Conversion.Fix Method
Definition
Important
Some information relates to prerelease product that may be substantially modified before it’s released. Microsoft makes no warranties, express or implied, with respect to the information provided here.
Returns the integer portion of a number.
Overloads
Fix(Decimal) |
Returns the integer portion of a number. |
Fix(Double) |
Returns the integer portion of a number. |
Fix(Int16) |
Returns the integer portion of a number. |
Fix(Int32) |
Returns the integer portion of a number. |
Fix(Int64) |
Returns the integer portion of a number. |
Fix(Object) |
Returns the integer portion of a number. |
Fix(Single) |
Returns the integer portion of a number. |
Fix(Decimal)
- Source:
- Conversion.vb
- Source:
- Conversion.vb
- Source:
- Conversion.vb
Returns the integer portion of a number.
public:
static System::Decimal Fix(System::Decimal Number);
public static decimal Fix (decimal Number);
static member Fix : decimal -> decimal
Public Function Fix (Number As Decimal) As Decimal
Parameters
- Number
- Decimal
Required. A number of type Decimal
or any valid numeric expression.
Returns
The integer portion of a number.
Exceptions
Number is not specified.
Number is not a numeric type.
Examples
This example illustrates how the Int
and Fix
functions return integer portions of numbers. In the case of a negative number argument, the Int
function returns the first negative integer less than or equal to the number; the Fix
function returns the first negative integer greater than or equal to the number. The following example requires you to specify Option Strict Off
because implicit conversions from type Double
to type Integer
are not allowed under Option Strict On
:
' This code requires Option Strict Off
Dim MyNumber As Integer
MyNumber = Int(99.8) ' Returns 99.
MyNumber = Fix(99.8) ' Returns 99.
MyNumber = Int(-99.8) ' Returns -100.
MyNumber = Fix(-99.8) ' Returns -99.
MyNumber = Int(-99.2) ' Returns -100.
MyNumber = Fix(-99.2) ' Returns -99.
You can use the CInt
function to explicitly convert other data types to type Integer
with Option Strict Off
. However, CInt
rounds to the nearest integer instead of truncating the fractional part of numbers. For example:
MyNumber = CInt(99.8) ' Returns 100.
MyNumber = CInt(-99.8) ' Returns -100.
MyNumber = CInt(-99.2) ' Returns -99.
You can use the CInt
function on the result of a call to Fix
or Int
to perform explicit conversion to integer without rounding. For example:
MyNumber = CInt(Fix(99.8)) ' Returns 99.
MyNumber = CInt(Int(99.8)) ' Returns 99.
For more information on CInt
, see Type Conversion Functions.
Remarks
Both the Int
and Fix
functions remove the fractional part of Number
and return the resulting integer value.
The difference between Int
and Fix
functions is that if Number
is negative, Int
returns the first negative integer less than or equal to Number
, whereas Fix
returns the first negative integer greater than or equal to Number
. For example, Int
converts -8.4 to -9, and Fix
converts -8.4 to -8.
Fix(number)
is equivalent to Sign(number) * Int(Abs(number)).
See also
- ArgumentNullException
- Type Conversion Functions
- Data Type Summary (Visual Basic)
- Math Summary
- Math Functions (Visual Basic)
- Conversion Summary
Applies to
Fix(Double)
- Source:
- Conversion.vb
- Source:
- Conversion.vb
- Source:
- Conversion.vb
Returns the integer portion of a number.
public:
static double Fix(double Number);
public static double Fix (double Number);
static member Fix : double -> double
Public Function Fix (Number As Double) As Double
Parameters
Returns
The integer portion of a number.
Exceptions
Number is not specified.
Number is not a numeric type.
Examples
This example illustrates how the Int
and Fix
functions return integer portions of numbers. In the case of a negative number argument, the Int
function returns the first negative integer less than or equal to the number; the Fix
function returns the first negative integer greater than or equal to the number. The following example requires you to specify Option Strict Off
because implicit conversions from type Double
to type Integer
are not allowed under Option Strict On
:
' This code requires Option Strict Off
Dim MyNumber As Integer
MyNumber = Int(99.8) ' Returns 99.
