Transformations 0.0.122

There is a newer version of this package available.
See the version list below for details.
dotnet add package Transformations --version 0.0.122                
NuGet\Install-Package Transformations -Version 0.0.122                
This command is intended to be used within the Package Manager Console in Visual Studio, as it uses the NuGet module's version of Install-Package.
<PackageReference Include="Transformations" Version="0.0.122" />                
For projects that support PackageReference, copy this XML node into the project file to reference the package.
paket add Transformations --version 0.0.122                
#r "nuget: Transformations, 0.0.122"                
#r directive can be used in F# Interactive and Polyglot Notebooks. Copy this into the interactive tool or source code of the script to reference the package.
// Install Transformations as a Cake Addin
#addin nuget:?package=Transformations&version=0.0.122

// Install Transformations as a Cake Tool
#tool nuget:?package=Transformations&version=0.0.122                

Conversion between data types. Envisaged as a possible alternative to the Universal Type Converter http://www.codeproject.com/Articles/248440/Universal-Type-Converter, with the provision for default values, and some extra features.

Product Compatible and additional computed target framework versions.
.NET Framework net is compatible. 
Compatible target framework(s)
Included target framework(s) (in package)
Learn more about Target Frameworks and .NET Standard.

This package has no dependencies.

NuGet packages

This package is not used by any NuGet packages.

GitHub repositories

This package is not used by any popular GitHub repositories.

Version Downloads Last updated
1.0.1 346 4/17/2023
1.0.0 750 3/25/2020
0.0.145 2,725 7/4/2017
0.0.144 2,500 5/19/2017
0.0.143 2,438 5/18/2017
0.0.142 2,471 5/16/2017
0.0.140 2,931 11/4/2016
0.0.139 2,761 11/4/2016
0.0.138 2,715 11/3/2016
0.0.137 2,704 11/3/2016
0.0.136 2,747 11/3/2016
0.0.135 2,708 11/2/2016
0.0.134 2,668 11/2/2016
0.0.133 2,692 11/2/2016
0.0.132 2,708 11/2/2016
0.0.131 2,757 11/2/2016
0.0.130 2,603 11/2/2016
0.0.129 2,622 12/14/2015
0.0.128 2,581 12/11/2015
0.0.127 2,530 12/10/2015
0.0.126 2,651 12/9/2015
0.0.125 2,570 11/20/2015
0.0.124 2,547 11/20/2015
0.0.123 2,558 11/20/2015
0.0.122 2,573 11/20/2015
0.0.121 2,556 11/20/2015
0.0.120 2,581 11/20/2015
0.0.119 2,572 11/17/2015
0.0.118 2,615 11/17/2015
0.0.117 2,603 11/17/2015
0.0.116 2,582 11/17/2015
0.0.115 2,551 11/17/2015
0.0.114 2,892 11/16/2015
0.0.113 2,518 11/16/2015
0.0.112 2,700 11/16/2015
0.0.111 2,566 11/12/2015
0.0.110 2,493 11/12/2015
0.0.109 2,493 11/3/2015
0.0.108 2,504 11/3/2015
0.0.107 2,548 11/3/2015
0.0.106 2,556 11/2/2015
0.0.105 2,519 11/2/2015
0.0.104 2,501 10/30/2015
0.0.103 2,529 10/30/2015
0.0.102 2,531 10/30/2015
0.0.101 2,509 10/30/2015
0.0.100 2,508 10/30/2015
0.0.99 2,491 10/23/2015
0.0.98 2,519 10/23/2015
0.0.97 2,520 10/19/2015
0.0.96 2,521 10/16/2015
0.0.95 2,574 10/16/2015
0.0.94 2,482 10/16/2015
0.0.93 2,529 10/16/2015
0.0.92 2,514 10/13/2015
0.0.91 2,536 10/13/2015
0.0.90 2,520 10/13/2015
0.0.89 2,600 9/16/2015
0.0.88 2,560 9/16/2015
0.0.87 2,584 8/20/2015
0.0.86 2,499 8/17/2015
0.0.85 2,854 8/6/2015
0.0.84 2,685 7/29/2015
0.0.83 2,695 7/29/2015
0.0.82 2,703 7/29/2015
0.0.81 2,658 7/28/2015
0.0.80 2,671 7/28/2015
0.0.79 2,648 7/27/2015
0.0.78 2,633 7/20/2015
0.0.77 2,684 7/20/2015
0.0.76 2,562 7/10/2015
0.0.75 2,535 7/10/2015
0.0.74 2,568 7/2/2015
0.0.73 2,565 7/2/2015
0.0.72 2,545 6/29/2015
0.0.71 2,512 6/29/2015
0.0.70 2,519 6/24/2015
0.0.69 2,550 6/23/2015
0.0.68 2,575 6/23/2015
0.0.67 2,559 6/22/2015
0.0.66 2,558 6/22/2015
0.0.65 2,535 6/5/2015
0.0.64 2,558 6/4/2015
0.0.63 2,535 6/4/2015
0.0.62 2,544 6/3/2015
0.0.61 2,583 6/2/2015
0.0.60 2,521 6/2/2015
0.0.59 2,669 6/1/2015
0.0.58 2,502 6/1/2015
0.0.57 2,696 6/1/2015
0.0.56 2,900 6/1/2015
0.0.55 2,498 5/29/2015
0.0.53 2,524 5/27/2015
0.0.52 2,510 5/27/2015
0.0.51 2,544 5/22/2015
0.0.50 2,512 5/21/2015
0.0.49 2,541 5/20/2015
0.0.48 2,528 5/20/2015
0.0.47 2,571 5/20/2015
0.0.46 2,542 5/20/2015
0.0.45 2,550 5/19/2015
0.0.44 2,540 5/19/2015
0.0.43 2,529 5/15/2015
0.0.42 2,493 5/14/2015
0.0.41 2,509 5/13/2015
0.0.40 2,525 5/12/2015
0.0.39 2,538 5/11/2015
0.0.38 2,548 5/7/2015
0.0.37 2,515 5/7/2015
0.0.36 2,506 5/7/2015
0.0.35 2,516 5/7/2015
0.0.34 2,496 5/7/2015
0.0.33 2,622 5/7/2015
0.0.32 2,535 5/6/2015
0.0.31 2,633 5/6/2015
0.0.30 2,540 5/6/2015
0.0.29 2,536 5/6/2015
0.0.28 2,627 5/6/2015
0.0.27 2,633 5/5/2015
0.0.26 2,534 5/5/2015
0.0.25 2,658 4/27/2015
0.0.24 2,673 4/24/2015
0.0.23 2,949 4/23/2015
0.0.22 2,765 4/2/2015
0.0.21 2,549 4/2/2015
0.0.20 2,560 4/1/2015
0.0.19 2,557 3/31/2015
0.0.18 2,622 3/31/2015
0.0.17 2,591 3/31/2015
0.0.16 2,559 3/31/2015
0.0.15 2,515 3/31/2015
0.0.14 2,571 3/31/2015
0.0.13 2,539 3/31/2015
0.0.12 2,517 3/30/2015
0.0.11 2,547 3/30/2015
0.0.10 2,552 3/30/2015

