3

If variable A = 0.07 when echoed and variable B = 2100.00 when echoed

if we: $c = $a * $b;

when the end result is a whole # ( i.e. $c = 147) is there any way to force the result to keep 2 decimal places and hold the trailing zero's so that ( $c = 147.00 ) ??

I have tried the following but the result still reported a whole number without trailing zero's:

$c = round($c,2);

So what obvious thing am i missing here?

3 Answers 3

4

Have a look at PHP's number_format() function. You could do:

$cStr = number_format($c, 2);

to get a string with two decimal points. Note that the result of number_format() is a string, not a number

4
  • 2
    Or printf("%.2f", $number) (might be more convenient if you're just going to print it anyway)
    – nice ass
    Jun 22, 2013 at 1:19
  • Well this does work but you said the result is a string and not a number. This is all pre-processing in a e-cart before being transmitted to a payment gateway. Passing the result to the gateway as a string vs a number shouldn't matter should it?
    – DMSJax
    Jun 22, 2013 at 1:29
  • How are you passing this to the gateway? Jun 22, 2013 at 1:34
  • It will pass to gateway as a $_POST value, i was testing what you had and it won't work that way. The result of the code below is 2 when it should be 2000.00. I cant pass that to the payment gateway as it would be wrong $2 vs $2000: $a=1000.00; $b=1000.00; $a = number_format($a,2); $b = number_format($b,2); echo $a; echo "<br>"; echo $b; $c = $a+$b; echo "<br>".$c;
    – DMSJax
    Jun 22, 2013 at 1:42
1

If you want to format a number as a string, you should use number_format()

$c_string = number_format($c, 2);
0

There is no way to force the variable to have 2 decimal positions. You can use number_format() to force on display though.

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