decimal x = decimal.Parse("1.2345E-02", NumberStyles.Float);
Console.WriteLine(x); // Prints 0.012345
I'm not entirely sure why this isn't supported by default - the default is to use NumberStyles.Number, which uses the AllowLeadingWhite, AllowTrailingWhite, AllowLeadingSign, AllowTrailingSign, AllowDecimalPoint, and AllowThousands styles. Possibly it's performance-related; specifying an exponent is relatively rare, I suppose.
In addition to specifying the NumberStyles I would recommend that you use the decimal.TryParse function such as:
decimal result;
if( !decimal.TryParse("1.2345E-02", NumberStyles.Any, CultureInfo.InvariantCulture, out result) )
{
// do something in case it fails?
}
As an alternative to NumberStyles.Any you could use a specific set if you're certain of your formats. e.g:
"6.33E+03" converts to 6330 as expected. In German, decimal points are represented by commas, but 6,33E+03 converts to 633000! This is a problem for my customers, as the culture that generates the data is not known and may be different than the culture that is operating on the data. In my case, I always have scientific notation, so I can always replace comma to decimal point before parsing, but if you are working with arbitrary numbers, like pretty-formatted numbers like 1,234,567 then that approach doesn't work.
Be cautious about the selected answer: there is a subtility specifying System.Globalization.NumberStyles.Float in Decimal.Parse which could lead to a System.FormatException because your system might be awaiting a number formated with ',' instead of '.'
For instance, in french notation, "1.2345E-02" is invalid, you have to convert it to "1,2345E-02" first.
I've found that passing in NumberStyles.Float, in some cases, changes the rules by which the string is processed and results in a different output from NumberStyles.Number (the default rules used by decimal.Parse).
For example, the following code will generate a FormatException in my machine:
I'd recommend using the input NumberStyles.Number | NumberStyles.AllowExponent, as this will allow exponential numbers and will still process the string under the decimal rules.
CultureInfo culture = new CultureInfo("");
culture.NumberFormat.NumberDecimalDigits = 2;
culture.NumberFormat.NumberDecimalSeparator = ".";
culture.NumberFormat.NumberGroupSeparator = ",";
Decimal.Parse("1,234.5",NumberStyles.Number | NumberStyles.AllowExponent, culture); // Does not generate a FormatException
To answer the poster's question, the right answer should instead be:
decimal x = decimal.Parse("1.2345E-02", NumberStyles.Number | NumberStyles.AllowExponent);
Console.WriteLine(x);
You don't need to replace the dots (respectively the commas) just specify the input IFormatProvider:
float d = Single.Parse("1.27315", System.Globalization.NumberStyles.Float, new CultureInfo("en-US"));
float d = Single.Parse("1,27315", System.Globalization.NumberStyles.Float, new CultureInfo("de-DE"));
The default NumberStyle for decimal.Parse(String) is NumberStyles.Number, so if you just want to add the functionality to allow exponents, then you can do a bitwise OR to include NumberStyles.AllowExponent.
decimal d = decimal
.Parse("1.2345E-02", NumberStyles.Number | NumberStyles.AllowExponent);