Reputation: 38073
VB has a couple of native functions for converting a char to an ASCII value and vice versa - Asc() and Chr().
Now I need to get the equivalent functionality in C#. What's the best way?
Upvotes: 35
Views: 108120
Reputation: 1018
The following routine works for me in a COM Interop server environment of .net standard 2.0 + .net 5 and a Classic ASP/VB6 client, with a code page of 1252.
I have not tested it with other code pages:
public static int Asc(char String)
{
int int32 = Convert.ToInt32(String);
if (int32 < 128)
return int32;
Encoding encoding = CodePagesEncodingProvider.Instance.GetEncoding(Thread.CurrentThread.CurrentCulture.TextInfo.ANSICodePage);
char[] chars = new char[1] { String };
if (encoding.IsSingleByte)
{
byte[] bytes = new byte[1];
encoding.GetBytes(chars, 0, 1, bytes, 0);
return (int)bytes[0];
}
byte[] bytes1 = new byte[2];
if (encoding.GetBytes(chars, 0, 1, bytes1, 0) == 1)
return (int)bytes1[0];
if (BitConverter.IsLittleEndian)
{
byte num = bytes1[0];
bytes1[0] = bytes1[1];
bytes1[1] = num;
}
return (int)BitConverter.ToInt16(bytes1, 0);
}
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 39
//You can create the function and no need change your program
private int Chr(int i)
{
return (char)i;
}
thanks to Soner Gönül
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 1350
I have extracted the Asc() function from Microsoft.VisualBasic.dll:
public static int Asc(char String)
{
int num;
byte[] numArray;
int num1 = Convert.ToInt32(String);
if (num1 >= 128)
{
try
{
Encoding fileIOEncoding = Encoding.Default;
char[] str = new char[] { String };
if (!fileIOEncoding.IsSingleByte)
{
numArray = new byte[2];
if (fileIOEncoding.GetBytes(str, 0, 1, numArray, 0) != 1)
{
if (BitConverter.IsLittleEndian)
{
byte num2 = numArray[0];
numArray[0] = numArray[1];
numArray[1] = num2;
}
num = BitConverter.ToInt16(numArray, 0);
}
else
{
num = numArray[0];
}
}
else
{
numArray = new byte[1];
fileIOEncoding.GetBytes(str, 0, 1, numArray, 0);
num = numArray[0];
}
}
catch (Exception exception)
{
throw exception;
}
}
else
{
num = num1;
}
return num;
}
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 1
Add this method into C# `
private int Asc(char String)
{
int int32 = Convert.ToInt32(String);
if (int32 < 128)
return int32;
try
{
Encoding fileIoEncoding = Encoding.Default;
char[] chars = new char[1] { String };
if (fileIoEncoding.IsSingleByte)
{
byte[] bytes = new byte[1];
fileIoEncoding.GetBytes(chars, 0, 1, bytes, 0);
return (int)bytes[0];
}
byte[] bytes1 = new byte[2];
if (fileIoEncoding.GetBytes(chars, 0, 1, bytes1, 0) == 1)
return (int)bytes1[0];
if (BitConverter.IsLittleEndian)
{
byte num = bytes1[0];
bytes1[0] = bytes1[1];
bytes1[1] = num;
}
return (int)BitConverter.ToInt16(bytes1, 0);
}
catch (Exception ex)
{
throw ex;
}
}
`
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 414
in C# you can use the Char.ConvertFromUtf32 statement
int intValue = 65; \\ Letter A
string strVal = Char.ConvertFromUtf32(intValue);
the equivalent of VB's
Dim intValue as integer = 65
Dim strValue As String = Char.ConvertFromUtf32(intValue)
No Microsoft.VisualBasic reference required
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 35171
Given char c and int i, and functions fi(int) and fc(char):
From char to int (analog of VB Asc()):
explicitly cast the char as an int: int i = (int)c;
or implicitly cast (promote): fi(char c) {i+= c;}
From int to char (analog of VB Chr()):
explicitly cast the int as an char: char c = (char)i, fc(int i) {(char)i};
An implicit cast is disallowed, as an int is wider (has a greater range of values) than a char
Upvotes: -2
Reputation: 11
//Char to Int - ASC("]")
int lIntAsc = (int)Char.Parse("]");
Console.WriteLine(lIntAsc); //Return 91
//Int to Char
char lChrChar = (char)91;
Console.WriteLine(lChrChar ); //Return "]"
Upvotes: -1
Reputation: 2041
I got these using resharper, the exact code runs by VB on your machine
/// <summary>
/// Returns the character associated with the specified character code.
/// </summary>
///
/// <returns>
/// Returns the character associated with the specified character code.
