Module: ActionView::Helpers::NumberHelper
- Included in:
- ActionView::Helpers
- Defined in:
- lib/action_view/helpers/number_helper.rb
Overview
Provides methods for converting numbers into formatted strings. Methods are provided for phone numbers, currency, percentage, precision, positional notation, file size and pretty printing.
Most methods expect a number
argument, and will return it unchanged if can’t be converted into a valid number.
Defined Under Namespace
Classes: InvalidNumberError
Constant Summary collapse
- DEFAULT_CURRENCY_VALUES =
{ :format => "%u%n", :negative_format => "-%u%n", :unit => "$", :separator => ".", :delimiter => ",", :precision => 2, :significant => false, :strip_insignificant_zeros => false }
- STORAGE_UNITS =
[:byte, :kb, :mb, :gb, :tb].freeze
- DECIMAL_UNITS =
{0 => :unit, 1 => :ten, 2 => :hundred, 3 => :thousand, 6 => :million, 9 => :billion, 12 => :trillion, 15 => :quadrillion, -1 => :deci, -2 => :centi, -3 => :mili, -6 => :micro, -9 => :nano, -12 => :pico, -15 => :femto}.freeze
Instance Method Summary collapse
-
#number_to_currency(number, options = {}) ⇒ Object
Formats a
number
into a currency string (e.g., $13.65). -
#number_to_human(number, options = {}) ⇒ Object
Pretty prints (formats and approximates) a number in a way it is more readable by humans (eg.: 1200000000 becomes “1.2 Billion”).
-
#number_to_human_size(number, options = {}) ⇒ Object
Formats the bytes in
number
into a more understandable representation (e.g., giving it 1500 yields 1.5 KB). -
#number_to_percentage(number, options = {}) ⇒ Object
Formats a
number
as a percentage string (e.g., 65%). -
#number_to_phone(number, options = {}) ⇒ Object
Formats a
number
into a US phone number (e.g., (555) 123-9876). -
#number_with_delimiter(number, options = {}) ⇒ Object
Formats a
number
with grouped thousands usingdelimiter
(e.g., 12,324). -
#number_with_precision(number, options = {}) ⇒ Object
Formats a
number
with the specified level of:precision
(e.g., 112.32 has a precision of 2 if:significant
isfalse
, and 5 if:significant
istrue
).
Instance Method Details
#number_to_currency(number, options = {}) ⇒ Object
Formats a number
into a currency string (e.g., $13.65). You can customize the format in the options
hash.
Options
-
:locale
- Sets the locale to be used for formatting (defaults to current locale). -
:precision
- Sets the level of precision (defaults to 2). -
:unit
- Sets the denomination of the currency (defaults to “$”). -
:separator
- Sets the separator between the units (defaults to “.”). -
:delimiter
- Sets the thousands delimiter (defaults to “,”). -
:format
- Sets the format for non-negative numbers (defaults to “%u%n”).Fields are <tt>%u</tt> for the currency, and <tt>%n</tt> for the number.
-
:negative_format
- Sets the format for negative numbers (defaults to prependingan hyphen to the formatted number given by <tt>:format</tt>). Accepts the same fields than <tt>:format</tt>, except <tt>%n</tt> is here the absolute value of the number.
Examples
number_to_currency(1234567890.50) # => $1,234,567,890.50
number_to_currency(1234567890.506) # => $1,234,567,890.51
number_to_currency(1234567890.506, :precision => 3) # => $1,234,567,890.506
number_to_currency(1234567890.506, :locale => :fr) # => 1 234 567 890,506 €
number_to_currency(-1234567890.50, :negative_format => "(%u%n)")
# => ($1,234,567,890.51)
number_to_currency(1234567890.50, :unit => "£", :separator => ",", :delimiter => "")
# => £1234567890,50
number_to_currency(1234567890.50, :unit => "£", :separator => ",", :delimiter => "", :format => "%n %u")
# => 1234567890,50 £
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# File 'lib/action_view/helpers/number_helper.rb', line 111 def number_to_currency(number, = {}) return unless number .symbolize_keys! defaults = I18n.translate(:'number.format', :locale => [:locale], :default => {}) currency = I18n.translate(:'number.currency.format', :locale => [:locale], :default => {}) defaults = DEFAULT_CURRENCY_VALUES.merge(defaults).merge!(currency) defaults[:negative_format] = "-" + [:format] if [:format] = defaults.merge!() unit = .delete(:unit) format = .delete(:format) if number.to_f < 0 format = .delete(:negative_format) number = number.respond_to?("abs") ? number.abs : number.sub(/^-/, '') end begin value = number_with_precision(number, .merge(:raise => true)) format.gsub(/%n/, value).gsub(/%u/, unit).html_safe rescue InvalidNumberError => e if [:raise] raise else formatted_number = format.gsub(/%n/, e.number).gsub(/%u/, unit) e.number.to_s.html_safe? ? formatted_number.html_safe : formatted_number end end end |
#number_to_human(number, options = {}) ⇒ Object
Pretty prints (formats and approximates) a number in a way it is more readable by humans (eg.: 1200000000 becomes “1.2 Billion”). This is useful for numbers that can get very large (and too hard to read).
