Convert and format data size units in .NET (bits, bytes, kilobits, kilobytes, and others).
$ dotnet add package DataSizeUnitsConvert and format data size units in .NET (bits, bytes, kilobits, kilobytes, and others).
Convert between many units of digital information, including bits, bytes, and their higher-order units (kilobits and kilobytes and the rest, up to and including exabits and exabytes)
DataSize sizeInMegabytes = new DataSize(150, Unit.Megabit).ConvertToUnit(Unit.Megabyte);
// sizeInMegabytes.Quantity == 17.8
// sizeInMegabytes.Unit == Unit.Megabyte
Normalize a number of bytes to an automatically-selected unit based on its magnitude
DataSize normalized = new DataSize(2_097_152).Normalize();
// normalized.Quantity == 2.0
// normalized.Unit == Unit.Megabyte
DataSize normalized = new DataSize(2_097_152).Normalize(true); // pass true to get bits units instead of bytes
// normalized.Quantity == 16.78
// normalized.Unit == Unit.Megabit
Parse and format unit names and abbreviations
Unit unit = DataSize.ParseUnit("MB");
// unit == Unit.Megabyte
string abbreviation = Unit.Terabyte.ToAbbreviation();
// abbreviation == "TB"
string iecAbbreviation = Unit.Terabyte.ToAbbreviation(true); // pass true for the IEC abbreviations (kibibyte, etc.)
// iecAbbreviation == "TiB";
TB) or IEC (TiB) variants.
string name = Unit.Terabyte.ToName();
// name == "terabyte";
string iecName = Unit.Terabyte.ToName(true); // pass true for the IEC names (kibibyte, etc.)
// iecName == "tebibyte";
Format bytes as a string with different unit and precision options
1.5 KB
string formatted = new DataSize(1536).ToString(1, Unit.Kilobyte); // precision 1, change to specified unit
// formatted == "1.5 KB"
string formatted = new DataSize(1536).ConvertToUnit(Unit.Kilobyte).ToString(1); // precision 1, don't change units
// formatted == "1.5 KB"
string formatted = new DataSize(1536).ToString("KB1"); // precision 1, change to specified unit
// formatted == "1.5 KB"
string formatted = new DataSize(1536).ToString(1, true); // precision 1, normalize to automatic unit
// formatted == "1.5 KB"
string formatted = string.Format(new DataSizeFormatter(), "Size: {0:KB1}", 1536); // precision 1, change to specified unit
// formatted == "Size: 1.5 KB"
string formatted = string.Format(DataSizeFormatter.Instance, "Size: {0:A1}", 1536); // precision 1, normalize to automatic unit
// formatted == "Size: 1.5 KB"
KB1 above) is made up of two optional parts, the destination unit (KB) and the precision (1).KB) is the data size unit to which you want the input bytes to be converted. You can also specify A to automatically normalize the unit of bytes and higher magnitudes, which is the default behavior if you omit the destination unit, and a normalizes to bits. Case matters for ambiguous units, like kB/KB/K for kilobytes and kb/k/Kb for kilobits. Unambiguous units like kilobyte/kbyte/kibibyte/kib can be provided in any case.1) is the number of digits after the decimal place. If you omit this, it will use the default number value for the culture of the current thread, for example 2. Set this to 0 if you want integers only.This package is available in NuGet Gallery.
This is a .NET Standard 2.0 library, and can be depended upon in projects with .NET Framework 4.6.1, .NET Core 2.0, or later.
| Tool | Installation |
|---|---|
| Visual Studio NuGet Package Manager | Search for DataSizeUnits |
| Visual Studio Package Manager Console | Install-Package DataSizeUnits |
| .NET Core SDK CLI | dotnet add package DataSizeUnits |