42

I have an Array where some drive data from WMI are captured:

$drivedata = $Drives | select  @{Name="Kapazität(GB)";Expression={$_.Kapazität}}

The Array has these values (2 drives):

@{Kapazität(GB)=1.500} @{Kapazität(GB)=1.500}

and just want to convert the 1.500 into a number 1500

I tried different suggestions I found here, but couldn't get it working:

-Replace ".","" and [int] doesn't work. I am not sure if regex would be correct and how to do this.

4
  • 1
    How do you get the data from WMI? When I use Get-WmiObject Win32_logicaldisk the type of the size attribute value is an integer. So it might be better to fix that "problem"? Aug 15, 2014 at 7:38
  • 1
    Basic maths: 1.5 * 1000 = 1500. Maybe you are labelling your properties wrong and that's why the number is not what you expect(TB vs GB)?
    – Raf
    Aug 15, 2014 at 8:23
  • @OcasoProtal: I am using the Object: code $Data = Get-ClusterSharedVolume -Cluster $Clustername | select -Expand SharedVolumeInfo | select FriendlyVolumeName , @{n="Kapazität";e={"{0:N0}" -f ($_.Partition.Size/1GB)}}
    – MMAX
    Aug 15, 2014 at 13:24
  • @Raf: the script ran ok as Long as the Capacity was below 1.000 GB :-) Unfortunately its hard for me to find the proper formatting for the variable - May you have a look to my comment above?
    – MMAX
    Aug 15, 2014 at 13:30

6 Answers 6

64

Simply casting the string as an int won't work reliably. You need to convert it to an int32. For this you can use the .NET convert class and its ToInt32 method. The method requires a string ($strNum) as the main input, and the base number (10) for the number system to convert to. This is because you can not only convert to the decimal system (the 10 base number), but also to, for example, the binary system (base 2).

Give this method a try:

[string]$strNum = "1.500"
[int]$intNum = [convert]::ToInt32($strNum, 10)

$intNum
2
  • 4
    What happens when the string isn't an int... this will blow up no?
    – Nicholas
    Mar 15, 2016 at 13:00
  • 1
    This will blow up if the string is not a number. e.g. [int]$intNum = [convert]::ToInt32("not a number", 10) Exception calling "ToInt32" with "2" argument(s): "Could not find any recognizable digits." Mar 22, 2019 at 15:33
31

Simply divide the Variable containing Numbers as a string by 1. PowerShell automatically convert the result to an integer.

$a = 15; $b = 2; $a + $b --> 152

But if you divide it before:

$a/1 + $b/1 --> 17

0
11

Since this topic never received a verified solution, I can offer a simple solution to the two issues I see you asked solutions for.

  1. Replacing the "." character when value is a string

The string class offers a replace method for the string object you want to update:

Example:

$myString = $myString.replace(".","") 
  1. Converting the string value to an integer

The system.int32 class (or simply [int] in powershell) has a method available called "TryParse" which will not only pass back a boolean indicating whether the string is an integer, but will also return the value of the integer into an existing variable by reference if it returns true.

Example:

[string]$convertedInt = "1500"
[int]$returnedInt = 0
[bool]$result = [int]::TryParse($convertedInt, [ref]$returnedInt)

I hope this addresses the issue you initially brought up in your question.

1
  • The safest solution... (y)
    – Kreshnik
    Sep 14, 2017 at 21:30
2

Replace all but the digits in the string like so:

$messyString = "Get the integer from this string: -1.500 !!"
[int]$myInt = $messyString -replace '\D', ''
$myInt
# PS > 1500

The regex \D will match everything except digits and remove them from your string.

This will work fine for your example.

1

I demonstrate how to receive a string, for example "-484876800000" and tryparse the string to make sure it can be assigned to a long. I calculate the Date from universaltime and return a string. When you convert a string to a number, you must decide the numeric type and precision and test if the string data can be parse, otherwise, it will throw and error.

function universalToDate
{
 param (
    $paramValue
  )
    $retVal=""


    if ($paramValue)
    {
        $epoch=[datetime]'1/1/1970'
        [long]$returnedLong = 0
        [bool]$result = [long]::TryParse($paramValue,[ref]$returnedLong)
        if ($result -eq 1)
        {
            $val=$returnedLong/1000.0
            $retVal=$epoch.AddSeconds($val).ToString("yyyy-MM-dd")
        }
    }
    else
    {
        $retVal=$null
    }
    return($retVal)
 }
-2

It seems the issue is in "-f ($_.Partition.Size/1GB)}}" If you want the value in MB then change the 1GB to 1MB.

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