210

I am looking to format a number like 188518982.18 to £188,518,982.18 using Python.

How can I do this?

2
  • You made an excellent point in a comment below, @RailsSon: you want to print £s to display a specific currency, but employ that display using a Japanese expression for financial numbers. I find it strange that your request hasn't been implemented in the language by decoupling the locale module's use of currency value and that currency's display properties.
    – yurisich
    Jan 13, 2012 at 13:56
  • 1
    @yurisich it is now, you can set LC_MONETARY and LC_NUMERIC to different locales. Jul 16, 2022 at 7:38

15 Answers 15

279

See the locale module.

This does currency (and date) formatting.

>>> import locale
>>> locale.setlocale( locale.LC_ALL, '' )
'English_United States.1252'
>>> locale.currency( 188518982.18 )
'$188518982.18'
>>> locale.currency( 188518982.18, grouping=True )
'$188,518,982.18'
14
  • 16
    How would I format a non-native currency correctly, Say I'm showing a cost in GB pounds for a Japanese language report? Jul 4, 2009 at 16:44
  • 3
    @TokenMacGuy: That's a Trick Question. Japanese report means japanese comma and decimal place rules but GB Pound currency symbol -- not trivially supported by Locale. You have to create a customized locale definition.
    – S.Lott
    Jul 4, 2009 at 17:10
  • if giver number is negative returns the value between "( )" why?
    – panchicore
    Oct 24, 2009 at 20:07
  • 11
    This still didn't work for me, but I changed it to locale.setlocale(locale.LC_ALL, 'en_US.UTF-8') and it worked perfectly! Dec 12, 2011 at 20:53
  • 3
    @panchicore the notation for negative numbers as denoted by parentheses is a common practice in the world of accounting. Try it in oocalc or excel, and format the numbers to the accounting type.
    – yurisich
    Jan 13, 2012 at 14:00
114

New in 2.7

>>> '{:20,.2f}'.format(18446744073709551616.0)
'18,446,744,073,709,551,616.00'

http://docs.python.org/dev/whatsnew/2.7.html#pep-0378

7
  • 11
    That's neat but doesn't really answer the question, as the requested solution would include a currency symbol, and you are also hard-coding the number of digits after the decimal, which is locale-specific. There are many more reasons to use the accepted locale answer if you don't just want comma placement.
    – mrooney
    Jun 24, 2013 at 19:44
  • 8
    @mrooney There are also many reasons not to use the accepted locale answer, such as not importing an entire module.
    – Josh
    Dec 31, 2014 at 4:19
  • 1
    @Josh, "from locale import currency".
    – Andrew H
    Jul 27, 2015 at 22:27
  • 6
    @mrooney: You can just do: '${:0,.2f}'.format(184467616.1), and you now have the symbol Sep 30, 2015 at 23:55
  • 2
    @triunenature that would result in $ 123,456.78 sometimes though. Edit: markdown takes out the extra spaces, pretend there's more between the $ and the numbers
    – Foxocube
    Jul 25, 2016 at 10:40
58

Not quite sure why it's not mentioned more online (or on this thread), but the Babel package (and Django utilities) from the Edgewall guys is awesome for currency formatting (and lots of other i18n tasks). It's nice because it doesn't suffer from the need to do everything globally like the core Python locale module.

The example the OP gave would simply be:

>>> import babel.numbers
>>> import decimal
>>> babel.numbers.format_currency( decimal.Decimal( "188518982.18" ), "GBP" )
£188,518,982.18
4
  • 3
    Very late note: Testing this, it does not appear to intelligently format currency, as it simply sticks the appropriate symbol before the amount (formatted in what appears to be the locale you have set, which is reasonable), regardless of whether that currency actually uses its symbol as a prefix.
    – kungphu
    Jan 9, 2015 at 3:57
  • @kungphu What do you mean? See babel.pocoo.org/en/latest/api/…
    – Julian
    Jan 31, 2019 at 14:42
  • 1
    @Julian It looks like the locale argument to format_currency can be used to address this, but either that wasn't in the doc four years ago (when I wrote that comment) or I just tested this answer's code as-is without checking the doc.
    – kungphu
    Feb 1, 2019 at 6:02
  • 1
    @kungphu Gotcha. I must have been not paying attention to the age of this post yesterday. The documentation/function changing seems very likely. Cheers!
    – Julian
    Feb 1, 2019 at 16:00
54

This is an ancient post, but I just implemented the following solution which:

  • Doesn't require external modules
  • Doesn't require creating a new function
  • Can be done in-line
  • Handles multiple variables
  • Handles negative dollar amounts

Code:

num1 = 4153.53
num2 = -23159.398598

print 'This: ${:0,.0f} and this: ${:0,.2f}'.format(num1, num2).replace('$-','-$')

Output:

This: $4,154 and this: -$23,159.40

And for the original poster, obviously, just switch $ for £

2
  • my format needed some customization, but that's OK because I was able to do that with this solution.
    – DonkeyKong
    Jul 24, 2018 at 21:54
  • 18
    Cool idea! With Python 3.6 and f-strings, it looks even more beautiful: print(f'Value is: ${value:,.2f}'.replace('$-', '-$')) Apr 10, 2019 at 15:30
26

"{:0,.2f}".format(float(your_numeric_value)) in Python 3 does the job; it gives out something like one of the following lines:

10,938.29
10,899.00
10,898.99
2,328.99
18

My locale settings seemed incomplete, so I had too look beyond this SO answer and found:

http://docs.python.org/library/decimal.html#recipes

OS-independent

Just wanted to share here.