See number_to_human_size
if you want to print a file size.
You can also define you own unit-quantifier names if you want to use other decimal units (eg.: 1500 becomes “1.5 kilometers”, 0.150 becomes “150 milliliters”, etc). You may define a wide range of unit quantifiers, even fractional ones (centi, deci, mili, etc).
Options
-
:locale
- Sets the locale to be used for formatting (defaults to current locale). -
:precision
- Sets the precision of the number (defaults to 3). -
:significant
- Iftrue
, precision will be the # of significant_digits. Iffalse
, the # of fractional digits (defaults totrue
) -
:separator
- Sets the separator between the fractional and integer digits (defaults to “.”). -
:delimiter
- Sets the thousands delimiter (defaults to “”). -
:strip_insignificant_zeros
- Iftrue
removes insignificant zeros after the decimal separator (defaults totrue
) -
:units
- A Hash of unit quantifier names. Or a string containing an i18n scope where to find this hash. It might have the following keys:-
integers:
:unit
,:ten
,:hundred
,:thousand
,:million
,:billion
,:trillion
,:quadrillion
-
fractionals:
:deci
,:centi
,:mili
,:micro
,:nano
,:pico
,:femto
-
-
:format
- Sets the format of the output string (defaults to “%n %u”). The field types are:%u The quantifier (ex.: 'thousand') %n The number
Examples
number_to_human(123) # => "123"
number_to_human(1234) # => "1.23 Thousand"
number_to_human(12345) # => "12.3 Thousand"
number_to_human(1234567) # => "1.23 Million"
number_to_human(1234567890) # => "1.23 Billion"
number_to_human(1234567890123) # => "1.23 Trillion"
number_to_human(1234567890123456) # => "1.23 Quadrillion"
number_to_human(1234567890123456789) # => "1230 Quadrillion"
number_to_human(489939, :precision => 2) # => "490 Thousand"
number_to_human(489939, :precision => 4) # => "489.9 Thousand"
number_to_human(1234567, :precision => 4,
:significant => false) # => "1.2346 Million"
number_to_human(1234567, :precision => 1,
:separator => ',',
:significant => false) # => "1,2 Million"
Unsignificant zeros after the decimal separator are stripped out by default (set :strip_insignificant_zeros
to false
to change that):
number_to_human(12345012345, :significant_digits => 6) # => "12.345 Billion"
number_to_human(500000000, :precision => 5) # => "500 Million"
Custom Unit Quantifiers
You can also use your own custom unit quantifiers:
number_to_human(500000, :units => {:unit => "ml", :thousand => "lt"}) # => "500 lt"
If in your I18n locale you have:
distance:
centi:
one: "centimeter"
other: "centimeters"
unit:
one: "meter"
other: "meters"
thousand:
one: "kilometer"
other: "kilometers"
billion: "gazillion-distance"
Then you could do:
number_to_human(543934, :units => :distance) # => "544 kilometers"
number_to_human(54393498, :units => :distance) # => "54400 kilometers"
number_to_human(54393498000, :units => :distance) # => "54.4 gazillion-distance"
number_to_human(343, :units => :distance, :precision => 1) # => "300 meters"
number_to_human(1, :units => :distance) # => "1 meter"
number_to_human(0.34, :units => :distance) # => "34 centimeters"
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# File 'lib/action_view/helpers/number_helper.rb', line 444 def number_to_human(number, = {}) .symbolize_keys! number = begin Float(number) rescue ArgumentError, TypeError if [:raise] raise InvalidNumberError, number else return number end end defaults = I18n.translate(:'number.format', :locale => [:locale], :default => {}) human = I18n.translate(:'number.human.format', :locale => [:locale], :default => {}) defaults = defaults.merge(human) = .reverse_merge(defaults) #for backwards compatibility with those that didn't add strip_insignificant_zeros to their locale files [:strip_insignificant_zeros] = true if not .key?(:strip_insignificant_zeros) inverted_du = DECIMAL_UNITS.invert units = .delete :units unit_exponents = case units when Hash units when String, Symbol I18n.translate(:"#{units}", :locale => [:locale], :raise => true) when nil I18n.translate(:"number.human.decimal_units.units", :locale => [:locale], :raise => true) else raise ArgumentError, ":units must be a Hash or String translation scope." end.keys.map{|e_name| inverted_du[e_name] }.sort_by{|e| -e} number_exponent = number != 0 ? Math.log10(number.abs).floor : 0 display_exponent = unit_exponents.find{ |e| number_exponent >= e } || 0 number /= 10 ** display_exponent unit = case units when Hash units[DECIMAL_UNITS[display_exponent]] when String, Symbol I18n.translate(:"#{units}.