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Home/ Questions/Q 587141
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 13, 20262026-05-13T15:10:53+00:00 2026-05-13T15:10:53+00:00

PerformanceCounter cpuload = new PerformanceCounter(); cpuload.CategoryName = Processor; cpuload.CounterName = % Processor Time; cpuload.InstanceName

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PerformanceCounter cpuload = new PerformanceCounter();
cpuload.CategoryName = "Processor";
cpuload.CounterName = "% Processor Time";
cpuload.InstanceName = "_Total";
Console.WriteLine(cpuload.NextValue() + "%");

The output is always 0%, while the cpuload.RawValue is like 736861484375 or so, what happened at NextValue()?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-13T15:10:53+00:00Added an answer on May 13, 2026 at 3:10 pm

    The first iteration of the counter will always be 0, because it has nothing to compare to the last value. Try this:

    var cpuload = new PerformanceCounter("Processor", "% Processor Time", "_Total");
    Console.WriteLine(cpuload.NextValue() + "%");
    Console.WriteLine(cpuload.NextValue() + "%");
    Console.WriteLine(cpuload.NextValue() + "%");
    Console.WriteLine(cpuload.NextValue() + "%");
    Console.WriteLine(cpuload.NextValue() + "%");
    

    Then you should see some data coming out. It’s made to be seen in a constant graph or updated scenario…that’s why you don’t come across this problem often.

    Here’s the MSDN reference:

    The method nextValue() always returns
    a 0 value on the first call. So you
    have to call this method a second
    time.

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