I keep stumbling on the format specifiers for the printf() family of functions. What I want is to be able to print a double (or float) with a maximum given number of digits after the decimal point. If I use:
printf("%1.3f", 359.01335);
printf("%1.3f", 359.00999);
I get
359.013
359.010
Instead of the desired
359.013
359.01
Can anybody help me?
This can't be done with the normal printf
format specifiers. The closest you could get would be:
printf("%.6g", 359.013); // 359.013
printf("%.6g", 359.01); // 359.01
but the ".6" is the total numeric width so
printf("%.6g", 3.01357); // 3.01357
breaks it.
What you can do is to sprintf("%.20g")
the number to a string buffer then manipulate the string to only have N characters past the decimal point.
Assuming your number is in the variable num, the following function will remove all but the first N
decimals, then strip off the trailing zeros (and decimal point if they were all zeros).
char str[50];
sprintf (str,"%.20g",num); // Make the number.
morphNumericString (str, 3);
: :
void morphNumericString (char *s, int n) {
char *p;
int count;
p = strchr (s,'.'); // Find decimal point, if any.
if (p != NULL) {
count = n; // Adjust for more or less decimals.
while (count >= 0) { // Maximum decimals allowed.
count--;
if (*p == '\0') // If there's less than desired.
break;
p++; // Next character.
}
*p-- = '\0'; // Truncate string.
while (*p == '0') // Remove trailing zeros.
*p-- = '\0';
if (*p == '.') { // If all decimals were zeros, remove ".".
*p = '\0';
}
}
}
If you're not happy with the truncation aspect (which would turn 0.12399
into 0.123
rather than rounding it to 0.124
), you can actually use the rounding facilities already provided by printf
. You just need to analyse the number before-hand to dynamically create the widths, then use those to turn the number into a string:
#include <stdio.h>
void nDecimals (char *s, double d, int n) {
int sz; double d2;
// Allow for negative.
d2 = (d >= 0) ? d : -d;
sz = (d >= 0) ? 0 : 1;
// Add one for each whole digit (0.xx special case).
if (d2 < 1) sz++;
while (d2 >= 1) { d2 /= 10.0; sz++; }
// Adjust for decimal point and fractionals.
sz += 1 + n;
// Create format string then use it.
sprintf (s, "%*.*f", sz, n, d);
}
int main (void) {
char str[50];
double num[] = { 40, 359.01335, -359.00999,
359.01, 3.01357, 0.111111111, 1.1223344 };
for (int i = 0; i < sizeof(num)/sizeof(*num); i++) {
nDecimals (str, num[i], 3);
printf ("%30.20f -> %s\n", num[i], str);
}
return 0;
}
The whole point of nDecimals()
in this case is to correctly work out the field widths, then format the number using a format string based on that. The test harness main()
shows this in action:
40.00000000000000000000 -> 40.000
359.01335000000000263753 -> 359.013
-359.00999000000001615263 -> -359.010
359.00999999999999090505 -> 359.010
3.01357000000000008200 -> 3.014
0.11111111099999999852 -> 0.111
1.12233439999999995429 -> 1.122
Once you have the correctly rounded value, you can once again pass that to morphNumericString()
to remove trailing zeros by simply changing:
nDecimals (str, num[i], 3);
into:
nDecimals (str, num[i], 3);
morphNumericString (str, 3);
(or calling morphNumericString
at the end of nDecimals
but, in that case, I'd probably just combine the two into one function), and you end up with:
40.00000000000000000000 -> 40
359.01335000000000263753 -> 359.013
-359.00999000000001615263 -> -359.01
359.00999999999999090505 -> 359.01
3.01357000000000008200 -> 3.014
0.11111111099999999852 -> 0.111
1.12233439999999995429 -> 1.122
To get rid of the trailing zeros, you should use the "%g" format:
float num = 1.33;
printf("%g", num); //output: 1.33
After the question was clarified a bit, that suppressing zeros is not the only thing that was asked, but limiting the output to three decimal places was required as well. I think that can't be done with sprintf format strings alone. As Pax Diablo pointed out, string manipulation would be required.
I like the answer of R. slightly tweaked:
float f = 1234.56789;
printf("%d.%.0f", f, 1000*(f-(int)f));
'1000' determines the precision.
Power to the 0.5 rounding.