#{DECIMAL_UNITS[display_exponent]}", :locale => [:locale], :count => number.to_i) else I18n.translate(:"number.human.decimal_units.units.#{DECIMAL_UNITS[display_exponent]}", :locale => [:locale], :count => number.to_i) end decimal_format = [:format] || I18n.translate(:'number.human.decimal_units.format', :locale => [:locale], :default => "%n %u") formatted_number = number_with_precision(number, ) decimal_format.gsub(/%n/, formatted_number).gsub(/%u/, unit).strip.html_safe end |
#number_to_human_size(number, options = {}) ⇒ Object
Formats the bytes in number
into a more understandable representation (e.g., giving it 1500 yields 1.5 KB). This method is useful for reporting file sizes to users. You can customize the format in the options
hash.
See number_to_human
if you want to pretty-print a generic number.
Options
-
:locale
- Sets the locale to be used for formatting (defaults to current locale). -
:precision
- Sets the precision of the number (defaults to 3). -
:significant
- Iftrue
, precision will be the # of significant_digits. Iffalse
, the # of fractional digits (defaults totrue
) -
:separator
- Sets the separator between the fractional and integer digits (defaults to “.”). -
:delimiter
- Sets the thousands delimiter (defaults to “”). -
:strip_insignificant_zeros
- Iftrue
removes insignificant zeros after the decimal separator (defaults totrue
) -
:prefix
- If:si
formats the number using the SI prefix (defaults to :binary)
Examples
number_to_human_size(123) # => 123 Bytes
number_to_human_size(1234) # => 1.21 KB
number_to_human_size(12345) # => 12.1 KB
number_to_human_size(1234567) # => 1.18 MB
number_to_human_size(1234567890) # => 1.15 GB
number_to_human_size(1234567890123) # => 1.12 TB
number_to_human_size(1234567, :precision => 2) # => 1.2 MB
number_to_human_size(483989, :precision => 2) # => 470 KB
number_to_human_size(1234567, :precision => 2, :separator => ',') # => 1,2 MB
Non-significant zeros after the fractional separator are stripped out by default (set :strip_insignificant_zeros
to false
to change that):
number_to_human_size(1234567890123, :precision => 5) # => "1.1229 TB"
number_to_human_size(524288000, :precision => 5) # => "500 MB"
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# File 'lib/action_view/helpers/number_helper.rb', line 325 def number_to_human_size(number, = {}) .symbolize_keys! number = begin Float(number) rescue ArgumentError, TypeError if [:raise] raise InvalidNumberError, number else return number end end defaults = I18n.translate(:'number.format', :locale => [:locale], :default => {}) human = I18n.translate(:'number.human.format', :locale => [:locale], :default => {}) defaults = defaults.merge(human) = .reverse_merge(defaults) #for backwards compatibility with those that didn't add strip_insignificant_zeros to their locale files [:strip_insignificant_zeros] = true if not .key?(:strip_insignificant_zeros) storage_units_format = I18n.translate(:'number.human.storage_units.format', :locale => [:locale], :raise => true) base = [:prefix] == :si ? 1000 : 1024 if number.to_i < base unit = I18n.translate(:'number.human.storage_units.units.byte', :locale => [:locale], :count => number.to_i, :raise => true) storage_units_format.gsub(/%n/, number.to_i.to_s).gsub(/%u/, unit).html_safe else max_exp = STORAGE_UNITS.size - 1 exponent = (Math.log(number) / Math.log(base)).to_i # Convert to base exponent = max_exp if exponent > max_exp # we need this to avoid overflow for the highest unit number /= base ** exponent unit_key = STORAGE_UNITS[exponent] unit = I18n.translate(:"number.human.storage_units.units.#{unit_key}", :locale => [:locale], :count => number, :raise => true) formatted_number = number_with_precision(number, ) storage_units_format.gsub(/%n/, formatted_number).gsub(/%u/, unit).html_safe end end |
#number_to_percentage(number, options = {}) ⇒ Object
Formats a number
as a percentage string (e.g., 65%). You can customize the format in the options
hash.
