I am doing: -
Decimal production = 0;
Decimal expense = 5000;
Decimal.ToUInt64(production - expense);
But it throws exception with the following error message.
"Value was either too large or too small for a UInt64"
Can someone give me a workaround for this.
Thanks!
Edit
In any case, I want the result as a positive number.
Problem: -5000m is a negative number, which is outside the range of UInt64
(an unsigned type).
Solution: use Int64
instead of UInt64
if you want to cope with negative numbers.
Note that you can just cast instead of calling Decimal.To...
:
long x = (long) (production - expense);
Alternative: validate that the number is non-negative before trying to convert it, and deal with it however you deem appropriate.
Very dodgy alternative: if you really just want the absolute value (which seems unlikely) you could use Math.Abs
:
UInt64 alwaysNonNegative = Decimal.ToUInt64(Math.Abs(production - expense));
0 - 5000 will return -5000. And you are trying to convert to an unsigned int which can not take negative values.
Try changing it to signed int
Decimal.ToInt64(production - expense);
UInt can not store negative numbers. The result of your calculation is negative. That's why the error comes. Check the sign before using ToUInt64 and correct it via *-1 or use a signed Int64.
use
var result = Decimal.ToInt64(production - expense);