Here's some code I found lying around. Not terribly efficient, and probably better attached to a category of NSNumberFormatter than NSNumber, and so on, but it seems to work
@interface NSNumber (FormatKibi)
- (NSString *)formatKibi;
@end
@implementation NSNumber (FormatKibi)
- (NSString *)formatKibi {
double value = [self doubleValue];
static const char suffixes[] = { 0, 'k', 'm', 'g', 't' };
int suffix = 0;
if (value <= 10000)
return [[NSString stringWithFormat:@"%5f", value]
substringToIndex:5];
while (value > 9999) {
value /= 1024.0;
++suffix;
if (suffix >= sizeof(suffixes)) return @"!!!!!";
}
return [[[NSString stringWithFormat:@"%4f", value]
substringToIndex:4]
stringByAppendingFormat:@"%c", suffixes[suffix]];
}
@end
I tested it with this:
int main(int argc, char *argv[]) {
for (int i = 1; i != argc; ++i) {
NSNumber *n = [NSNumber numberWithInteger:
[[NSString stringWithUTF8String:argv[i]]
integerValue]];
printf("%s ", [[n formatKibi] UTF8String]);
}
printf("\n");
return 0;
}
Then:
$ ./sizeformat 1 12 123 1234 12345 123456 1234567 12345678 1234567890 123456789012 12345678901234 1234567890123456 123456789012345678
1.000 12.00 123.0 1234. 12.0k 120.k 1205k 11.7m 1177m 114.g 11.2t 1122t !!!!!