EDIT
Ok, this answer was edited a few times and I lost track what I was thinking a few years back (and originally it did not fill all the criteria). So here is a new version (that fills all criteria and handles negative numbers correctly):
double f = 1234.05678900;
char s[100];
int decimals = 10;
sprintf(s,"%.*g", decimals, ((int)(pow(10, decimals)*(fabs(f) - abs((int)f)) +0.5))/pow(10,decimals));
printf("10 decimals: %d%s\n", (int)f, s+1);
And the test cases:
#import <stdio.h>
#import <stdlib.h>
#import <math.h>
int main(void){
double f = 1234.05678900;
char s[100];
int decimals;
decimals = 10;
sprintf(s,"%.*g", decimals, ((int)(pow(10, decimals)*(fabs(f) - abs((int)f)) +0.5))/pow(10,decimals));
printf("10 decimals: %d%s\n", (int)f, s+1);
decimals = 3;
sprintf(s,"%.*g", decimals, ((int)(pow(10, decimals)*(fabs(f) - abs((int)f)) +0.5))/pow(10,decimals));
printf(" 3 decimals: %d%s\n", (int)f, s+1);
f = -f;
decimals = 10;
sprintf(s,"%.*g", decimals, ((int)(pow(10, decimals)*(fabs(f) - abs((int)f)) +0.5))/pow(10,decimals));
printf(" negative 10: %d%s\n", (int)f, s+1);
decimals = 3;
sprintf(s,"%.*g", decimals, ((int)(pow(10, decimals)*(fabs(f) - abs((int)f)) +0.5))/pow(10,decimals));
printf(" negative 3: %d%s\n", (int)f, s+1);
decimals = 2;
f = 1.012;
sprintf(s,"%.*g", decimals, ((int)(pow(10, decimals)*(fabs(f) - abs((int)f)) +0.5))/pow(10,decimals));
printf(" additional : %d%s\n", (int)f, s+1);
return 0;
}
And the output of the tests:
10 decimals: 1234.056789
3 decimals: 1234.057
negative 10: -1234.056789
negative 3: -1234.057
additional : 1.01
Now, all criteria are met:
maximum number of decimals behind the zero is fixed
trailing zeros are removed
it does it mathematically right (right?)
works (now) also when first decimal is zero
Unfortunately this answer is a two-liner as sprintf
does not return the string.
Why not just do this?
double f = 359.01335;
printf("%g", round(f * 1000.0) / 1000.0);
I search the string (starting rightmost) for the first character in the range 1
to 9
(ASCII value 49
-57
) then null
(set to 0
) each char right of it - see below:
void stripTrailingZeros(void) {
//This finds the index of the rightmost ASCII char[1-9] in array
//All elements to the left of this are nulled (=0)
int i = 20;
unsigned char char1 = 0; //initialised to ensure entry to condition below
while ((char1 > 57) || (char1 < 49)) {
i--;
char1 = sprintfBuffer[i];
}
//null chars left of i
for (int j = i; j < 20; j++) {
sprintfBuffer[i] = 0;
}
}
What about something like this (might have rounding errors and negative-value issues that need debugging, left as an exercise for the reader):
printf("%.0d%.4g\n", (int)f/10, f-((int)f-(int)f%10));
It's slightly programmatic but at least it doesn't make you do any string manipulation.
Some of the highly voted solutions suggest the %g
conversion specifier of printf
. This is wrong because there are cases where %g
will produce scientific notation. Other solutions use math to print the desired number of decimal digits.
I think the easiest solution is to use sprintf
with the %f
conversion specifier and to manually remove trailing zeros and possibly a decimal point from the result. Here's a C99 solution:
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
char*
format_double(double d) {
int size = snprintf(NULL, 0, "%.3f", d);
char *str = malloc(size + 1);
snprintf(str, size + 1, "%.3f", d);
for (int i = size - 1, end = size; i >= 0; i--) {
if (str[i] == '0') {
if (end == i + 1) {
end = i;
}
}
else if (str[i] == '.') {
if (end == i + 1) {
end = i;
}
str[end] = '\0';
break;
}
}
return str;
}
Note that the characters used for digits and the decimal separator depend on the current locale. The code above assumes a C or US English locale.
A simple solution but it gets the job done, assigns a known length and precision and avoids the chance of going exponential format (which is a risk when you use %g):
// Since we are only interested in 3 decimal places, this function
// can avoid any potential miniscule floating point differences
// which can return false when using "=="
int DoubleEquals(double i, double j)
{
return (fabs(i - j) < 0.000001);
}
void PrintMaxThreeDecimal(double d)
{
if (DoubleEquals(d, floor(d)))
printf("%.0f", d);
else if (DoubleEquals(d * 10, floor(d * 10)))
printf("%.1f", d);
else if (DoubleEquals(d * 100, floor(d* 100)))
printf("%.2f", d);
else
printf("%.3f", d);
}
Add or remove "elses" if you want a max of 2 decimals; 4 decimals; etc.
