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IPAddress.Parse Method

Definition

Overloads

Parse(ReadOnlySpan<Char>)

Converts an IP address represented as a character span to an IPAddress instance.

Parse(String)

Converts an IP address string to an IPAddress instance.

Parse(ReadOnlySpan<Byte>)

Parse(ReadOnlySpan<Char>)

Source:
IPAddress.cs
Source:
IPAddress.cs
Source:
IPAddress.cs

Converts an IP address represented as a character span to an IPAddress instance.

public static System.Net.IPAddress Parse(ReadOnlySpan<char> ipSpan);
public static System.Net.IPAddress Parse(ReadOnlySpan<char> ipString);

Parameters

ipStringipSpan
ReadOnlySpan<Char>

A character span that contains an IP address in dotted-quad notation for IPv4 and in colon-hexadecimal notation for IPv6.

Returns

The converted IP address.

Exceptions

ipString is not a valid IP address.

Applies to

Parse(String)

Source:
IPAddress.cs
Source:
IPAddress.cs
Source:
IPAddress.cs

Converts an IP address string to an IPAddress instance.

public static System.Net.IPAddress Parse(string ipString);

Parameters

ipString
String

A string that contains an IP address in dotted-quad notation for IPv4 and in colon-hexadecimal notation for IPv6.

Returns

An IPAddress instance.

Exceptions

ipString is null.

ipString is not a valid IP address.

Examples

The following code converts a string that contains an IP address, in dotted-quad notation for IPv4 or in colon-hexadecimal notation for IPv6, into an instance of the IPAddress class. Then it uses the overloaded ToString method to display the address in standard notation.


using System;
using System.Net;

class ParseAddress
{

  private static void Main(string[] args)
  {
    string IPaddress;

    if (args.Length == 0)
    {
      Console.WriteLine("Please enter an IP address.");
      Console.WriteLine("Usage:   >cs_parse any IPv4 or IPv6 address.");
      Console.WriteLine("Example: >cs_parse 127.0.0.1");
      Console.WriteLine("Example: >cs_parse 0:0:0:0:0:0:0:1");
      return;
    }
    else
        {
            IPaddress = args[0];
        }

        // Get the list of the IPv6 addresses associated with the requested host.
        Parse(IPaddress);
  }

  // This method calls the IPAddress.Parse method to check the ipAddress
  // input string. If the ipAddress argument represents a syntatically correct IPv4 or
  // IPv6 address, the method displays the Parse output into quad-notation or
  // colon-hexadecimal notation, respectively. Otherwise, it displays an
  // error message.
  private static void Parse(string ipAddress)
  {
    try
    {
      // Create an instance of IPAddress for the specified address string (in
      // dotted-quad, or colon-hexadecimal notation).
      IPAddress address = IPAddress.Parse(ipAddress);

      // Display the address in standard notation.
      Console.WriteLine("Parsing your input string: " + "\"" + ipAddress + "\"" + " produces this address (shown in its standard notation): "+ address.ToString());
    }

    catch(ArgumentNullException e)
    {
      Console.WriteLine("ArgumentNullException caught!!!");
      Console.WriteLine("Source : " + e.Source);
      Console.WriteLine("Message : " + e.Message);
    }

    catch(FormatException e)
    {
      Console.WriteLine("FormatException caught!!!");
      Console.WriteLine("Source : " + e.Source);
      Console.WriteLine("Message : " + e.Message);
    }

    catch(Exception e)
    {
      Console.WriteLine("Exception caught!!!");
      Console.WriteLine("Source : " + e.Source);
      Console.WriteLine("Message : " + e.Message);
    }
   }
}

Remarks

The static Parse method creates an IPAddress instance from an IP address expressed in dotted-quad notation for IPv4 and in colon-hexadecimal notation for IPv6.

The number of parts (each part is separated by a period) in ipString determines how the IP address is constructed. A one part address is stored directly in the network address. A two part address, convenient for specifying a class A address, puts the leading part in the first byte and the trailing part in the right-most three bytes of the network address. A three part address, convenient for specifying a class B address, puts the first part in the first byte, the second part in the second byte, and the final part in the right-most two bytes of the network address. For example:

Number of parts and example ipString IPv4 address for IPAddress
1 -- "65535" 0.0.255.255
2 -- "20.2" 20.0.0.2
2 -- "20.65535" 20.0.255.255
3 -- "128.1.2" 128.1.0.2
4 -- "1.1.1.10" 1.1.1.10
4 -- "1.1.1.010" 1.1.1.8
1 -- "0x2F" 0.0.0.47

Applies to

Parse(ReadOnlySpan<Byte>)

public static System.Net.IPAddress Parse(ReadOnlySpan<byte> utf8Text);

Parameters

utf8Text
ReadOnlySpan<Byte>

Returns

Applies to