239

Is there a way to have rails print out a number with commas in it?

For example, if I have a number 54000000.34, I can run <%= number.function %>, which would print out "54,000,000.34"

thanks!

16 Answers 16

394

You want the number_with_delimiter method. For example:

<%= number_with_delimiter(@number, :delimiter => ',') %>

Alternatively, you can use the number_with_precision method to ensure that the number is always displayed with two decimal places of precision:

<%= number_with_precision(@number, :precision => 2, :delimiter => ',') %>
10
  • 7
    @Mo It's a view helper method. You should be able to use it from a module by including ActionView::Helpers::NumberHelper within the module. Jul 22, 2010 at 7:55
  • 10
    I believe by default the delimiter is a comma so you wouldn't need to pass in that option in this case.
    – Deekor
    Oct 16, 2013 at 7:38
  • 3
    You should leave the delimiter off so that the current locale can decide what to use. This allows locales that use periods for delimiters to be displayed properly rather than putting what they would consider a decimal point between thousands. See coloradoblue answer below. Dec 16, 2013 at 14:13
  • 2
    Rails 4 syntax: <%= number_with_precision(@number, precision: 0, delimiter: ',') %> May 23, 2015 at 21:27
  • 6
    Beware: number_with_delimiter is overly-complex and really slow, with enormous depths of call stacks. It uses i18n to be able to format any numbers known to humanity and extraterrestrial civilizations (or maybe just to choose either , or . for decimal digits, even if you specify it as argument). It allocates thousands of objects (so its performance patterns are complex and hard to profile). Consider just using regexps if you don't need to support different ways to format numbers depending on locale.
    – kolen
    Dec 11, 2018 at 13:06
153

For anyone not using rails:

number.to_s.reverse.gsub(/(\d{3})(?=\d)/, '\\1,').reverse
11
  • 2
    Nice. And your answer seems to be minutely (only a fraction of a second over one million iterations) faster than the approach presented here: number.to_s.reverse.scan(/(?:\d*\.)?\d{1,3}-?/).join(',').reverse
    – user664833
    Dec 31, 2012 at 22:21
  • can you explain what is going on here? number.to_s.reverse.gsub(/(\d{3})(?=\d)/, '\\1,').reverse Feb 21, 2013 at 23:37
  • 7
    Sure, it reverses the string, then adds a comma after any sequence of 3 digits that is also followed by another digit, then reverses it back. Feb 22, 2013 at 0:04
  • 1
    @renosis - I see what you mean now, this is for formatting currency. So 2 decimals, not 7. Mar 10, 2013 at 22:32
  • 2
    @pguardiario What's the extra \ for in the \\1? isn't \1 sufficient? Thanks. Oct 7, 2014 at 2:25
67

The direct way to do this, with or without Rails, is:

require 'active_support'
require 'active_support/core_ext/numeric/conversions'

123456.to_fs(:delimited)     # => "123,456"
123456.789.to_fs(:delimited) # => "123,456.789"

For more options, see Active Support Core Extensions - Numeric - Formatting.

7
  • 2
    And with this inclusion you can use ActiveSupport::NumberHelper.number_to_delimited as well. This answer deserve a lot more upvotes.
    – Ulysse BN
    Sep 30, 2019 at 8:31
  • I'm getting uninitialized constant ActiveSupport::Autoload (NameError) 🤔
    – Cruz Nunez
    Apr 10, 2021 at 16:08
  • @CruzNunez If it's not already loaded, you'll need to require "active_support" first. I've updated the answer. May 13, 2021 at 16:41
  • You make the assumption that active_support is installed, which would be the case for the OP. Careful not to assume it should be done this way for all Ruby non-Rails code. Nov 4, 2021 at 20:01
  • 2
    I guess this changed in some version, but it seems like this should be .to_fs(:delimited) now.
    – kodbuse
    Mar 30, 2022 at 5:06
33

If you want to add commas outside of views and you don't want to include some modules, you can use number_to_delimited method (rails version >= 4.02). For example:

#inside anywhere
ActiveSupport::NumberHelper.number_to_delimited(1000000) # => "1,000,000"
32

Yes, use the NumberHelper. The method you are looking for is number_with_delimiter.

 number_with_delimiter(98765432.98, :delimiter => ",", :separator => ".")
 # => 98,765,432.98
21

If you're doing it a lot but also FYI because it's not implied by the above, Rails has sensible defaults for the number_with_delimiter method.

#inside controller or view
number_with_delimiter(2444323.4)
#=> 2,444,323.30

#inside console
helper.number_with_delimiter(233423)
#=> 233,423

No need to supply the delimiter value if you're doing it the most typical way.

1
  • This has the added benefit of using the current locale. This is really important in international apps since some locales use comma for decimal and period for thousands separator. Dec 16, 2013 at 14:11
19

A better way for those not using rails that handles decimals:

parts = number.to_s.split('.')
parts[0].gsub!(/(\d)(?=(\d\d\d)+(?!\d))/, "\\1,")
parts.join('.')

If you want a different delimiter, change the last ',' in the regex.

