I've had a good look around for any help with my problem so hopefully someone can help me here.
Basically i have a number which is saved into a $price, the number is 15900. Which should translate to 159.00.
Does anyone know how to do this?
Use number_format for this. It will return a string, thereby keeping the decimal places intact, even if they will be .00.
$price = 15900;
// Defaults to a comma as a thousands separator
// but I've set it to an empty string (last argument)
$formatted = number_format( $price / 100, 2, '.', '' );
echo $formatted;
Or better still, maybe have a look at money_format as well, depending on whether internationalized notations and/or currency symbols are of importance as well.
$current = 15900;
$your = round($current / 100, 2);
Related
I am trying to do a 2 digit precision in PHP Laravel project but it doesnt work. I have the value 1234666.6666667 that I want to make 1234666.66 but all the results I've seen in here or/and in other search pages.
This is my code:
$value = 1234666.6666667;
return round($value,2);
any other solution?
EDIT:
As I see, you actually want to floor number to 2 decimal points, not to round it, so this answer could help you:
$value = 1234666.6666667;
floor($value * 100) / 100; // returns 1234666.66
If you want 3 decimal points you need to multiple and divide with 1000, for 4 - with 10000 and etc.
You can use number_format, it convert value to string though, so you lose real float value:
$value = 1234666.6666667;
echo number_format($value, 2, '.', ''); // prints 1234666.67
Use this function.
function truncate($i) {
return floor($i*100) / 100.0;
}
Then you can do
$value = truncate(123.5666666); // 123.56
A pragmatic way is to use round($value - 0.05, 2), but even that gets you into hot water with some edge cases. Floating point numbers just don't round well. It's life I'm afraid. The closest double to 1234666.66 is
1234666.65999999991618096828460693359375
That's what $value will be after applying my formula! Really, if you want exact decimal precision, then you need to use a decimal type. Else use integer types and work in multiples of 100.
For the former choice, see http://de2.php.net/manual/en/ref.bc.php
$value = bcadd($value, 0, 2); // 1234666.6666667 -> 1234666.66
Another more exotic way to solve this issue is to use bcadd() with a dummy value for the $right_operand of 0,
This will give you 2 number after decimal.
Is there a built-in/neat way to format a number (just like number_format does), but without any rounding ups/downs?
For instance, number 1234.234 should be formatted as 1,234.234 and another number 1234 should be formatted as 1,234 (i.e. without any trailing .000)
You can define simple custom function for that:
<?php
function custom_number_format($number, $decimal = '.')
{
$broken_number = explode($decimal, $number);
if (isset($broken_number[1]))
return number_format($broken_number[0]) . $decimal . $broken_number[1];
else
return number_format($broken_number[0]);
}
$n1 = '1234.234';
$n2 = '1234';
echo custom_number_format($n1);
echo '<br>';
echo custom_number_format($n2);
?>
Output is:
1,234.234
1,234
Based on the arhey's answer
TLDR ;)
You can use number_format to format the number to a fixed-width format, then use rtrim twice to remove trailing zeroes, and dot.
rtrim(rtrim(number_format($number, 3, '.', ','), '0'), '.')
Starting from the last character, rtrim removes it while it is one of those given. In our case, we remove trailing dots, then we remove an eventual trailing zero.
rtrim(rtrim(number_format(1234.123, 3, '.', ','), '0'), '.')
// returns 1,234.123
rtrim(rtrim(number_format(1234.12, 3, '.', ','), '0'), '.')
// returns 1,234.12 (1,234.120, trimmed to 1234.12)
rtrim(rtrim(number_format(1234, 3, '.', ','), '0'), '.')
// returns 1,234 (1,234.000, trimmed to 1234)
rtrim(rtrim(number_format(1200, 3, '.', ','), '0'),'.')