MyNumber = Fix(99.8) ' Returns 99.
MyNumber = Int(-99.8) ' Returns -100.
MyNumber = Fix(-99.8) ' Returns -99.
MyNumber = Int(-99.2) ' Returns -100.
MyNumber = Fix(-99.2) ' Returns -99.
You can use the CInt
function to explicitly convert other data types to type Integer
with Option Strict Off
. However, CInt
rounds to the nearest integer instead of truncating the fractional part of numbers. For example:
MyNumber = CInt(99.8) ' Returns 100.
MyNumber = CInt(-99.8) ' Returns -100.
MyNumber = CInt(-99.2) ' Returns -99.
You can use the CInt
function on the result of a call to Fix
or Int
to perform explicit conversion to integer without rounding. For example:
MyNumber = CInt(Fix(99.8)) ' Returns 99.
MyNumber = CInt(Int(99.8)) ' Returns 99.
For more information on CInt
, see Type Conversion Functions.
Remarks
Both the Int
and Fix
functions remove the fractional part of Number
and return the resulting integer value.
The difference between Int
and Fix
functions is that if Number
is negative, Int
returns the first negative integer less than or equal to Number
, whereas Fix
returns the first negative integer greater than or equal to Number
. For example, Int
converts -8.4 to -9, and Fix
converts -8.4 to -8.
Fix(number)
is equivalent to Sign(number) * Int(Abs(number)).
Starting with Visual Basic 15.8, the performance of Double
-to-integer conversion is optimized if you pass the value returned by the Fix
method to the any of the integral conversion functions, or if the Double
value returned by Fix
is implicitly converted to an integer with Option Strict set to Off
. This optimization allows code to run faster -- up to twice as fast for code that does a large number of conversions to integer types. The following example illustrates such an optimized conversion:
Dim d As Double = 173.7619
Dim i1 As Integer = CInt(Fix(d)) ' Result: 173
See also
- ArgumentNullException
- Type Conversion Functions
- Data Type Summary (Visual Basic)
- Math Summary
- Math Functions (Visual Basic)
- Conversion Summary
Applies to
Fix(Int16)
- Source:
- Conversion.vb
- Source:
- Conversion.vb
- Source:
- Conversion.vb
Returns the integer portion of a number.
public:
static short Fix(short Number);
public static short Fix (short Number);
static member Fix : int16 -> int16
Public Function Fix (Number As Short) As Short
Parameters
- Number
- Int16
Required. A number of type Short
or any valid numeric expression.
Returns
The integer portion of a number.
Exceptions
Number is not specified.
Number is not a numeric type.
Examples
This example illustrates how the Int
and Fix
functions return integer portions of numbers. In the case of a negative number argument, the Int
function returns the first negative integer less than or equal to the number; the Fix
function returns the first negative integer greater than or equal to the number. The following example requires you to specify Option Strict Off
because implicit conversions from type Double
to type Integer
are not allowed under Option Strict On
:
' This code requires Option Strict Off
Dim MyNumber As Integer
MyNumber = Int(99.8) ' Returns 99.
MyNumber = Fix(99.8) ' Returns 99.
MyNumber = Int(-99.8) ' Returns -100.
MyNumber = Fix(-99.8) ' Returns -99.
MyNumber = Int(-99.2) ' Returns -100.
MyNumber = Fix(-99.2) ' Returns -99.
You can use the CInt
function to explicitly convert other data types to type Integer
with Option Strict Off
. However, CInt
rounds to the nearest integer instead of truncating the fractional part of numbers. For example:
MyNumber = CInt(99.8) ' Returns 100.
MyNumber = CInt(-99.8) ' Returns -100.
MyNumber = CInt(-99.2) ' Returns -99.
You can use the CInt
function on the result of a call to Fix
or Int
to perform explicit conversion to integer without rounding. For example:
MyNumber = CInt(Fix(99.8)) ' Returns 99.
