString()=="1000000");
even to integer literals
Debug.Assert(256.ToString("X")=="100");
Although integer literals like this are often considered to be bad coding style (magic numbers) there may be cases where this feature is useful...
string s = "" + 2;
and you can do nice things like:
string s = 2 + 2 + "you"
The result will be:
"4 you"
if you're getting from a dataset
string newbranchcode = (Convert.ToInt32(ds.Tables[0].Rows[0]["MAX(BRANCH_CODE)"]) ).ToString();
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