/// </returns>
/// <param name="CharCode">Required. An Integer expression representing the <paramref name="code point"/>, or character code, for the character.</param><exception cref="T:System.ArgumentException"><paramref name="CharCode"/> < 0 or > 255 for Chr.</exception><filterpriority>1</filterpriority>
public static char Chr(int CharCode)
{
if (CharCode < (int) short.MinValue || CharCode > (int) ushort.MaxValue)
throw new ArgumentException(Utils.GetResourceString("Argument_RangeTwoBytes1", new string[1]
{
"CharCode"
}));
if (CharCode >= 0 && CharCode <= (int) sbyte.MaxValue)
return Convert.ToChar(CharCode);
try
{
Encoding encoding = Encoding.GetEncoding(Utils.GetLocaleCodePage());
if (encoding.IsSingleByte && (CharCode < 0 || CharCode > (int) byte.MaxValue))
throw ExceptionUtils.VbMakeException(5);
char[] chars = new char[2];
byte[] bytes = new byte[2];
Decoder decoder = encoding.GetDecoder();
if (CharCode >= 0 && CharCode <= (int) byte.MaxValue)
{
bytes[0] = checked ((byte) (CharCode & (int) byte.MaxValue));
decoder.GetChars(bytes, 0, 1, chars, 0);
}
else
{
bytes[0] = checked ((byte) ((CharCode & 65280) >> 8));
bytes[1] = checked ((byte) (CharCode & (int) byte.MaxValue));
decoder.GetChars(bytes, 0, 2, chars, 0);
}
return chars[0];
}
catch (Exception ex)
{
throw ex;
}
}
/// <summary>
/// Returns an Integer value representing the character code corresponding to a character.
/// </summary>
///
/// <returns>
/// Returns an Integer value representing the character code corresponding to a character.
/// </returns>
/// <param name="String">Required. Any valid Char or String expression. If <paramref name="String"/> is a String expression, only the first character of the string is used for input. If <paramref name="String"/> is Nothing or contains no characters, an <see cref="T:System.ArgumentException"/> error occurs.</param><filterpriority>1</filterpriority>
public static int Asc(char String)
{
int num1 = Convert.ToInt32(String);
if (num1 < 128)
return num1;
try
{
Encoding fileIoEncoding = Utils.GetFileIOEncoding();
char[] chars = new char[1]
{
String
};
if (fileIoEncoding.IsSingleByte)
{
byte[] bytes = new byte[1];
fileIoEncoding.GetBytes(chars, 0, 1, bytes, 0);
return (int) bytes[0];
}
byte[] bytes1 = new byte[2];
if (fileIoEncoding.GetBytes(chars, 0, 1, bytes1, 0) == 1)
return (int) bytes1[0];
if (BitConverter.IsLittleEndian)
{
byte num2 = bytes1[0];
bytes1[0] = bytes1[1];
bytes1[1] = num2;
}
return (int) BitConverter.ToInt16(bytes1, 0);
}
catch (Exception ex)
{
throw ex;
}
}
/// <summary>
/// Returns an Integer value representing the character code corresponding to a character.
/// </summary>
///
/// <returns>
/// Returns an Integer value representing the character code corresponding to a character.
/// </returns>
/// <param name="String">Required. Any valid Char or String expression. If <paramref name="String"/> is a String expression, only the first character of the string is used for input. If <paramref name="String"/> is Nothing or contains no characters, an <see cref="T:System.ArgumentException"/> error occurs.</param><filterpriority>1</filterpriority>
public static int Asc(string String)
{
if (String == null || String.Length == 0)
throw new ArgumentException(Utils.GetResourceString("Argument_LengthGTZero1", new string[1]
{
"String"
}));
return Strings.Asc(String[0]);
}
Resources are just stored error message, so somehow the way you want ignore them, and the other two method which you do not have access to are as follow:
internal static Encoding GetFileIOEncoding()
{
return Encoding.Default;
}
internal static int GetLocaleCodePage()
{
return Thread.CurrentThread.CurrentCulture.TextInfo.ANSICodePage;
}
Upvotes: 6
Reputation: 1643
Strings.Asc is not equivalent with a plain C# cast for non ASCII chars that can go beyond 127 code value. The answer I found on https://social.msdn.microsoft.com/Forums/vstudio/en-US/13fec271-9a97-4b71-ab28-4911ff3ecca0/equivalent-in-c-of-asc-chr-functions-of-vb?forum=csharpgeneral amounts to something like this:
static int Asc(char c)
{
int converted = c;
if (converted >= 0x80)
{
byte[] buffer = new byte[2];
// if the resulting conversion is 1 byte in length, just use the value
if (System.Text.Encoding.Default.GetBytes(new char[] { c }, 0, 1, buffer, 0) == 1)
{
converted = buffer[0];
}
else
{
// byte swap bytes 1 and 2;
converted = buffer[0] << 16 | buffer[1];
}
}
return converted;
}
Or, if you want the read deal add a reference to Microsoft.VisualBasic assembly.
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 32698
You could always add a reference to Microsoft.VisualBasic and then use the exact same methods: Strings.Chr and Strings.Asc.
That's the easiest way to get the exact same functionality.
Upvotes: 34
Reputation: 351616
For Asc()
you can cast the char
to an int
like this:
int i = (int)your_char;
and for Chr()
you can cast back to a char
from an int
like this:
char c = (char)your_int;
Here is a small program that demonstrates the entire thing:
using System;
class Program
{
static void Main()
{
char c = 'A';
int i = 65;
// both print "True"
Console.WriteLine(i == (int)c);
Console.WriteLine(c == (char)i);
}
}
Upvotes: 27