Math.Sign Method (Int64)
.NET Framework 4.5
Returns a value indicating the sign of a 64-bit signed integer.
Assembly: mscorlib (in mscorlib.dll)
Parameters
- value
- Type: System.Int64
A signed number.
Return Value
Type: System.Int32A number that indicates the sign of value, as shown in the following table.
Return value | Meaning |
|---|---|
-1 | value is less than zero. |
0 | value is equal to zero. |
1 | value is greater than zero. |
The following example demonstrates how to use the Sign(Int64) method to determine the sign of an Int64 value and display it to the console.
// This example demonstrates Math.Sign() using System; class Sample { public static void Main() { string str = "{0}: {1,3} is {2} zero."; string nl = Environment.NewLine; byte xByte1 = 0; short xShort1 = -2; int xInt1 = -3; long xLong1 = -4; float xSingle1 = 0.0f; double xDouble1 = 6.0; Decimal xDecimal1 = -7m; // The following type is not CLS-compliant. sbyte xSbyte1 = -101; Console.WriteLine("{0}Test the sign of the following types of values:", nl); Console.WriteLine(str, "Byte ", xByte1, Test(Math.Sign(xByte1))); Console.WriteLine(str, "Int16 ", xShort1, Test(Math.Sign(xShort1))); Console.WriteLine(str, "Int32 ", xInt1, Test(Math.Sign(xInt1))); Console.WriteLine(str, "Int64 ", xLong1, Test(Math.Sign(xLong1))); Console.WriteLine(str, "Single ", xSingle1, Test(Math.Sign(xSingle1))); Console.WriteLine(str, "Double ", xDouble1, Test(Math.Sign(xDouble1))); Console.WriteLine(str, "Decimal", xDecimal1, Test(Math.Sign(xDecimal1))); // Console.WriteLine("{0}The following type is not CLS-compliant.", nl); Console.WriteLine(str, "SByte ", xSbyte1, Test(Math.Sign(xSbyte1))); } // public static String Test(int compare) { if (compare == 0) return "equal to"; else if (compare < 0) return "less than"; else return "greater than"; } } /* This example produces the following results: Test the sign of the following types of values: Byte : 0 is equal to zero. Int16 : -2 is less than zero. Int32 : -3 is less than zero. Int64 : -4 is less than zero. Single : 0 is equal to zero. Double : 6 is greater than zero. Decimal: -7 is less than zero. The following type is not CLS-compliant. SByte : -101 is less than zero. */
Windows 8, Windows Server 2012, Windows 7, Windows Vista SP2, Windows Server 2008 (Server Core Role not supported), Windows Server 2008 R2 (Server Core Role supported with SP1 or later; Itanium not supported)
The .NET Framework does not support all versions of every platform. For a list of the supported versions, see .NET Framework System Requirements.