For example if you wanted 2 decimals:
void PrintMaxTwoDecimal(double d)
{
if (DoubleEquals(d, floor(d)))
printf("%.0f", d);
else if (DoubleEquals(d * 10, floor(d * 10)))
printf("%.1f", d);
else
printf("%.2f", d);
}
If you want to specify the minimum width to keep fields aligned, increment as necessary, for example:
void PrintAlignedMaxThreeDecimal(double d)
{
if (DoubleEquals(d, floor(d)))
printf("%7.0f", d);
else if (DoubleEquals(d * 10, floor(d * 10)))
printf("%9.1f", d);
else if (DoubleEquals(d * 100, floor(d* 100)))
printf("%10.2f", d);
else
printf("%11.3f", d);
}
You could also convert that to a function where you pass the desired width of the field:
void PrintAlignedWidthMaxThreeDecimal(int w, double d)
{
if (DoubleEquals(d, floor(d)))
printf("%*.0f", w-4, d);
else if (DoubleEquals(d * 10, floor(d * 10)))
printf("%*.1f", w-2, d);
else if (DoubleEquals(d * 100, floor(d* 100)))
printf("%*.2f", w-1, d);
else
printf("%*.3f", w, d);
}
d = 0.0001
: then floor(d)
is 0
, so the difference is bigger than 0.000001, so DoubleEquals
is false, so it will not use the "%.0f"
specifier: you will see trailing zeros from "%*.2f"
or "%*.3f"
. So it doesn't answer the question.
I found problems in some of the solutions posted. I put this together based on answers above. It seems to work for me.
int doubleEquals(double i, double j) {
return (fabs(i - j) < 0.000001);
}
void printTruncatedDouble(double dd, int max_len) {
char str[50];
int match = 0;
for ( int ii = 0; ii < max_len; ii++ ) {
if (doubleEquals(dd * pow(10,ii), floor(dd * pow(10,ii)))) {
sprintf (str,"%f", round(dd*pow(10,ii))/pow(10,ii));
match = 1;
break;
}
}
if ( match != 1 ) {
sprintf (str,"%f", round(dd*pow(10,max_len))/pow(10,max_len));
}
char *pp;
int count;
pp = strchr (str,'.');
if (pp != NULL) {
count = max_len;
while (count >= 0) {
count--;
if (*pp == '\0')
break;
pp++;
}
*pp-- = '\0';
while (*pp == '0')
*pp-- = '\0';
if (*pp == '.') {
*pp = '\0';
}
}
printf ("%s\n", str);
}
int main(int argc, char **argv)
{
printTruncatedDouble( -1.999, 2 ); // prints -2
printTruncatedDouble( -1.006, 2 ); // prints -1.01
printTruncatedDouble( -1.005, 2 ); // prints -1
printf("\n");
printTruncatedDouble( 1.005, 2 ); // prints 1 (should be 1.01?)
printTruncatedDouble( 1.006, 2 ); // prints 1.01
printTruncatedDouble( 1.999, 2 ); // prints 2
printf("\n");
printTruncatedDouble( -1.999, 3 ); // prints -1.999
printTruncatedDouble( -1.001, 3 ); // prints -1.001
printTruncatedDouble( -1.0005, 3 ); // prints -1.001 (shound be -1?)
printTruncatedDouble( -1.0004, 3 ); // prints -1
printf("\n");
printTruncatedDouble( 1.0004, 3 ); // prints 1
printTruncatedDouble( 1.0005, 3 ); // prints 1.001
printTruncatedDouble( 1.001, 3 ); // prints 1.001
printTruncatedDouble( 1.999, 3 ); // prints 1.999
printf("\n");
exit(0);
}
My idea is to calculate the required precision that would not result in trailing zeroes for a given double value and pass it to the "%1.*f"
format in printf(). This can even be done as one-liner:
int main() {
double r=1234.56789;
int precision=3;
printf(L"%1.*f", prec(r, precision), r);
}
int prec(const double& r, int precision)
{
double rPos = (r < 0)? -r : r;
double nkd = fmod(rPos, 1.0); // 0..0.99999999
int i, ex10 = 1;
for (i = 0; i < precision; ++i)
ex10 *= 10;
int nki = (int)(nkd * ex10 + 0.5);
// "Eliminate" trailing zeroes
int requiredPrecision = precision;
for (; requiredPrecision && !(nki % 10); ) {
--requiredPrecision;
nki /= 10;
}
return requiredPrecision;
}
And here is another %g
solution. You should always provide a format precision that is "wide enough" (default is only 6) and round the value. I think this is a nice way to do it:
double round(const double &value, const double& rounding) {
return rounding!=0 ? floor(value/rounding + 0.5)*rounding : value;
}
printf("%.12g" round(val, 0.001)); // prints up to 3 relevant digits
Here is my first try at an answer:
void xprintfloat(char *format, float f) { char s[50]; char *p; sprintf(s, format, f); for(p=s; *p; ++p) if('.' == *p) { while(*++p); while('0'==*--p) *p = '\0'; } printf("%s", s); }
Known bugs: Possible buffer overflow depending on format. If "." is present for other reason than %f wrong result might happen.
