In JavaScript, when converting from a float to a string, how can I get just 2 digits after the decimal point? For example, 0.34 instead of 0.3445434.
There are functions to round numbers. For example:
var x = 5.0364342423;
print(x.toFixed(2));
will print 5.04.
EDIT: Fiddle
var result = Math.round(original*100)/100;
The specifics, in case the code isn't self-explanatory.
edit: ...or just use toFixed
, as proposed by Tim Büthe. Forgot that one, thanks (and an upvote) for reminder :)
toFixed()
will mimic what something like printf()
does in C. However, toFixed()
and Math.round()
will handle rounding differently. In this case, toFixed()
will have the same sort of effect Math.floor()
would have (granted you're multiplying the original by 10^n beforehand, and calling toFixed()
with n digits). The "correctness" of the answer is very dependent on what the OP wants here, and both are "correct" in their own way.
Be careful when using toFixed()
:
First, rounding the number is done using the binary representation of the number, which might lead to unexpected behaviour. For example
(0.595).toFixed(2) === '0.59'
instead of '0.6'
.
Second, there's an IE bug with toFixed()
. In IE (at least up to version 7, didn't check IE8), the following holds true:
(0.9).toFixed(0) === '0'
It might be a good idea to follow kkyy's suggestion or to use a custom toFixed()
function, eg
function toFixed(value, precision) {
var power = Math.pow(10, precision || 0);
return String(Math.round(value * power) / power);
}
.toFixed()
method in the return value, which will add the required amount of precision, eg: return (Math.round(value * power) / power).toFixed(precision);
and also return the value as a string. Otherwise, precision of 20 is ignored for smaller decimals
toFixed
: note that increasing the precision can yield unexpected results: (1.2).toFixed(16) === "1.2000000000000000"
, while (1.2).toFixed(17) === "1.19999999999999996"
(in Firefox/Chrome; in IE8 the latter doesn't hold due to lower precision that IE8 can offer internally).
(0.598).toFixed(2)
does not produce 0.6
. It produces 0.60
:)
(0.335).toFixed(2) == 0.34 == (0.345).toFixed(2)
.
One more problem to be aware of, is that toFixed()
can produce unnecessary zeros at the end of the number. For example:
var x=(23-7.37)
x
15.629999999999999
x.toFixed(6)
"15.630000"
The idea is to clean up the output using a RegExp
:
function humanize(x){
return x.toFixed(6).replace(/\.?0*$/,'');
}
The RegExp
matches the trailing zeros (and optionally the decimal point) to make sure it looks good for integers as well.
humanize(23-7.37)
"15.63"
humanize(1200)
"1200"
humanize(1200.03)
"1200.03"
humanize(3/4)
"0.75"
humanize(4/3)
"1.333333"
var x = 0.3445434
x = Math.round (x*100) / 100 // this will make nice rounding
There is a problem with all those solutions floating around using multipliers. Both kkyy and Christoph's solutions are wrong unfortunately.
Please test your code for number 551.175 with 2 decimal places - it will round to 551.17 while it should be 551.18 ! But if you test for ex. 451.175 it will be ok - 451.18. So it's difficult to spot this error at a first glance.
The problem is with multiplying: try 551.175 * 100 = 55117.49999999999 (ups!)
So my idea is to treat it with toFixed() before using Math.round();
function roundFix(number, precision)
{
var multi = Math.pow(10, precision);
return Math.round( (number * multi).toFixed(precision + 1) ) / multi;
}
toFixed
is affected as well — (0.335).toFixed(2) == 0.34 == (0.345).toFixed(2)
… Whichever method is used, better add an epsilon before the rounding.
The key here I guess is to round up correctly first, then you can convert it to String.
function roundOf(n, p) {
const n1 = n * Math.pow(10, p + 1);
const n2 = Math.floor(n1 / 10);
if (n1 >= (n2 * 10 + 5)) {
return (n2 + 1) / Math.pow(10, p);
}
return n2 / Math.pow(10, p);
}
// All edge cases listed in this thread
roundOf(95.345, 2); // 95.35
roundOf(95.344, 2); // 95.34
roundOf(5.0364342423, 2); // 5.04
roundOf(0.595, 2); // 0.60
roundOf(0.335, 2); // 0.34
roundOf(0.345, 2); // 0.35
roundOf(551.175, 2); // 551.18
roundOf(0.3445434, 2); // 0.34
Now you can safely format this value with toFixed(p). So with your specific case:
roundOf(0.3445434, 2).toFixed(2); // 0.34
If you want the string without round you can use this RegEx (maybe is not the most efficient way... but is really easy)
(2.34567778).toString().match(/\d+\.\d{2}/)[0]
// '2.34'
function trimNumber(num, len) {
const modulu_one = 1;
const start_numbers_float=2;
var int_part = Math.trunc(num);
var float_part = String(num % modulu_one);
float_part = float_part.slice(start_numbers_float, start_numbers_float+len);
return int_part+'.'+float_part;
}
return float_part ? int_part+'.'+float_part : int_part;
otherwise if you passed Integer, it returned number with a dot at the end (example input: 2100
, output: 2100.
