Custom Numeric Format Strings
A custom numeric format string, which you create and consists of one or more custom numeric format specifiers, defines how numeric data is formatted. A custom numeric format string is equivalently defined as any string that is not a standard numeric format string.
The following table describes the custom numeric format specifiers. For examples of the output produced by each format specifier, see Custom Numeric Format Strings Output Examples. For more information, see the notes that follow the table.
Format specifier | Name | Description |
---|---|---|
0 |
Zero placeholder |
If the value being formatted has a digit in the position where the '0' appears in the format string, then that digit is copied to the result string. The position of the leftmost '0' before the decimal point and the rightmost '0' after the decimal point determines the range of digits that are always present in the result string. The "00" specifier causes the value to be rounded to the nearest digit preceding the decimal, where rounding away from zero is always used. For example, formatting 34.5 with "00" would result in the value 35. |
# |
Digit placeholder |
If the value being formatted has a digit in the position where the '#' appears in the format string, then that digit is copied to the result string. Otherwise, nothing is stored in that position in the result string. Note that this specifier never displays the '0' character if it is not a significant digit, even if '0' is the only digit in the string. It will display the '0' character if it is a significant digit in the number being displayed. The "##" format string causes the value to be rounded to the nearest digit preceding the decimal, where rounding away from zero is always used. For example, formatting 34.5 with "##" would result in the value 35. |
. |
Decimal point |
The first '.' character in the format string determines the location of the decimal separator in the formatted value; any additional '.' characters are ignored. The actual character used as the decimal separator is determined by the NumberDecimalSeparator property of the NumberFormatInfo that controls formatting. |
, |
Thousand separator and number scaling |
The ',' character serves as both a thousand separator specifier and a number scaling specifier. Thousand separator specifier: If one or more ',' characters is specified between two digit placeholders (0 or #) that format the integral digits of a number, a group separator character is inserted between each number group in the integral part of the output. The NumberGroupSeparator and NumberGroupSizes properties of the current NumberFormatInfo object determine the character used as the number group separator and the size of each number group. For example, if the string "#,#" and the invariant culture are used to format the number 1000, the output is "1,000". Number scaling specifier: If one or more ',' characters is specified immediately to the left of the explicit or implicit decimal point, the number to be formatted is divided by 1000 each time a number scaling specifier occurs. For example, if the string "0,," is used to format the number 100 million, the output is "100". You can use thousand separator and number scaling specifiers in the same format string. For example, if the string "#,0,," and the invariant culture are used to format the number one billion, the output is "1,000". |
% |
Percentage placeholder |
The presence of a '%' character in a format string causes a number to be multiplied by 100 before it is formatted. The appropriate symbol is inserted in the number itself at the location where the '%' appears in the format string. The percent character used is dependent on the current NumberFormatInfo class. |
E0 E+0 E-0 e0 e+0 e-0 |
Scientific notation |
If any of the strings "E", "E+", "E-", "e", "e+", or "e-" are present in the format string and are followed immediately by at least one '0' character, then the number is formatted using scientific notation with an 'E' or 'e' inserted between the number and the exponent. The number of '0' characters following the scientific notation indicator determines the minimum number of digits to output for the exponent. The "E+" and "e+" formats indicate that a sign character (plus or minus) should always precede the exponent. The "E", "E-", "e", or "e-" formats indicate that a sign character should only precede negative exponents. |
\ |
Escape character |
In C# and C++, the backslash character causes the next character in the format string to be interpreted as an escape sequence. It is used with traditional formatting sequences like '\n' (new line). In some languages, the escape character itself must be preceded by an escape character when used as a literal. Otherwise, the compiler interprets the character as an escape sequence. Use the string "\\" to display '\'. Note that this escape character is not supported in Visual Basic; however, ControlChars provides the same functionality. |
'ABC' "ABC" |
Literal string |
Characters enclosed in single or double quotes are copied to the result string, and do not affect formatting. |
; |
Section separator |
The ';' character is used to separate sections for positive, negative, and zero numbers in the format string. |
Other |
All other characters |
Any other character is copied to the result string, and does not affect formatting. |
Notes
Floating-Point Infinities and NaN
Note that regardless of the format string, if the value of a Single or Double floating-point type is positive infinity, negative infinity, or Not a Number (NaN), the formatted string is the value of the respective PositiveInfinitySymbol, NegativeInfinitySymbol, or NaNSymbol property specified by the currently applicable NumberFormatInfo object.