Options
-
:locale
- Sets the locale to be used for formatting (defaults to current locale). -
:precision
- Sets the precision of the number (defaults to 3). -
:significant
- Iftrue
, precision will be the # of significant_digits. Iffalse
, the # of fractional digits (defaults tofalse
) -
:separator
- Sets the separator between the fractional and integer digits (defaults to “.”). -
:delimiter
- Sets the thousands delimiter (defaults to “”). -
:strip_insignificant_zeros
- Iftrue
removes insignificant zeros after the decimal separator (defaults tofalse
)
Examples
number_to_percentage(100) # => 100.000%
number_to_percentage(100, :precision => 0) # => 100%
number_to_percentage(1000, :delimiter => '.', :separator => ',') # => 1.000,000%
number_to_percentage(302.24398923423, :precision => 5) # => 302.24399%
number_to_percentage(1000, :locale => :fr) # => 1 000,000%
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# File 'lib/action_view/helpers/number_helper.rb', line 162 def number_to_percentage(number, = {}) return unless number .symbolize_keys! defaults = I18n.translate(:'number.format', :locale => [:locale], :default => {}) percentage = I18n.translate(:'number.percentage.format', :locale => [:locale], :default => {}) defaults = defaults.merge(percentage) = .reverse_merge(defaults) begin "#{number_with_precision(number, .merge(:raise => true))}%".html_safe rescue InvalidNumberError => e if [:raise] raise else e.number.to_s.html_safe? ? "#{e.number}%".html_safe : "#{e.number}%" end end end |
#number_to_phone(number, options = {}) ⇒ Object
Formats a number
into a US phone number (e.g., (555) 123-9876). You can customize the format in the options
hash.
Options
-
:area_code
- Adds parentheses around the area code. -
:delimiter
- Specifies the delimiter to use (defaults to “-”). -
:extension
- Specifies an extension to add to the end of the generated number. -
:country_code
- Sets the country code for the phone number.
Examples
number_to_phone(5551234) # => 555-1234
number_to_phone(1235551234) # => 123-555-1234
number_to_phone(1235551234, :area_code => true) # => (123) 555-1234
number_to_phone(1235551234, :delimiter => " ") # => 123 555 1234
number_to_phone(1235551234, :area_code => true, :extension => 555) # => (123) 555-1234 x 555
number_to_phone(1235551234, :country_code => 1) # => +1-123-555-1234
number_to_phone(1235551234, :country_code => 1, :extension => 1343, :delimiter => ".")
=> +1.123.555.1234 x 1343
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# File 'lib/action_view/helpers/number_helper.rb', line 52 def number_to_phone(number, = {}) return unless number begin Float(number) rescue ArgumentError, TypeError raise InvalidNumberError, number end if [:raise] number = number.to_s.strip = .symbolize_keys area_code = [:area_code] delimiter = [:delimiter] || "-" extension = [:extension] country_code = [:country_code] if area_code number.gsub!(/(\d{1,3})(\d{3})(\d{4}$)/,"(\\1) \\2#{delimiter}\\3") else number.gsub!(/(\d{0,3})(\d{3})(\d{4})$/,"\\1#{delimiter}\\2#{delimiter}\\3") number.slice!(0, 1) if number.starts_with?('-') end str = [] str << "+#{country_code}#{delimiter}" unless country_code.blank? str << number str << " x #{extension}" unless extension.blank? ERB::Util.html_escape(str.join) end |
#number_with_delimiter(number, options = {}) ⇒ Object
Formats a number
with grouped thousands using delimiter
(e.g., 12,324). You can customize the format in the options
hash.