MyNumber = CInt(Int(99.8)) ' Returns 99.
For more information on CInt
, see Type Conversion Functions.
Remarks
Both the Int
and Fix
functions remove the fractional part of Number
and return the resulting integer value.
The difference between Int
and Fix
functions is that if Number
is negative, Int
returns the first negative integer less than or equal to Number
, whereas Fix
returns the first negative integer greater than or equal to Number
. For example, Int
converts -8.4 to -9, and Fix
converts -8.4 to -8.
Fix(number)
is equivalent to Sign(number) * Int(Abs(number)).
See also
- ArgumentNullException
- Type Conversion Functions
- Data Type Summary (Visual Basic)
- Math Summary
- Math Functions (Visual Basic)
- Conversion Summary
Applies to
Fix(Int32)
- Source:
- Conversion.vb
- Source:
- Conversion.vb
- Source:
- Conversion.vb
Returns the integer portion of a number.
public:
static int Fix(int Number);
public static int Fix (int Number);
static member Fix : int -> int
Public Function Fix (Number As Integer) As Integer
Parameters
- Number
- Int32
Required. A number of type Integer
or any valid numeric expression.
Returns
The integer portion of a number.
Exceptions
Number is not specified.
Number is not a numeric type.
Examples
This example illustrates how the Int
and Fix
functions return integer portions of numbers. In the case of a negative number argument, the Int
function returns the first negative integer less than or equal to the number; the Fix
function returns the first negative integer greater than or equal to the number. The following example requires you to specify Option Strict Off
because implicit conversions from type Double
to type Integer
are not allowed under Option Strict On
:
' This code requires Option Strict Off
Dim MyNumber As Integer
MyNumber = Int(99.8) ' Returns 99.
MyNumber = Fix(99.8) ' Returns 99.
MyNumber = Int(-99.8) ' Returns -100.
MyNumber = Fix(-99.8) ' Returns -99.
MyNumber = Int(-99.2) ' Returns -100.
MyNumber = Fix(-99.2) ' Returns -99.
You can use the CInt
function to explicitly convert other data types to type Integer
with Option Strict Off
. However, CInt
rounds to the nearest integer instead of truncating the fractional part of numbers. For example:
MyNumber = CInt(99.8) ' Returns 100.
MyNumber = CInt(-99.8) ' Returns -100.
MyNumber = CInt(-99.2) ' Returns -99.
You can use the CInt
function on the result of a call to Fix
or Int
to perform explicit conversion to integer without rounding. For example:
MyNumber = CInt(Fix(99.8)) ' Returns 99.
MyNumber = CInt(Int(99.8)) ' Returns 99.
For more information on CInt
, see Type Conversion Functions.
Remarks
Both the Int
and Fix
functions remove the fractional part of Number
and return the resulting integer value.
The difference between Int
and Fix
functions is that if Number
is negative, Int
returns the first negative integer less than or equal to Number
, whereas Fix
returns the first negative integer greater than or equal to Number
. For example, Int
converts -8.4 to -9, and Fix
converts -8.4 to -8.
Fix(number)
is equivalent to Sign(number) * Int(Abs(number)).
See also
- ArgumentNullException
- Type Conversion Functions
- Data Type Summary (Visual Basic)
- Math Summary
- Math Functions (Visual Basic)
- Conversion Summary
Applies to
Fix(Int64)
- Source:
- Conversion.vb
- Source:
- Conversion.vb
- Source:
- Conversion.vb
Returns the integer portion of a number.
public:
static long Fix(long Number);
public static long Fix (long Number);
static member Fix : int64 -> int64
Public Function Fix (Number As Long) As Long
Parameters
- Number
- Int64
Required. A number of type Long
or any valid numeric expression.
Returns
The integer portion of a number.
Exceptions
Number is not specified.
Number is not a numeric type.
