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Home/ Questions/Q 472589
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 13, 20262026-05-13T00:06:10+00:00 2026-05-13T00:06:10+00:00

Today’s problem is as follows: we have a table in an Oracle database. The

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Today’s problem is as follows: we have a table in an Oracle database. The table contains a field that is of the type Number(18, 3).

On the surface, both saving and loading data from said field work perfectly. However, further inspection reveals, that numbers that have three decimal digits in them, e.g. 500.001, are read from the database in such a way that the string representation of the decimal has a fourth, zero digit (e.g. 500.0010). This seems to happen whenever the third decimal digit is nonzero.

For math purposes, this is not a problem. However, we have validators that verify the number of decimal digits in a decimal number by converting it to a string and then counting the number of decimal digits. Since this particular piece of data is defined to have at most three decimal digits, the extra zero causes a validation error.

Since I can’t change the validators, I’m left wondering if there is a clean way to get the decimal without the extra zero, apart from converting the number to a string, trimming the trailing zeroes and then re-parsing it? Or should I be doing something different altogether?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-13T00:06:10+00:00Added an answer on May 13, 2026 at 12:06 am

    Try this:

    decimal trimmed = ((decimal)((int)(number * 1000))) / 1000
    

    Casting to int gets rid of the fractional part. You don’t need all the parentheses but I think it’s easier to see what’s going on if the order of operations is explictily indicated.

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