Options
-
:locale
- Sets the locale to be used for formatting (defaults to current locale). -
:delimiter
- Sets the thousands delimiter (defaults to “,”). -
:separator
- Sets the separator between the fractional and integer digits (defaults to “.”).
Examples
number_with_delimiter(12345678) # => 12,345,678
number_with_delimiter(12345678.05) # => 12,345,678.05
number_with_delimiter(12345678, :delimiter => ".") # => 12.345.678
number_with_delimiter(12345678, :separator => ",") # => 12,345,678
number_with_delimiter(12345678.05, :locale => :fr) # => 12 345 678,05
number_with_delimiter(98765432.98, :delimiter => " ", :separator => ",")
# => 98 765 432,98
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# File 'lib/action_view/helpers/number_helper.rb', line 200 def number_with_delimiter(number, = {}) .symbolize_keys! begin Float(number) rescue ArgumentError, TypeError if [:raise] raise InvalidNumberError, number else return number end end defaults = I18n.translate(:'number.format', :locale => [:locale], :default => {}) = .reverse_merge(defaults) parts = number.to_s.to_str.split('.') parts[0].gsub!(/(\d)(?=(\d\d\d)+(?!\d))/, "\\1#{[:delimiter]}") parts.join([:separator]).html_safe end |
#number_with_precision(number, options = {}) ⇒ Object
Formats a number
with the specified level of :precision
(e.g., 112.32 has a precision of 2 if :significant
is false
, and 5 if :significant
is true
). You can customize the format in the options
hash.
Options
-
:locale
- Sets the locale to be used for formatting (defaults to current locale). -
:precision
- Sets the precision of the number (defaults to 3). -
:significant
- Iftrue
, precision will be the # of significant_digits. Iffalse
, the # of fractional digits (defaults tofalse
) -
:separator
- Sets the separator between the fractional and integer digits (defaults to “.”). -
:delimiter
- Sets the thousands delimiter (defaults to “”). -
:strip_insignificant_zeros
- Iftrue
removes insignificant zeros after the decimal separator (defaults tofalse
)
Examples
number_with_precision(111.2345) # => 111.235
number_with_precision(111.2345, :precision => 2) # => 111.23
number_with_precision(13, :precision => 5) # => 13.00000
number_with_precision(389.32314, :precision => 0) # => 389
number_with_precision(111.2345, :significant => true) # => 111
number_with_precision(111.2345, :precision => 1, :significant => true) # => 100
number_with_precision(13, :precision => 5, :significant => true) # => 13.000
number_with_precision(111.234, :locale => :fr) # => 111,234
number_with_precision(13, :precision => 5, :significant => true, :strip_insignificant_zeros => true)
# => 13
number_with_precision(389.32314, :precision => 4, :significant => true) # => 389.3
number_with_precision(1111.2345, :precision => 2, :separator => ',', :delimiter => '.')
# => 1.111,23
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# File 'lib/action_view/helpers/number_helper.rb', line 248 def number_with_precision(number, = {}) .symbolize_keys! number = begin Float(number) rescue ArgumentError, TypeError if [:raise] raise InvalidNumberError, number else return number end end defaults = I18n.translate(:'number.format', :locale => [:locale], :default => {}) precision_defaults = I18n.translate(:'number.precision.format', :locale => [:locale], :default => {}) defaults = defaults.merge(precision_defaults) = .reverse_merge(defaults) # Allow the user to unset default values: Eg.: :significant => false precision = .delete :precision significant = .delete :significant strip_insignificant_zeros = .delete :strip_insignificant_zeros if significant and precision > 0 if number == 0 digits, rounded_number = 1, 0 else digits = (Math.log10(number.abs) + 1).floor rounded_number = (BigDecimal.new(number.to_s) / BigDecimal.new((10 ** (digits - precision)).to_f.to_s)).round.to_f * 10 ** (digits - precision) digits = (Math.log10(rounded_number.abs) + 1).floor # After rounding, the number of digits may have changed end precision -= digits precision = precision > 0 ? precision : 0 #don't let it be negative else rounded_number = BigDecimal.new(number.to_s).round(precision).to_f end formatted_number = number_with_delimiter("%01.#{precision}f" % rounded_number, ) if strip_insignificant_zeros escaped_separator = Regexp.escape([:separator]) formatted_number.sub(/(#{escaped_separator})(\d*[1-9])?0+\z/, '\1\2').sub(/#{escaped_separator}\z/, '').html_safe else formatted_number end end |