How to: Determine Whether a String Represents a Numeric Value (C# Programming Guide)

To determine whether a string is a valid representation of a specified numeric type, use the static TryParse method that is implemented by all primitive numeric types and also by types such as DateTime and IPAddress. The following example shows how to determine whether "108" is a valid int.

  int i = 0; 
  string s = "108";
  bool result = int.TryParse(s, out i); //i now = 108

If the string contains nonnumeric characters or the numeric value is too large or too small for the particular type you have specified, TryParse returns false and sets the out parameter to zero. Otherwise, it returns true and sets the out parameter to the numeric value of the string.

Note

A string may contain only numeric characters and still not be valid for the type whose TryParse method that you use. For example, "256" is not a valid value for byte but it is valid for int. "98.6" is not a valid value for int but it is a valid decimal.

Example

The following examples show how to use TryParse with string representations of long, byte, and decimal values.

string numString = "1287543"; //"1287543.0" will return false for a long 
long number1 = 0;
bool canConvert = long.TryParse(numString, out number1);
if (canConvert == true)
  Console.WriteLine("number1 now = {0}", number1);
else
  Console.WriteLine("numString is not a valid long");

byte number2 = 0;
numString = "255"; // A value of 256 will return false
canConvert = byte.TryParse(numString, out number2);
if (canConvert == true)
  Console.WriteLine("number2 now = {0}", number2);
else
  Console.WriteLine("numString is not a valid byte");

decimal number3 = 0;
numString = "27.3"; //"27" is also a valid decimal
canConvert = decimal.TryParse(numString, out number3);
if (canConvert == true)
  Console.WriteLine("number3 now = {0}", number3);
else
  Console.WriteLine("number3 is not a valid decimal");            

Robust Programming

Primitive numeric types also implement the Parse static method, which throws an exception if the string is not a valid number. TryParse is generally more efficient because it just returns false if the number is not valid.

Security

Always use the TryParse or Parse methods to validate user input from controls such as text boxes and combo boxes.

See Also

Tasks

How to: Convert a byte Array to an int (C# Programming Guide)

How to: Convert a String to a Number (C# Programming Guide)

How to: Convert Between Hexadecimal Strings and Numeric Types (C# Programming Guide)

Concepts

Parsing Numeric Strings

Other Resources

Formatting Types