3

I'm developing a piece of software in C# and the end result is an Excel spreadsheet. The title of the spreadsheet is created using several variables to explain exactly what the spreadsheet is. One of the variables is a string which contains data like this:

'1.1.1'

I need to convert it at the point of creating the spreadsheet to be:

'1_1_1'

I have tried using the String.Replace method but it just seems to ignore it. Any ideas?

Best Regards

6
  • 7
    Share some code. Using String.Replace is the normal solution.
    – Ed Marty
    Jun 13, 2011 at 15:03
  • 3
    Please share the code that is failing.
    – Ed Chapel
    Jun 13, 2011 at 15:03
  • Let's see the code you used, as Replace should do the trick easily. Jun 13, 2011 at 15:03
  • 1
    More code would be nice, but I'm willing to bet that the 6 answers that all arrived within one minute of each other are onto something ;)
    – Tim
    Jun 13, 2011 at 15:07
  • 1
    @DeveloperX That code does in fact do something. Assign the result to a value, and take a look.
    – asawyer
    Jun 13, 2011 at 15:08

7 Answers 7

35

I bet you doing this:

myString.Replace(".","_");

When you should be doing this:

myString = myString.Replace(".","_");

Remember, in .Net strings are immutable, so any changes result in a new string.

2
  • 1
    Congratulations on the fast Nice Answer badge :)
    – Matt Ball
    Jun 13, 2011 at 15:14
  • 1
    @Matt Thanks, I'm more then a little shocked at the response.
    – asawyer
    Jun 13, 2011 at 15:19
12

Chances are you're ignoring the result of string.Replace. You need:

text = text.Replace('.', '_');

Just calling Replace doesn't change the existing string - it creates a new string and returns it. Strings are immutable in .NET - they never change after creation.

4

When you use string.Replace are you remembering that you have to assign it?

yourString.Replace(".", "_");

Will do nothing.

string newString = yourString.Replace(".", "_");

will return the string with the dots replaced with underscores.

2

If I had to guess, you're not capturing the value returned by String.Replace. Strings are immutable, so String.Replace returns a new string, which you need to store a reference to.

string foo = "1.1.1";
foo = foo.Replace('.', '_');
1
String input = "1.1.1";
input = input.Replace(".", "_");
0

strings are immutable, so make sure you're using it like this:

string myString = "1.1.1";
myString = myString.Replace('.', '_');
0

String.Replace is the right way to do this:

 private void button1_Click(object sender, RoutedEventArgs e) {
        String myNumbers = "1.1.1";
        Console.WriteLine("after replace: " + myNumbers);
        myNumbers = myNumbers.Replace(".", "_");
        Console.WriteLine("after replace: " + myNumbers);
    }

will produce:

after replace: 1.1.1
after replace: 1_1_1

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