)
Maybe you'll also want decimal separator? Here is a function I just made:
function formatFloat(num,casasDec,sepDecimal,sepMilhar) {
if (num < 0)
{
num = -num;
sinal = -1;
} else
sinal = 1;
var resposta = "";
var part = "";
if (num != Math.floor(num)) // decimal values present
{
part = Math.round((num-Math.floor(num))*Math.pow(10,casasDec)).toString(); // transforms decimal part into integer (rounded)
while (part.length < casasDec)
part = '0'+part;
if (casasDec > 0)
{
resposta = sepDecimal+part;
num = Math.floor(num);
} else
num = Math.round(num);
} // end of decimal part
while (num > 0) // integer part
{
part = (num - Math.floor(num/1000)*1000).toString(); // part = three less significant digits
num = Math.floor(num/1000);
if (num > 0)
while (part.length < 3) // 123.023.123 if sepMilhar = '.'
part = '0'+part; // 023
resposta = part+resposta;
if (num > 0)
resposta = sepMilhar+resposta;
}
if (sinal < 0)
resposta = '-'+resposta;
return resposta;
}
There is no way to avoid inconsistent rounding for prices with x.xx5 as actual value using either multiplication or division. If you need to calculate correct prices client-side you should keep all amounts in cents. This is due to the nature of the internal representation of numeric values in JavaScript. Notice that Excel suffers from the same problems so most people wouldn't notice the small errors caused by this phenomen. However errors may accumulate whenever you add up a lot of calculated values, there is a whole theory around this involving the order of calculations and other methods to minimize the error in the final result. To emphasize on the problems with decimal values, please note that 0.1 + 0.2 is not exactly equal to 0.3 in JavaScript, while 1 + 2 is equal to 3.
/** don't spend 5 minutes, use my code **/
function prettyFloat(x,nbDec) {
if (!nbDec) nbDec = 100;
var a = Math.abs(x);
var e = Math.floor(a);
var d = Math.round((a-e)*nbDec); if (d == nbDec) { d=0; e++; }
var signStr = (x<0) ? "-" : " ";
var decStr = d.toString(); var tmp = 10; while(tmp<nbDec && d*tmp < nbDec) {decStr = "0"+decStr; tmp*=10;}
var eStr = e.toString();
return signStr+eStr+"."+decStr;
}
prettyFloat(0); // "0.00"
prettyFloat(-1); // "-1.00"
prettyFloat(-0.999); // "-1.00"
prettyFloat(0.5); // "0.50"
I use this code to format floats. It is based on toPrecision()
but it strips unnecessary zeros. I would welcome suggestions for how to simplify the regex.
function round(x, n) {
var exp = Math.pow(10, n);
return Math.floor(x*exp + 0.5)/exp;
}
Usage example:
function test(x, n, d) {
var rounded = rnd(x, d);
var result = rounded.toPrecision(n);
result = result.replace(/\.?0*$/, '');
result = result.replace(/\.?0*e/, 'e');
result = result.replace('e+', 'e');
return result;
}
document.write(test(1.2000e45, 3, 2) + '=' + '1.2e45' + '<br>');
document.write(test(1.2000e+45, 3, 2) + '=' + '1.2e45' + '<br>');
document.write(test(1.2340e45, 3, 2) + '=' + '1.23e45' + '<br>');
document.write(test(1.2350e45, 3, 2) + '=' + '1.24e45' + '<br>');
document.write(test(1.0000, 3, 2) + '=' + '1' + '<br>');
document.write(test(1.0100, 3, 2) + '=' + '1.01' + '<br>');
document.write(test(1.2340, 4, 2) + '=' + '1.23' + '<br>');
document.write(test(1.2350, 4, 2) + '=' + '1.24' + '<br>');
countDecimals = value => { if (Math.floor(value) === value) return 0; let stringValue = value.toString().split(".")[1]; if (stringValue) { return value.toString().split(".")[1].length ? value.toString().split(".")[1].length : 0; } else { return 0; } }; formatNumber=(ans)=>{ let decimalPlaces = this.countDecimals(ans); ans = 1 * ans; if (decimalPlaces !== 0) { let onePlusAns = ans + 1; let decimalOnePlus = this.countDecimals(onePlusAns); if (decimalOnePlus < decimalPlaces) { ans = ans.toFixed(decimalPlaces - 1).replace(/\.?0*$/, ""); } else { let tenMulAns = ans * 10; let decimalTenMul = this.countDecimals(tenMulAns); if (decimalTenMul + 1 < decimalPlaces) { ans = ans.toFixed(decimalPlaces - 1).replace(/\.?0*$/, ""); } } } }
I just add 1 to the value and count the decimal digits present in the original value and the added value. If I find the decimal digits after adding one less than the original decimal digits, I just call the toFixed() with (original decimals - 1). I also check by multiplying the original value by 10 and follow the same logic in case adding one doesn't reduce redundant decimal places. A simple workaround to handle floating-point number rounding in JS. Works in most cases I tried.
Success story sharing
var x = 5.036432346; var y = x.toFixed(2) + 100;
y
will be equal"5.03100"
(0.335).toFixed(2) == 0.34 == (0.345).toFixed(2)
…