For bonus, this is how the regex is working:

  • gsub replaces everything that matches the regex with the second parameter passed to gsub. In this case that is \\1. \\1 becomes \1 when evaluated which matches the first capture group in the regex. In this regex that is (\d).
  • (\d)(?=(\d\d\d)+) is matching a digit followed by 1 or more groups of 3 digits. The first set of parens is our \1 capture group, the second would be \2. If we were just to leave it at that we would get: 123456.gsub!(/(\d)(?=(\d\d\d)+)/, "\\1,") #=> 1,2,3,456 This is because 1234 matches, 2345 matches and 3456 matches so we put a comma after the 1, the 2, and the 3.
  • By adding the (?!\d) we are matching anything that comes before that doesn't precede a digit so (\d)(?=(\d\d\d)+(?!\d)) means match a digit followed by 3 digits that is not followed by a digit. The reason why this works is that gsub will keep replacing things that match the string. If we were only going to replace the first match then for a number like 123456789 we would get 123456,789. Since 123456,789 still matches our regex we get 123,456,789.

Here is where I got the code: https://github.com/rails/rails/blob/master/activesupport/lib/active_support/number_helper.rb#L298-L300

And here is where I learned about what is going on in that regex: http://www.tutorialspoint.com/ruby/ruby_regular_expressions.htm

1
  • works like a charm, especially in Liquid template lang: {{ value | round | replace: "(\d)(?=(\d\d\d)+(?!\d))", "$1," | prepend: "$" }}
    – Kukunin
    Oct 8, 2019 at 8:20
2

I had this challenge when working on a Rails 6 application.

If the number is for the price of an item or has to do with currency, then you can use number_to_currency ActionView Helper

Here's how to do it:

number_to_currency("123456789")                      # => $123456789
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)     # => $1,234,567,890.506
number_to_currency(1234567890.506, locale: :fr)      # => 1 234 567 890,51 €
number_to_currency(1234567890.50, unit: '₦', delimiter: ',', precision: 0)    # => ₦1,234,567,890
number_to_currency(1234567890.50, unit: "R$", separator: ",", delimiter: "")  # => R$1234567890,50

You can read up more about it here in the Rails documentation: number_to_currency

That's all.

I hope this helps

2

new syntax

number_with_delimiter(@number, delimiter: ",")

If you you want to user delimeter for money then you can do

number_to_currency(@number)

this will add $ too. If you are using money gem then you can do

Money.new(@number,"USD").format

This will also put $.

number_with_delimiter

ruby money

number_to_currency

2

For Ruby guys: Formatting numbers (integers only) with a comma separator between every group of thousands.

number = 12345678
numStr1 = number.to_s.reverse.scan(/.{1,3}/).join(',').reverse
puts numStr1             # => 12,345,678

numStr2 = number.to_s.gsub(/\B(?=(...)*\b)/, ',')
puts numStr2             # => 12,345,678
1
  • The number.to_s.reverse.scan(/.{1,3}/) piece seems like a good place to start if you wanted to produce output like 4.32M or 12.3G. The top two array entries could be joined with "." and then trimmed to the length you want, reverse, and add the suffix based upon the length of the array scan produced.
    – pedz
    May 18, 2022 at 14:43
1

You can use methods from ActiveSupport

For example:

ActiveSupport::NumberHelper::number_to_currency(10000.1234,{precision: 2,unit: ''})

1

Another solution that does not use Helpers: format with 2 decimal places, and then replace . by ,

puts(("%.2f" % 2.5666).gsub('.',','))
>> 2,57
1
  • 3
    I believe the question was about commas for digit grouping, not comma as intergral part/fraction part decimal separator that your answer achieves. (as that wiki link explains, due to the long-standing confusion, internetional standards now recommend spaces only for digit grouping) Feb 14, 2018 at 9:13
1
  def add_commas(numstring)
    correct_idxs = (1..100).to_a.select{|n| n % 6 == 0}.map{|n| n - 1}
     numstring.reverse.chars.join(",").chars.select.with_index{|x, i| i.even? || correct_idxs.include?(i)}.join.reverse
  end

This was my way in ruby

Addition edit: Basically it adds all commas in between the numbers and only selects the ones where the index + 1 % 6

I figured the commas up to 100 was fine but if you want a super long number just make 100 a higher number

1

The following do the trick for both delimiter and precision (API ref).

ActiveSupport::NumberHelper.number_to_rounded(1234.532, delimiter: ',', precision: 1) 
     

(or from views just number_to_rounded, no need for the prefix)

HTH

0

For Ruby Folks: functions can be created to set comma to large number integer.

def number_with_comma(numStr)
   return numStr.to_s.gsub(/\B(?=(...)*\b)/, ',')
end
a = number_with_comma 1234567
puts a   => 1,234,567

x = 9876543
y = number_with_comma x
puts y   => 9,876,543
-1

for javascript folks

function numberWithDelimiter(value) {
    return (value+"").split("").reverse().join("").replace(/(\d{3})(?=\d)/g, '$1,').split("").reverse().join("")
}

:)

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