NSNumberFormatter set multiplier for dividing with large number - ios

I have a NSNumberFormatter and I would like to display currency as in a Billion,
So if I have 1,000,000,000 $ I would like to display 1B $
I create NSNumberFormatter object and set multiplyer :
NSNumberFormatter * numberFormatter = [[NSNumberFormatter alloc]init];
[numberFormatter setMultiplier: #(1.0/1000000000)];
If I display multiplier as:
NSLog(#" NUMBER %#", numberFormatter.multiplier); // --> NUMBER 1e-09
But if I put
NSLog(#"Formatter %#", [numberFormatter1 stringFromNumber:#(1225245041496000)]); // --> Formatter 0
It seams to me that multiplier round number but I don't know how to prevent this.

Looks like you're exceeding the minimum value allowed for the multiplier. I can't find docs on it, but quick testing shows:
[numberFormatter setMultiplier: #(1.0 / 8388608.0)];
works fine, but
[numberFormatter setMultiplier: #(1.0 / 8388609.0)];
fails (string output is always "0").
So I don't think NSNumberFormatter is going to fit your needs.

Related

NSNumberFormatter currency symbol

My application is allowing user to select various currencies for spendings tracking.
I have a label which displays the amount with currecy symbol. I'm using NSNumberFormatter with kCFNumberFormatterCurrencyStyle to format the amount string and display it in the label;
numberFormatter = [[NSNumberFormatter alloc] init];
numberFormatter.numberStyle = kCFNumberFormatterCurrencyStyle;
numberFormatter.currencyCode = #"EUR";
My goal is to display the currency symbol with different color, so i'm using NSAttributedString, trying to find symbols' range and set different attributes to it. The problem is that the formatter return wrong symbol when I initilizing the attributed string:
MLOG(#"internationalCurrencySymbol %#", numberFormatter.internationalCurrencySymbol);
MLOG(#"currencySymbol %#", numberFormatter.currencySymbol);
MLOG(#"currencyCode %#", numberFormatter.currencyCode);
//logs:
//USD
//$
//EUR
but when the label is displayed on the screen I see correct Euro currency symbol: €
Does anybody know how can get the currency symbol for given currency code?
I just tested your code. If you run the log statements right after defining the number formatter the way you did, the output is
#"EUR"
#"€"
#"EUR"
Note that international currency symbol and currency symbol seem to depend on the locale set in your system. But you can easily change the locale for the formatter like this:
numberFormatter.locale = [[NSLocale alloc] initWithLocaleIdentifier:#"de_DE"];
It would probably be best to not set the currencySymbol at all. Then when the locale is, say, Thailand (#"th_TH"), you get
numberFormatter.internationalCurrencySymbol "THB"
numberFormatter.currencySymbol "฿"
numberFormatter.currencyCode "THB"

Convert Double to NSString for label text

I'm trying to get an NSNumber out of an NSMutableArray that's been previously manipluated as a double and then added to the array to print out in a label (NSString).
It's important that the number stays as an accurate representatoin of a double with no scientific notation to abbreviate the answer.
The other requirement is to have it print to maybe 15 or 16 decimal places, rounding is optional but not required.
I also do not want trailing 0's when displaying the double
I've tried the following but these do not work...
This is ok but ends the number with a . (eg: 1+1=2.)
double test = [[data.argOperands objectAtIndex:0]doubleValue];
label.text = [NSString stringWithFormat:#"%3.2f", test];
label.text = [label.text stringByTrimmingCharactersInSet:[NSCharacterSet characterSetWithCharactersInString:[NSString stringWithFormat:#"0"]]];
I then try something like this, which is wrong because if I do 9^99 it'll print inf or 0.0003/4 it'll give scientific numbers instead of the value
float y = [[calcData.argOperands objectAtIndex:0]doubleValue];;
label.text = [NSString stringWithFormat:#"%g", y];
If I do the following using double it's getting close, 9^99 works, but 3.33/5 returns 0.666000 with trailing 0's
double y = [[data.argOperands objectAtIndex:0]doubleValue];
label.text = [NSString stringWithFormat:#"%f", y];
Any code examples of how to do it this way using either NSNumberFormatter or NSDecimalNumber would be greatly appreciated.
"%.13f" Would give you 13 decimal places, but that would give you trailing zeros.
You may need to create an NSNumberFormatter and use that.
I suspect you're not going to be happy no matter what. Binary floating point is not an exact representation of decimal. The decimal value .1 is not an exact value in binary, and might display as something like .09999999998 if you display it with 13 decimal places.
You also might look at using NSDecimalNumber, which stores values as decimal digits. It's slower than other ways of doing math but you can control the results exactly.
After looking over http://nshipster.com/nsformatter/ and the giant NSNumberFormatter_Class doc I've come up with this code that prints everything to my requirements:
NSNumberFormatter *numberFormatter = [[NSNumberFormatter alloc] init];
[numberFormatter setUsesSignificantDigits: YES];
numberFormatter.maximumSignificantDigits = 100;
[numberFormatter setGroupingSeparator:#""];
[numberFormatter setNumberStyle:NSNumberFormatterDecimalStyle];
label.text = [numberFormatter stringFromNumber:stringFromNumber:#(1234.567800000555)];
This will actually print 1234.56780000056 (missing the 12th decimal place and rounding it up to the 11th decimal place) though I'm happy enough with this.
I'm still cleaning up the answer, I don't need maximumSignificantDigits = 100 obviously, but generally having a large number there helps to ensure I'm getting all the decimal places I need.
I had to set setGroupingSeparator:#"" because NSNumberFormatterDecimalStyle puts commas in numbers and I don't want them (eg: Instead of getting 1,000 I want 1000).