// returns 1,200 (1,200.000, trimmed to 1200., trimmed to 1200)
Formal form, and discussion about the parameters (notably the decimals count)
rtrim(rtrim(number_format($number, <N>, '<D>', ''), '0'), '<D>')
Where :
D is the decimal separator. To avoid locale-formatting problems, explicitly specify it
N is the maximum digits you number can have.
If you know all your numbers will have less than 3 digits, go and take N=3.
What if you don't know how many decimals are at most ? Well, things are getting more complex.
It may worth recalling (as stated in the PHP documentation) that floats are stored :
with a precision (a number of digits, without distinction whether they are before or after the decimal separator), not a number of decimals
and in their binary form, not their decimal one, and that can lead to rounding errors when reaching precision limit.
For example, floor((0.1+0.7)*10) will usually return 7 instead of the
expected 8, since the internal representation will be something like
7.9999999999999991118....
So there is no universal good value, you'll have to choose it depending on the usual scale of your data.
And that explains why there is no built-in function for that : PHP can't choose for you.
You can use function:
<?php
function getNumberFormat($number) {
$numberAr = explode('.', (string)$number);
$count = 0;
if (2 === count($numberAr)) {
$count = strlen($numberAr[1]);
}
return number_format($number, $count, ',', '.');
}
$test1 = 1234.234;
$test2 = 1234;
echo getNumberFormat($test1); //1,234.234
echo getNumberFormat($test2); //1,234
I really liked arhey's answer, but later realized it has a major flaw. A number like 2100 will get converted to 2,1 instead of 2,100.
Below is how I ended up modifying it.
public function formatDecimal($number)
{
$stringVal = strval($number); //convert number to string
$decPosition = strpos($stringVal, ".");
if ($decPosition !== false) //there is a decimal
{
$decPart = substr($stringVal, $decPosition); //grab only the decimal portion
$result = number_format($stringVal) . rtrim($decPart, ".0");
}
else //no decimal to worry about
{
$result = number_format($stringVal);
}
return $result;
}
It's not as succinct a solution as I was hoping, but in my case I put it into a view helper (I'm using ZF2) and so it's just one simple function call in my view.
Hope this is helpful for someone!
rtrim(number_format(1234.234, 3),'.0');
rtrim(number_format(1234, 3),'.0');
Let's begin with that there's no decimal type in PHP. There's float only.
And if you know how float works, then you know that it's usually not possible to store exact decimal value that you think you have, but it's an approximation. That's because you can't express most of decimal numbers in binary system.
Therefore if you say:
$number = 1234.234;
Then you have a float that is close to this value. The real value is:
1234.23399999999992360244505107402801513671875
Therefore PHP can't just guess how do you want to round it. It needs to be specified explicitly.
thanks in advance.
I have a WP WooCommerce store and need to upload some prices that have 3 decimal places, e.g. £0.012 (products that are purchased in volumes of 000s).
The majority of my products are 'ordinary' with 2 decimal places.
There is a function in WooCommerce that allows for 3 decimal places - fine. Also a function to delete trailing zeros, but it deletes them if it's an integer e.g. £10.00 becomes £10.
My problem arises when the 95% of 'ordinary' price products start showing £10.000 or £5.230.
In a nutshell I'm looking for a way to delete trailing zeros but ONLY after the 3 decimal place;
Retain - £0.012
Delete any 3rd decimal 0 on prices like £10.00 or £5.23
Does anyone have a good solution?
Thanks
If you want to use regular expressions you can match them with
(?<=\d{2})(0+)$
preg_replace("/(?<=\d{2})(0+)$/", "", $price_string)
to match all zeroes which come after at least two digits. (It will match the zeroes in parenthesis):
12.002(0)
12.00(0000)
12.01(000000)
12.232(0)
12.123
an if else statement would probably work, unless you also have prices like 10.001:
$price = '0.001';
if ($price < 1) {
// don't round
} else {
$price = number_format($price, 2);
}
or just
$price = ( $price < 1 ) ? $price : number_format($price, 2) ;
Why not just something like this ↓ ?