Examples
This example illustrates how the Int
and Fix
functions return integer portions of numbers. In the case of a negative number argument, the Int
function returns the first negative integer less than or equal to the number; the Fix
function returns the first negative integer greater than or equal to the number. The following example requires you to specify Option Strict Off
because implicit conversions from type Double
to type Integer
are not allowed under Option Strict On
:
' This code requires Option Strict Off
Dim MyNumber As Integer
MyNumber = Int(99.8) ' Returns 99.
MyNumber = Fix(99.8) ' Returns 99.
MyNumber = Int(-99.8) ' Returns -100.
MyNumber = Fix(-99.8) ' Returns -99.
MyNumber = Int(-99.2) ' Returns -100.
MyNumber = Fix(-99.2) ' Returns -99.
You can use the CInt
function to explicitly convert other data types to type Integer
with Option Strict Off
. However, CInt
rounds to the nearest integer instead of truncating the fractional part of numbers. For example:
MyNumber = CInt(99.8) ' Returns 100.
MyNumber = CInt(-99.8) ' Returns -100.
MyNumber = CInt(-99.2) ' Returns -99.
You can use the CInt
function on the result of a call to Fix
or Int
to perform explicit conversion to integer without rounding. For example:
MyNumber = CInt(Fix(99.8)) ' Returns 99.
MyNumber = CInt(Int(99.8)) ' Returns 99.
For more information on CInt
, see Type Conversion Functions.
Remarks
Both the Int
and Fix
functions remove the fractional part of Number
and return the resulting integer value.
The difference between Int
and Fix
functions is that if Number
is negative, Int
returns the first negative integer less than or equal to Number
, whereas Fix
returns the first negative integer greater than or equal to Number
. For example, Int
converts -8.4 to -9, and Fix
converts -8.4 to -8.
Fix(number)
is equivalent to Sign(number) * Int(Abs(number)).
See also
- ArgumentNullException
- Type Conversion Functions
- Data Type Summary (Visual Basic)
- Math Summary
- Math Functions (Visual Basic)
- Conversion Summary
Applies to
Fix(Object)
- Source:
- Conversion.vb
- Source:
- Conversion.vb
- Source:
- Conversion.vb
Returns the integer portion of a number.
public:
static System::Object ^ Fix(System::Object ^ Number);
public static object Fix (object Number);
static member Fix : obj -> obj
Public Function Fix (Number As Object) As Object
Parameters
- Number
- Object
Required. A number of type Object
or any valid numeric expression. If Number
contains Nothing
, Nothing
is returned.
Returns
The integer portion of a number.
Exceptions
Number is not specified.
Number is not a numeric type.
Examples
This example illustrates how the Int
and Fix
functions return integer portions of numbers. In the case of a negative number argument, the Int
function returns the first negative integer less than or equal to the number; the Fix
function returns the first negative integer greater than or equal to the number. The following example requires you to specify Option Strict Off
because implicit conversions from type Double
to type Integer
are not allowed under Option Strict On
:
' This code requires Option Strict Off
Dim MyNumber As Integer
MyNumber = Int(99.8) ' Returns 99.
MyNumber = Fix(99.8) ' Returns 99.
MyNumber = Int(-99.8) ' Returns -100.
MyNumber = Fix(-99.8) ' Returns -99.
MyNumber = Int(-99.2) ' Returns -100.
MyNumber = Fix(-99.2) ' Returns -99.
You can use the CInt
function to explicitly convert other data types to type Integer
with Option Strict Off
. However, CInt
rounds to the nearest integer instead of truncating the fractional part of numbers. For example:
MyNumber = CInt(99.8) ' Returns 100.
MyNumber = CInt(-99.8) ' Returns -100.
MyNumber = CInt(-99.2) ' Returns -99.
You can use the CInt
function on the result of a call to Fix
or Int
to perform explicit conversion to integer without rounding. For example:
MyNumber = CInt(Fix(99.8)) ' Returns 99.
MyNumber = CInt(Int(99.8)) ' Returns 99.
For more information on CInt
, see Type Conversion Functions.
Remarks
Both the Int
and Fix
functions remove the fractional part of Number
and return the resulting integer value.