Slight variation on above:
Eliminates period for case (10000.0). Breaks after first period is processed.
Code here:
void EliminateTrailingFloatZeros(char *iValue)
{
char *p = 0;
for(p=iValue; *p; ++p) {
if('.' == *p) {
while(*++p);
while('0'==*--p) *p = '\0';
if(*p == '.') *p = '\0';
break;
}
}
}
It still has potential for overflow, so be careful ;P
I would say you should use printf("%.8g",value);
If you use "%.6g"
you will not get desired output for some numbers like.32.230210 it should print 32.23021
but it prints 32.2302
Hit the same issue, double precision is 15 decimal, and float precision is 6 decimal, so I wrote to 2 functions for them separately
#include <stdio.h>
#include <math.h>
#include <string>
#include <string.h>
std::string doublecompactstring(double d)
{
char buf[128] = {0};
if (isnan(d))
return "NAN";
sprintf(buf, "%.15f", d);
// try to remove the trailing zeros
size_t ccLen = strlen(buf);
for(int i=(int)(ccLen -1);i>=0;i--)
{
if (buf[i] == '0')
buf[i] = '\0';
else
break;
}
return buf;
}
std::string floatcompactstring(float d)
{
char buf[128] = {0};
if (isnan(d))
return "NAN";
sprintf(buf, "%.6f", d);
// try to remove the trailing zeros
size_t ccLen = strlen(buf);
for(int i=(int)(ccLen -1);i>=0;i--)
{
if (buf[i] == '0')
buf[i] = '\0';
else
break;
}
return buf;
}
int main(int argc, const char* argv[])
{
double a = 0.000000000000001;
float b = 0.000001f;
printf("a: %s\n", doublecompactstring(a).c_str());
printf("b: %s\n", floatcompactstring(b).c_str());
return 0;
}
output is
a: 0.000000000000001
b: 0.000001
I needed that and the first answer from paxdiablo does the trick. But I was not needing truncating and the version below is maybe slightly faster? Starting to search end of string (EOS) after the ".", only one placement of EOS.
//https://stackoverflow.com/questions/277772/avoid-trailing-zeroes-in-printf
//adapted from paxdiablo (removed truncating)
char StringForDouble[50];
char *PointerInString;
void PrintDouble (double number) {
sprintf(StringForDouble,"%.10f",number); // convert number to string
PointerInString=strchr(&StringForDouble[0],'.'); // find decimal point, if any
if(PointerInString!=NULL) {
PointerInString=strchr(&PointerInString[0],'\0'); // find end of string
do{
PointerInString--;
} while(PointerInString[0]=='0'); // remove trailing zeros
if (PointerInString[0]=='.') { // if all decimals were zeros, remove "."
PointerInString[0]='\0';
} else {
PointerInString[1]='\0'; //otherwise put EOS after the first non zero char
}
}
printf("%s",&StringForDouble[0]);
}
Your code rounds to three decimal places due to the ".3" before the f
printf("%1.3f", 359.01335);
printf("%1.3f", 359.00999);
Thus if you the second line rounded to two decimal places, you should change it to this:
printf("%1.3f", 359.01335);
printf("%1.2f", 359.00999);
That code will output your desired results:
359.013
359.01
*Note this is assuming you already have it printing on separate lines, if not then the following will prevent it from printing on the same line:
printf("%1.3f\n", 359.01335);
printf("%1.2f\n", 359.00999);
The Following program source code was my test for this answer
#include <cstdio>
int main()
{
printf("%1.3f\n", 359.01335);
printf("%1.2f\n", 359.00999);
while (true){}
return 0;
}
Success story sharing
.
In some locales, the decimal place is actually a,
comma.atof
gives back the same value.0.10000000000000000555
will be0.1
when stripped back. The problem may come if you have a value slightly under such as if the closest representation of42.1
was42.099999999314159
. If you really wanted to handle that, then you'd probably need to round based on the last digit removed rather than truncate.printf
-like functions as they already support dynamic parameters (*
special character): for exampleprintf("%*.*f", total, decimals, x);
outputs a number with the dynamically specified total field length and decimals.