I don't know what the correct wording is for what I am trying to achieve so it may already be posted online. Please be kind if it is.
Ok so basically I have this method.
public static T IsNull<T>(IDataReader dr, String name, T nullValue)
{
return Helpers.IsNull(dr, dr.GetOrdinal(name), nullValue);
}
public static T IsNull<T>(IDataReader dr, Int32 index, T nullValue)
{
if (d开发者_如何学JAVAr.IsDBNull(index))
{
return nullValue;
}
else
{
return (T)dr.GetValue(index);
}
}
Being called as Helpers.IsNull(dr, "UnitWholeSale", 0d)
and the error I am getting is "Cannot convert from double to decimal".
Now I know I can use decimal.Zero
but is there some way that I can simply go 0dec or something similar? I just hate those long shortcut values (especially when you are calling a constructor with 20 parameters).
0m
is how you say (decimal)0
because m
is the suffix that means decimal
.
Other suffixes are f
for float
, d
for double
, u
for unsigned
, and l
for long
. They can be either upper- or lower-case and u
can be combined with l
in either order to make a ulong
.
Although the suffixes are not case-sensitive, keep in mind what it says in the C# language specification, section 2.4.4.2:
As a matter of style, it is suggested that “L” be used instead of “l” when writing literals of type long, since it is easy to confuse the letter “l” with the digit “1”.
0m
will give you a decimal
0 value.
For the sake of completeness,
0.0 - double
0f - float
0m - decimal
float value = 0f || 0.0f || (float)0;
double value = 0d || 0.0d || (double)0;
decimal value = 0m || 0.0m || (decimal)0;
Be aware that each last example is a cast and therefor can lose precision
M
is the suffix for decimal
values, e.g. 200.32M
is considered to be of type decimal
to the compiler.
Instead of using 0d
, you can use 0m
for decimal values.
I assume nullValue
is really defaultvalue
, otherwise you could just do
public static T IsNull<T>(IDataReader dr, Int32 index)
{
if (dr.IsDBNull(index))
{
return default(T);
}
else
{
return (T)dr.GetValue(index);
}
}
Also looking more closely at your method you probably want a convertible value and use Convert.ChangeType()
, I don't think the simple casting would work for all types:
public static T IsNull<T>(IDataReader dr, Int32 index) where T: IConvertible
{
if (dr.IsDBNull(index))
{
return default(T);
}
else
{
return (T)Convert.ChangeType(dr.GetValue(index), typeof(T));
}
}
Use 0.0m
instead - m
denotes decimal
.
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