Control Panel Settings
The settings in the Regional and Language Options item in Control Panel influence the result string produced by a formatting operation. Those settings are used to initialize the NumberFormatInfo object associated with the current thread culture, and the current thread culture provides values used to govern formatting. Computers using different settings will generate different result strings.
Rounding and Fixed-Point Format Strings
Note that for fixed-point format strings (that is, format strings that do not contain scientific notation format characters), numbers are rounded to as many decimal places as there are digit placeholders to the right of the decimal point. If the format string does not contain a decimal point, the number is rounded to the nearest integer. If the number has more digits than there are digit placeholders to the left of the decimal point, the extra digits are copied to the result string immediately before the first digit placeholder.
Section Separators and Conditional Formatting
Different formatting can be applied to a string based on whether the value is positive, negative, or zero. To produce this behavior, a custom format string can contain up to three sections separated by semicolons. These sections are described in the following table.
Number of sections | Description |
---|---|
One section |
The format string applies to all values. |
Two sections |
The first section applies to positive values and zeros, and the second section applies to negative values. If the number to be formatted is negative, but becomes zero after rounding according to the format in the second section, then the resulting zero is formatted according to the first section. |
Three sections |
The first section applies to positive values, the second section applies to negative values, and the third section applies to zeros. The second section can be left empty (by having nothing between the semicolons), in which case the first section applies to all nonzero values. If the number to be formatted is nonzero, but becomes zero after rounding according to the format in the first or second section, then the resulting zero is formatted according to the third section. |
Section separators ignore any preexisting formatting associated with a number when the final value is formatted. For example, negative values are always displayed without a minus sign when section separators are used. If you want the final formatted value to have a minus sign, you should explicitly include the minus sign as part of the custom format specifier.
The following code fragments illustrate how section separators can be used to produce formatted strings.
Dim MyPos As Double = 19.95
Dim MyNeg As Double = -19.95
Dim MyZero As Double = 0
' In the U.S. English culture, MyString has the value: $19.95.
Dim MyString As String = MyPos.ToString("$#,##0.00;($#,##0.00);Zero")
' In the U.S. English culture, MyString has the value: ($19.95).
' The minus sign is omitted by default.
MyString = MyNeg.ToString("$#,##0.00;($#,##0.00);Zero")
' In the U.S. English culture, MyString has the value: Zero.
MyString = MyZero.ToString("$#,##0.00;($#,##0.00);Zero")
double MyPos = 19.95, MyNeg = -19.95, MyZero = 0.0;
// In the U.S. English culture, MyString has the value: $19.95.
string MyString = MyPos.ToString("$#,##0.00;($#,##0.00);Zero");
// In the U.S. English culture, MyString has the value: ($19.95).
// The minus sign is omitted by default.
MyString = MyNeg.ToString("$#,##0.00;($#,##0.00);Zero");
// In the U.S. English culture, MyString has the value: Zero.
MyString = MyZero.ToString("$#,##0.00;($#,##0.00);Zero");
Two Custom Format Examples
The following code fragments demonstrate custom numeric formatting. In both cases the digit placeholder (#
) in the custom format string displays the numeric data, and all other characters are copied to the output.
Dim myDouble As Double = 1234567890
Dim myString As String = myDouble.ToString( "(###) ### - ####" )
' The value of myString is "(123) 456 – 7890".
Dim MyInt As Integer = 42
MyString = MyInt.ToString( "My Number = #" )
' In the U.S. English culture, MyString has the value:
' "My Number = 42".
Double myDouble = 1234567890;
String myString = myDouble.ToString( "(###) ### - ####" );
// The value of myString is "(123) 456 – 7890".
int MyInt = 42;
MyString = MyInt.ToString( "My Number = #" );
// In the U.S. English culture, MyString has the value:
// "My Number = 42".
See Also
Reference
Concepts
Numeric Format Strings
Custom Numeric Format Strings Output Examples
Standard Numeric Format Strings