$numberAsString = number_format($yourUglyNumber, 2, '.', ' ');
PHP function number_format
If you get the number as string with the money sign, you can first filter this out:
$moneyString = "£300.4578525";
// remove all non-numeric and cast to number
$moneyNum = preg_replace("/[^0-9.]/", "", $moneyString) + 0;
// format
$formatted = number_format($moneyNum, 2, '.', ' ');
// add the money symbol if you want
$formatted = '£' + $formatted.
I have a e-commerce shop and on the shopping cart page it gives me a separate price for every product, but I need total price.
in order to do that, I need to calculate all these values together and that's fine.
But, what bugs me is that I should calculate the sum of variables that are given in this format:
$455.00
What is the best way to extract the value "455" so I could add it to another value afterwards?
I hope I made myself clear...
Don't use float, but instead use an integer in cent. Floats are not precise (see Floating Point Precision), so the calculation tend to fail if you use floats. That's especially a burden if it is related to payments.
$str = '$455.00';
$r = sscanf($str, '$%d.%d', $dollar, $cent);
if ($r <> 2 or $cent > 99 or $cent < 0 or $dollar > 9999 or $dollar < 0) throw new Exception(sprintf('Invalid string "%s"', $str));
$amountInDollarCents = $dollar * 100 + $cent;
echo $str, ' -> ', $amountInDollarCents;
Demo
If you need only the dollar sign removed, use str_replace. To convert that to int or float, typecast it. However, using float results in non-exact calculations so be careful with it!
$newval = (int)str_replace('$', '', '$455.00');
I think that your ECommerce site only has $ (USD)
$price= substr($string_price,1);
This will convert your string to a float:
$price = (float)substr("$455.00", 1);
echo($price);
For more information, you can see this answer, which has a couple of good links for you in it.
What about the following:
$amount = array();
$amount[0] = '$455.15';
$amount[2] = '$85.75';
$total = 0;
foreach ($amount AS $value) {
$value = str_replace('$', '', $value);
$total += $value;
}
echo $total . "\n";
The cleaning operation is:
$value = str_replace('$', '', $value);
You might want to extract it in a function, especially if you need to use it in more than one place.
Another thing to think about is, why do you have the value in such way? It's a display format and such conversion should be the last to be done, ideally by the template. Maybe, if possible, you should consider to fix the code before, instead of applying a patch like this one.
It really looks like your program is doing it wrong. You should really represent all prices as (double) instead of a string. Then only when you need to show the price to the user you would prepend the $ sign to it, converting it to a string. But your program should really treat prices as numbers and not strings.
If you storing your price in the database as a string "$5.99" then you are really doing it wrong.
It's been a long time since I worked with PHP, so I don't know what the best practice would be for working with currency. One quick method would be to remove "$" and ".", and just add together the resulting as integers.
use str_replace() for instance, and replace "$" and "." with an empty string: http://se2.php.net/manual/en/function.str-replace.php
This will give you the whole sum in cents (thus avoiding some potential rounding problems). You can then divide it by 100 and format it however you like to display the sum as dollars.
I would like to make dots between my total value.
If i have 425000 i would like it to show as 425.000
Is there a function in php that implodes dots for numbers or how can i do this then?
Use number_format for this:
$number = 425000;
echo number_format( $number, 0, '', '.' );
The above example means: format the number, using 0 decimal places, an empty string as the decimal point (as we're not using decimal places anyway), and use . as the thousands separator.
Unless of course I misunderstood your intent, and you want to format the number as a number with 3 decimal places:
$number = 425000;
echo number_format( $number, 3, '.', '' );
The above example means: format the number, using 3 decimal places, . as the decimal point (default), and an empty string as the thousands separator (defaults to ,).
If the default thousands separator is good enough for you, you can just use 1:
$number = 425000;
echo number_format( $number, 3 );
1) Mind you: number_format accepts either 1, 2 or 4 parameters, not 3.
I guess you're looking for the number_format function.