Replace dot(.) with comma(,) using RegEx?

旧巷老猫 提交于 2019-12-04 06:19:49

When formatting numbers, you should use the string format overload that takes a CultureInfo object. The culture name for swedish is "sv-SE", as can be seen here.

decimal value = -16325.62m;
Console.WriteLine(value.ToString(CultureInfo.CreateSpecificCulture("sv-SE")));

Edit:

As @OregonGhost points out - parsing out numbers should also be done with CultureInfo.

Also have a look at

System.Globalization.CultureInfo.CurrentCulture.NumberFormat.CurrencyDecimalSeparator
scripni

Not sure what 100,00.56 represents, did you mean 10.000,56?
To answer your question:

For such a simple task, why use RegEx? You can do it much easier:

string oldValue = "100,00.56";
char dummyChar = '&'; //here put a char that you know won't appear in the strings
var newValue = oldValue.Replace('.', dummyChar)
                       .Replace(',', '.')
                       .Replace(dummyChar, ',');

Edit I agree with @Oded, for formatting numbers use the CultureInfo class.

You can do this even without regex. For example

var temp = price.Replace(".", "<TEMP>");
var temp2 = temp.Replace(",", ".");
var replaced = temp2.Replace("<TEMP>", ",");

Not a RegEx solution but from my experience - more correct:

public static string CheckDecimalDigitsDelimiter(this string instance)
{
    var sv = new CultureInfo("sv-SE");
    var en = new CultureInfo("en-US");

    decimal d;
    return (!Decimal.TryParse(instance, NumberStyles.Currency, sv, out d) &&
            Decimal.TryParse(instance, NumberStyles.Currency, en, out d)) ?
        d.ToString(sv) : // didn't passed by SV but did by EN
        instance;
}

What does this method do? It ensures that if given string is incorrect Sweden string but is correct English - convert it to Sweden, e.g. 100,00 -> 100,00 but 100.00 -> 100,00.

Do not rely on RegExp for this kind of thing :) Use the build in cultures fx:

decimal s = decimal.Parse("10,000.56", NumberStyles.Currency, CultureInfo.GetCultureInfo("en-US"));
string output = s.ToString("N",CultureInfo.GetCultureInfo("da-DK"));

en-US will parse it correctly and da-DK uses the other kind of representation. I live in DK and therefore use that but you should use the culture which fits your output.

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