557

I have an enum construct like this:

public enum EnumDisplayStatus
{
    None    = 1,
    Visible = 2,
    Hidden  = 3,
    MarkedForDeletion = 4
}

In my database, the enumerations are referenced by value. My question is, how can I turn the number representation of the enum back to the string name.

For example, given 2 the result should be Visible.

0

14 Answers 14

704

You can convert the int back to an enumeration member with a simple cast, and then call ToString():

int value = GetValueFromDb();
var enumDisplayStatus = (EnumDisplayStatus)value;
string stringValue = enumDisplayStatus.ToString();
5
243

If you need to get a string "Visible" without getting EnumDisplayStatus instance you can do this:

int dbValue = GetDBValue();
string stringValue = Enum.GetName(typeof(EnumDisplayStatus), dbValue);
2
  • 5
    If you about Mandoleen's answer there is an inaccuracy: Enum.GetName returns a string, not an Enum
    – algreat
    Jun 9, 2013 at 14:10
  • Much better than the accepted answer.
    – Yoda
    Dec 30, 2022 at 18:54
198

Try this:

string m = Enum.GetName(typeof(MyEnumClass), value);
0
91

Use this:

string bob = nameof(EnumDisplayStatus.Visible);
2
  • 14
    C# 6+ required though. Jul 17, 2018 at 18:32
  • 4
    This solution doesn't work if you want to pass in a variable Oct 15, 2022 at 19:08
47

The fastest, compile time solution using nameof expression.

Returns the literal type casing of the enum or in other cases, a class, struct, or any kind of variable (arg, param, local, etc).

public enum MyEnum {
    CSV,
    Excel
}


string enumAsString = nameof(MyEnum.CSV)
// enumAsString = "CSV"

Note:

  • You wouldn't want to name an enum in full uppercase, but used to demonstrate the case-sensitivity of nameof.
0
29

you can just cast it

int dbValue = 2;
EnumDisplayStatus enumValue = (EnumDisplayStatus)dbValue;
string stringName = enumValue.ToString(); //Visible

ah.. kent beat me to it :)

0
20

SOLUTION:

int enumValue = 2; // The value for which you want to get string 
string enumName = Enum.GetName(typeof(EnumDisplayStatus), enumValue);

Also, using GetName is better than Explicit casting of Enum.

[Code for Performance Benchmark]

Stopwatch sw = new Stopwatch (); sw.Start (); sw.Stop (); sw.Reset ();
double sum = 0;
int n = 1000;
Console.WriteLine ("\nGetName method way:");
for (int i = 0; i < n; i++) {
   sw.Start ();
   string t = Enum.GetName (typeof (Roles), roleValue);
   sw.Stop ();
   sum += sw.Elapsed.TotalMilliseconds;
   sw.Reset ();
}
Console.WriteLine ($"Average of {n} runs using Getname method casting way: {sum / n}");
Console.WriteLine ("\nExplicit casting way:");
for (int i = 0; i < n; i++) {
   sw.Start ();
   string t = ((Roles)roleValue).ToString ();
   sw.Stop ();
   sum += sw.Elapsed.TotalMilliseconds;
   sw.Reset ();
}
Console.WriteLine ($"Average of {n} runs using Explicit casting way: {sum / n}");

[Sample result]

GetName method way:
Average of 1000 runs using Getname method casting way: 0.000186899999999998
Explicit casting way:
Average of 1000 runs using Explicit casting way: 0.000627900000000002
5
  • 2
    This is a copy of a 7 year old answer. Can you explain why your's is better than the original?
    – nvoigt
    Feb 22, 2019 at 9:20
  • @nvoigt Because, if I am correct, the ToString() API on Enum is now obsolete. [learn.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/api/… Feb 22, 2019 at 10:02
  • So... at least two other answers already provide the code you posted. What does your's provide over the one from Mandoleen or algreat?
    – nvoigt
    Feb 22, 2019 at 10:44
  • @nvoigt They did not mention about its performance compared to Explicit casting. Is this sufficient for you to like my answer? :p Thanks anyway, I hope it will help someone. :) Feb 22, 2019 at 11:00
  • 1
    We seem to have a communication problem. Are you on a mobile device or maybe did you not scroll down far enough? There are two exact copies of your answer from 7 years back. I named the answerers, so they should be easy to find. What does your answer provide that has not been here for at least 7 years already?
    – nvoigt
    Feb 22, 2019 at 13:35
15

DB to C#

EnumDisplayStatus status = (EnumDisplayStatus)int.Parse(GetValueFromDb());

C# to DB

string dbStatus = ((int)status).ToString();
8

Just need:

string stringName = EnumDisplayStatus.Visible.ToString("f");
// stringName == "Visible"
2
  • 2
    in most cases, this is pretty much identical to the top answer from 10 years ago; the addition of the "f" specifier is nuanced, and may or may not be what the caller wants (it depends on: what they want): learn.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/standard/base-types/… Nov 29, 2018 at 12:50
  • 1
    I didn't pay attention to the date ahah. I think it is good to update a bit the old solution like this one. I won't be the last one to open this page. And thanks for your precision! :)
    – Al3x_M
    Nov 29, 2018 at 16:39
7

Given:

enum Colors {
    Red = 1,
    Green = 2,
    Blue = 3
};

In .NET 4.7 the following

Console.WriteLine( Enum.GetName( typeof(Colors), Colors.Green ) );
Console.WriteLine( Enum.GetName( typeof(Colors), 3 ) );

will display

Green
Blue

In .NET 6 the above still works, but also:

Console.WriteLine( Enum.GetName( Colors.Green ) );
Console.WriteLine( Enum.GetName( (Colors)3 ) );

will display:

Green
Blue
6

i have used this code given below

 CustomerType = ((EnumCustomerType)(cus.CustomerType)).ToString()
5

For getting the String value [Name]:

EnumDisplayStatus enumDisplayStatus = (EnumDisplayStatus)GetDBValue();
string stringValue = $"{enumDisplayStatus:G}"; 

And for getting the enum value:

string stringValue = $"{enumDisplayStatus:D}";
SetDBValue(Convert.ToInt32(stringValue ));
1
  • Why not just .ToString()? 'facepalm'
    – MeTitus
    Jan 2, 2020 at 9:44
4

Just cast the int to the enumeration type:

EnumDisplayStatus status = (EnumDisplayStatus) statusFromDatabase;
string statusString = status.ToString();
1

You can try this

string stringValue=( (MyEnum)(MyEnum.CSV)).ToString();
1
  • 1
    The cast is redundant Feb 8, 2022 at 15:52

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