Adding Commas to Float or String?

I have been trying to find a way to find a way to append commas to a string or float. I have a float which could be anything from 10.50 to 50000000000.99 and would love to be able to format this to add commas to every 3 digits (not including the floats). I know that there is a NSNumberFormatter that can use NSNumberFormatterDecimalStyle or NSNumberFormatterCurrencyStyle but neither of those work with strings/floats. I have tried to split the float into two strings and then try to do a % of length == 3 calculation but it began to get really really messy. I did something similar in Java but it seems to be a lot harder in iOS.
If anyone have any suggestions or ideas? Any information or guidance is appreciated! Thanks in advance.
Edit: I know there are posts out there but none of them seem to solve the problem with doubles/floats/strings that end in zeros. For example, if I have a double as 16.00, the formatter will format that into 16. Same thing goes for a 1234.80. The formatter will format it into 1,234.8 instead of 1,234.80 and that is what I am looking for.
View this post on NSNumberFormatting here
The gist of it is to covert the float or double to a NSNumber and then use the NSNumberFormatter on the NSNumber to get a NSString with the desired format. Something like:
double doubleNum = 1000.002;
// Change double to nsnumber:
NSNumber *num = [NSNumber numberWithDouble:doubleNum];
// Set up the formatter:
NSNumberFormatter *numFormatter = [[NSNumberFormatter alloc] init];
[numFormatter setUsesGroupingSeporator:YES];
[numFormatter setGroupingSeparator:#","];
[numFormatter setGroupingSize:3];
// Get the formatted string:
NSString *stringNum = [numFormatter stringFromNumber:num];
NSLog(#"%#",stringNum);
// prints out '1,000.002'
Give it a try, there are lots of different formatting settings you can apply.
Read Apple's guide to formatting numbers, NSNumberFormatter supports both thousand separators and fractional parts. For example see Listing 1 in the referenced doc.

Changing the number of significant digits for a string format with %g

I'm building an app that allows the user to perform some calculations except the calculations result in numbers with lots of decimal digits. It's fine for me to see that kind of precision but I want to let the users be able to choose how many significant digits they want shown. I'm creating a result string using a double and using the %g format shown here:
NSString *resultString = [[NSString alloc] initWithFormat:#"%.14g", result];
I have created a stepper that the users can interact with and storing the number they have chosen in another double. My question is, how can insert that double where the 14 is to change the number of significant digits? Or is this even possible? Please comment if you need clarification.
Any field width or precision in a format can be replaced by an * to indicate a dynamic value which is supplied by an int argument.
For example:
double d = 1.0/7;
for(int i = 4; i < 12; i++)
NSLog(#"%.*g", i, d);
Outputs:
0.1429
0.14286
0.142857
0.1428571
0.14285714
0.142857143
0.1428571429
0.14285714286

How to get format numbers with decimals (XCode)

My objective is to create a customer calculator application for iPhone and I am using Xcode to write my application. My problem, that I cannot find a solution for, is how to format a number that uses decimals (with extra zeros) without switching into scientific notation
I tried...
buttonScreen.text = [NSString stringWithFormat:#"%0.f",currentNumber];
%0.f formatting always rounds so if the user types in "4.23" it displays "4"
%f formats numbers with 6 decimals (typing in '5' displays as '5.000000'), but I don't want to show extra zeros on the end of the number.
%10.4f is something else that I have seen in my reading to find the solution, but my problem is that I don't know how many decimals will be in the answer, and I may want zero decimals or 10 decimals depending on the number.
The following are examples of numbers I'd like to display (without the commas): A whole number larger than 6 digits, a decimal number with more than 6 digits.
123,456,789;
0.123456789;
12345.6789;
-123,456,789;
-0.23456789;
-12345.6789;
*This is a spiritual repost to my earlier question "How to Format Numbers without scientific notation or decimals" which I poorly phrased as I intended to write 'unnecessary (extra zeros),' but upon rereading my post clearly witnessed my inability to convey that at any point in my question.
Use the NSNumberFormatter class.
First define the formatter:
NSNumberFormatter *formatter = [[NSNumberFormatter alloc] init];
Then you can define various properties of the formatter:
formatter.numberStyle = NSNumberFormatterDecimalStyle;
formatter.maximumIntigerDigits = 3;
formatter.minimumFractionDigits = 3;
formatter.maximumFractionDigits = 8;
formatter.usesSignificantDigits = NO;
formatter.usesGroupingSeparator = YES;
formatter.groupingSeparator = #",";
formatter.decimalSeparator = #".";
....
You format the number into a string like this:
NSString *formattedNumber = [formatter stringFromNumber:num];
Play around with it. Its pretty simple, but may take some work to get the look you would like.
Actually, it makes more sense to use this:
label.text = [NSString stringWithFormat:#"%.4f", answer];
This tells XCode to display your number with 4 decimal places, but it doesn't try to "pad" the front of the number with spaces. For example:
1.23 -> " 1.2300" // When using [NSString stringWithFormat:#"%9.4f", answer];
1.23 -> "1.2300" // When using [NSString stringWithFormat:#"%.4f", answer];
try something like this
label.text = [NSString stringWithFormat:#"%9.4f", answer];
where the 9 means total digits (in terms of padding for alignment), and the 4 means 4 decimal places.

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