88

I am working in progress bar concept in ASP.NET MVC 2. Here i have a DropDownList which has 10 values. i want to calculate the percentage for progress bar, e.g. 10 values from DropDownList and i am having a query which returns the value 2. so, out of 10 values i am getting 2. "20 % completed" should be displayed.. How to do this calculation

8 Answers 8

108

Using Math.Round():

int percentComplete = (int)Math.Round((double)(100 * complete) / total);

or manually rounding:

int percentComplete = (int)(0.5f + ((100f * complete) / total));
5
  • So, complete and total should be int or double? Thanks.
    – Si8
    Jul 14, 2016 at 14:40
  • It doesn't matter actually if you use it exactly as written here. Proving this statement is an exercise left to the reader :)
    – Sogger
    Jul 15, 2016 at 18:15
  • 1
    you should never use a floating point number (ie double) for money Sep 26, 2017 at 9:53
  • 9
    If you are doing anything with money I would really, really hope you weren't googling 'how to calculate percentage' :P If you are, please do more reading on floating point precision, banker's rounding, and especially 'professional liability insurance'
    – Sogger
    Feb 24, 2018 at 20:00
  • @Sogger I am actually working with money and transactions and came here. I use decimal values myself, but wanted to be sure the percentage calculation would be correct. Nov 16, 2022 at 9:03
98

(current / maximum) * 100. In your case, (2 / 10) * 100.

9
  • Thanks a lot..how to round that.. for ex ( 2 / 11) * 100 means what should i do...
    – RobinHood
    Dec 30, 2010 at 9:30
  • 1
    use Math.Round and then decide on how many decimal places you want :) Dec 30, 2010 at 9:31
  • 1
    Cast it to an int. (int)((2.0 / 11.0) * 100.0) = 18. Dec 30, 2010 at 9:33
  • 2
    Count and DDLValues are integers, so your division is an "integer division", returning and integer result (witch you dont want). Try casting Count or DDLValues to a double. (((double)Count / DDLValues)... Dec 30, 2010 at 10:20
  • 1
    Result = Math.Round((double)(Count / DDLValues), 2) * 100;...This also shows error."cannot convert type double to int"
    – RobinHood
    Dec 30, 2010 at 10:25
52

With C# String formatting you can avoid the multiplication by 100 as it will make the code shorter and cleaner especially because of less brackets and also the rounding up code can be avoided.

(current / maximum).ToString("0.00%");

// Output - 16.67%

16

Mathematically, to get percentage from two numbers:

percentage = (yourNumber / totalNumber) * 100;

And also, to calculate from a percentage :

number = (percentage / 100) * totalNumber;
14

You can hold onto the percentage as decimal (value \ total) and then when you want to render to a human you can make use of Habeeb's answer or using string interpolation you could have something even cleaner:

var displayPercentage = $"{(decimal)value / total:P}";

or

//Calculate percentage earlier in code
decimal percentage = (decimal)value / total;
...
//Now render percentage
var displayPercentage = $"{percentage:P}";
1
  • 2
    I had trouble with literally every other method presented here, but this one worked.
    – baker.nole
    May 16, 2019 at 3:17
5

Bear in mind that you may need to cast one of the numbers to double if you have two ints

(double)i / events.Count * 100
0

In my case, I set two ints, and trying to calculate the percentage, and always get 0;

my code (before)

int Ff_Crm_Count = Ff_Crm.Count();
int Unfollowed_Ff_Crm_Count = Unfollowed_Ff_Crm.Count();
int The_Percentage = (Unfollowed_Ff_Crm_Count / Ff_Crm_Count) * 100);

after doing research (after)

double Ff_Crm_Count = Ff_Crm.Count();
double Unfollowed_Ff_Crm_Count = Unfollowed_Ff_Crm.Count();
double The_Percentage = Math.Round((double)((Unfollowed_Ff_Crm_Count / Ff_Crm_Count) * 100),2);
0

//For other people

If you need calculate using negative numbers:

double minValue = -100;
double value = 30;
double maxValue = 100;
dobule perc = (value - minValue) / (maxValue - minValue);
Console.WriteLine((perc * 100) + "%");

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