The difference between Int
and Fix
functions is that if Number
is negative, Int
returns the first negative integer less than or equal to Number
, whereas Fix
returns the first negative integer greater than or equal to Number
. For example, Int
converts -8.4 to -9, and Fix
converts -8.4 to -8.
Fix(number)
is equivalent to Sign(number) * Int(Abs(number)).
Starting with Visual Basic 15.8, if the Number
argument is an object whose runtime type is Double
or Single
, the performance of floating-point-to-integer conversion is optimized if you pass the value returned by the Fix
method to the any of the integral conversion functions, or if the value returned by Fix
is automatically converted to an integer with Option Strict set to Off. This optimization allows code to run faster -- up to twice as fast for code that does a large number of conversions to integer types. For example:
Dim d As Object = 173.7619
Dim i1 As Integer = CInt(Fix(d)) ' Result: 173
Dim s As Object = 173.7619F
Dim i2 As Integer = CInt(Fix(s)) ' Result: 173
See also
- ArgumentNullException
- Type Conversion Functions
- Data Type Summary (Visual Basic)
- Math Summary
- Math Functions (Visual Basic)
- Conversion Summary
Applies to
Fix(Single)
- Source:
- Conversion.vb
- Source:
- Conversion.vb
- Source:
- Conversion.vb
Returns the integer portion of a number.
public:
static float Fix(float Number);
public static float Fix (float Number);
static member Fix : single -> single
Public Function Fix (Number As Single) As Single
Parameters
Returns
The integer portion of a number.
Exceptions
Number is not specified.
Number is not a numeric type.
Examples
This example illustrates how the Int
and Fix
functions return integer portions of numbers. In the case of a negative number argument, the Int
function returns the first negative integer less than or equal to the number; the Fix
function returns the first negative integer greater than or equal to the number. The following example requires you to specify Option Strict Off
because implicit conversions from type Double
to type Integer
are not allowed under Option Strict On
:
' This code requires Option Strict Off
Dim MyNumber As Integer
MyNumber = Int(99.8) ' Returns 99.
MyNumber = Fix(99.8) ' Returns 99.
MyNumber = Int(-99.8) ' Returns -100.
MyNumber = Fix(-99.8) ' Returns -99.
MyNumber = Int(-99.2) ' Returns -100.
MyNumber = Fix(-99.2) ' Returns -99.
You can use the CInt
function to explicitly convert other data types to type Integer
with Option Strict Off
. However, CInt
rounds to the nearest integer instead of truncating the fractional part of numbers. For example:
MyNumber = CInt(99.8) ' Returns 100.
MyNumber = CInt(-99.8) ' Returns -100.
MyNumber = CInt(-99.2) ' Returns -99.
You can use the CInt
function on the result of a call to Fix
or Int
to perform explicit conversion to integer without rounding. For example:
MyNumber = CInt(Fix(99.8)) ' Returns 99.
MyNumber = CInt(Int(99.8)) ' Returns 99.
For more information on CInt
, see Type Conversion Functions.
Remarks
Both the Int
and Fix
functions remove the fractional part of Number
and return the resulting integer value.
The difference between Int
and Fix
functions is that if Number
is negative, Int
returns the first negative integer less than or equal to Number
, whereas Fix
returns the first negative integer greater than or equal to Number
. For example, Int
converts -8.4 to -9, and Fix
converts -8.4 to -8.
Fix(number)
is equivalent to Sign(number) * Int(Abs(number)).
Starting with Visual Basic 15.8, the performance of Single
-to-integer conversion is optimized if you pass the value returned by the Fix
method to the any of the integral conversion functions, or if the Single
value returned by Fix
is automatically converted to an integer with Option Strict set to Off. This optimization allows code to run faster -- up to twice as fast for code that does a large number of conversions to integer types. The following example illustrates such an optimized conversion:
Dim s As Single = 173.7619
Dim i2 As Integer = CInt(Fix(s)) ' Result: 173
See also
- ArgumentNullException
- Type Conversion Functions
- Data Type Summary (Visual Basic)
- Math Summary
- Math Functions (Visual Basic)
- Conversion Summary