* You don't need to reference the transformations namespace with Using statement (type conversions are meant to be universal if you choose to use this).

Generally you would just do:

 var newValue = oldValue.ConvertTo<newType>(optionalDefaultValue);

* You can use TryConvertTo if you need to get the result of the conversion process.

* You can do some conversions on DataTables and Lists , for example convert a data table to an object list, if the names of the columns match the object properties.

* The date conversion is set to British date format by default, not the project's current format. This may have to change to make the library more "universal".

* From some basic tests I have performed on universal type converter and this library, I found it to be a bit faster than the universal type converter...

********************************************
Some examples of use:
********************************************
string valueInput = "7F8C14B6-B3A8-4F71-8EFC-E5A7B35923B6";
Guid actual = valueInput.ConvertTo<Guid>(Guid.Empty);
// where Guid.Empty is the default value if the conversion fails.
// -----------------------------------------------
string valueInput = "0.1";
float actual = valueInput.ConvertTo<float>(0.0f);
// where 0.0f is the default value if the conversion fails.
// result = 0.1f;
// -----------------------------------------------
string valueInput = "15/02/2014";
DateTime actual = valueInput.ConvertTo<DateTime>(new DateTime(2000, 01, 01));
// where 2000-01-01 is the default value if the conversion fails.
// result = new DateTime(2014, 02, 15);
// -----------------------------------------------
float? f = 123.524f;
int? i = f.ConvertTo<int>();
// result = 124;
// -----------------------------------------------

* You can convert date to 'excel'-type value:
DateTime d = new DateTime(2005, 5, 5);
d.ToDouble();
// or d.ToInt();

List conversions examples:
// -----------------------------------------------
List<int> l1 = new List<int>(new int[] { 2, 3, 4 });
List<float> l2 = l1.ConvertToList<int, float>();
// -----------------------------------------------



**************************************************

Some additional helper methods are added as extensions as well:

// -----------------------------------------------

*Proper Case*

string name = "mr john smith";
name.ProperCase();
// result = "Mr John Smith";

// -----------------------------------------------

*Insert Spaces*

string name = "MrJohnSmith";
name.InsertSpaces();
// result = "Mr John Smith";

// -----------------------------------------------

*Remove Chars* - removes multiple instances of the same string pattern from the string.

string name = "Mr John John Smith";
name.RemoveChars("John ");
// result = "Mr Smith";

// -----------------------------------------------

*Replace Ex* - replace multiple instances of the same string pattern in the string.
string s = "12345678901234567890";
s.ReplaceEx("2", "X");
// result = "1X345678901X34567890";

// -----------------------------------------------

*Is Date* - check if string is a date! assumes en-Gb as default culture at present..

string s = "14/02/2014";
if (IsDate(s))
{ ... }
if (IsDate(s, "en-GB"))
{ ... }

// -----------------------------------------------

.ToSqlParameter() extension methods make it easier to effectively make the swift conversion to SqlParameters from most types, but please always check that the correct SqlDbType is supplied...

For example, if you wanted to supply myChar parameter to a stored procedure - a char conversion could be:

char c = 'a';
c.ToSqlParameter('myChar');
- and you would probably want to add SqlParameter to the list of parameters.

When converting a string to a varchar / nvarchar, a size of the string is required. It's usually the best practice to supply the string size to avoid runtime errors.

I'm thinking of adding a completely separate validation method to SqlParameter list, which will test that each conversion can be performed correctly.

// -----------------------------------------------

New:

Added DataTable.HasRows()
// ie: dataTable != null && dataTable.Rows.Count > 0

Added DataRow.GetValue<T>()
- Gets the value as required type.