1
  • But where do we call the def moneyfmt(value, places=2, curr='', sep=',', dp='.', pos='', neg='-', trailneg='')? Oct 16, 2019 at 9:50
12

If you are using OSX and have yet to set your locale module setting this first answer will not work you will receive the following error:

Traceback (most recent call last):File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module> File "/System/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/2.6/lib/python2.6/locale.py", line 221, in currency
raise ValueError("Currency formatting is not possible using "ValueError: Currency formatting is not possible using the 'C' locale.

To remedy this you will have to do use the following:

locale.setlocale(locale.LC_ALL, 'en_US')
1
  • 2
    locale.setlocale(locale.LC_ALL, 'en_US.UTF-8') does for me
    – alexblum
    Jan 31, 2014 at 12:20
10

If I were you, I would use BABEL: http://babel.pocoo.org/en/latest/index.html

from babel.numbers import format_decimal


format_decimal(188518982.18, locale='en_US')
1
  • 1
    The python locale module didn't work for me (whatever locale I set it, it complained) but requiring babel and using this function is nice. It's worth having a look in the API docs as there are more parameters and more useful functions (like for currencies: format_currency).
    – Daniel W.
    Jun 17, 2019 at 21:15
10

There are already a dozen solutions here, but I believe the one below is the best, because:

  • it is simple
  • obeys the OS locale
  • no external lib is needed
  • you can make it concise

My solution is to use locale.currency() method:

import locale
# this sets locale to the current Operating System value
locale.setlocale(locale.LC_ALL, '') 
print(locale.currency(1346896.67444, grouping=True, symbol=True)

will output in my Windows 10 configured to Brazilian Portuguese:

R$ 1.346.896,67

It is somewhat verbose, so if you will use it a lot, maybe it is better to predefine some parameters and have a shorter name and use it inside a f-string:

fmt = lambda x: locale.currency(x, grouping=True, symbol=True)
print(f"Value: {fmt(1346896.67444)}"

You can pass a locale value for the setlocale method, but its value is OS dependent, so beware. If you are in a *nix server, you also need to check if your desired locale is correctly installed in the OS.

You also can turn off the symbol passing symbol=False.

3

Oh, that's an interesting beast.

I've spent considerable time of getting that right, there are three main issues that differs from locale to locale: - currency symbol and direction - thousand separator - decimal point

I've written my own rather extensive implementation of this which is part of the kiwi python framework, check out the LGPL:ed source here:

http://svn.async.com.br/cgi-bin/viewvc.cgi/kiwi/trunk/kiwi/currency.py?view=markup

The code is slightly Linux/Glibc specific, but shouldn't be too difficult to adopt to windows or other unixes.

Once you have that installed you can do the following:

>>> from kiwi.datatypes import currency
>>> v = currency('10.5').format()

Which will then give you:

'$10.50'

or

'10,50 kr'

Depending on the currently selected locale.

The main point this post has over the other is that it will work with older versions of python. locale.currency was introduced in python 2.5.

2
  • Does it have advantages over locale.currency() ?
    – Ali Afshar
    Nov 28, 2008 at 0:29
  • @AliAfshar: One advantage would be 10,50 kr instead of kr 10,50. Feb 20, 2020 at 0:23
3

#printing the variable 'Total:' in a format that looks like this '9,348.237'

print ('Total:',   '{:7,.3f}'.format(zum1))

where the '{:7,.3f}' es the number of spaces for formatting the number in this case is a million with 3 decimal points. Then you add the '.format(zum1). The zum1 is tha variable that has the big number for the sum of all number in my particular program. Variable can be anything that you decide to use.

2

Inspired by the code above :D

def money_format(value):
    value = str(value).split('.')
    money = ''
    count = 1

    for digit in value[0][::-1]:
        if count != 3:
            money += digit
            count += 1
        else:
            money += f'{digit},'
            count = 1

    if len(value) == 1:
        money = ('$' + money[::-1]).replace('$-','-$')
    else:
        money = ('$' + money[::-1] + '.' + value[1]).replace('$-','-$')

    return money
0

A lambda for calculating it inside a function, with help from @Nate's answer

converter = lambda amount, currency: "%s%s%s" %(
    "-" if amount < 0 else "", 
    currency, 
    ('{:%d,.2f}'%(len(str(amount))+3)).format(abs(amount)).lstrip())

and then,

>>> converter(123132132.13, "$")
'$123,132,132.13'

>>> converter(-123132132.13, "$")
'-$123,132,132.13'
2
  • Most countries use the currency symbol after the amount, not the other way around. Apr 3, 2017 at 10:31
  • @jonas Maybe that's what most countries do, but OP had it before the amount, hence I've got it before the amount in my answer too :) Apr 4, 2017 at 19:24
0

Simple python code!

def format_us_currency(value):
    value=str(value)
    if value.count(',')==0:
        b,n,v='',1,value
        value=value[:value.rfind('.')]
        for i in value[::-1]:
            b=','+i+b if n==3 else i+b
            n=1 if n==3 else n+1
        b=b[1:] if b[0]==',' else b
        value=b+v[v.rfind('.'):]
    return '$'+(value.rstrip('0').rstrip('.') if '.' in value else value)
2
  • 1
    Your code returns strings like "$2,129.1468284147656", "$10,948.3742933", "$1,0908". Garbles the string. Aug 4, 2019 at 16:53
  • Yes I didn't notice. You have given the ans too.
    – Vanjith
    Aug 9, 2019 at 12:48
0

With only Python Standard Library imports, this is a compact way of defining a custom format:

>>> from functools import partial
>>> import locale
>>> locale.setlocale(locale.LC_ALL, 'en_US.UTF-8')  # or whatever locale you want
>>> _c = partial(locale.currency, grouping=True)
>>> my_amount = 188518982.18
>>> print(f'{_c(my_amount)}')
$188,518,982.18

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.