159

The inputType numberDecimal in EditText uses the dot . as decimal separator. In Europe it's common to use a comma , instead. Even though my locale is set as german the decimal separator is still the .

Is there a way to get the comma as decimal separator?

4
  • 1
    this bug has finally been fixed in Android O: issuetracker.google.com/issues/36907764
    – Lovis
    Jul 19, 2017 at 13:24
  • they say it is fixed but i cannot confirm it fixed? can you?
    – sebastian
    Dec 1, 2017 at 10:15
  • 13
    I can confirm it is NOT fixed, at least on my Nexus 4 running Android 8.1 (aka LineageOS 15.1). With Settings->Language set to French (France), an EditText with android:inputType="numberDecimal" offers the ',' (comma) separator but still refuses to accept the comma. The offered '.' (decimal point) is accepted. It's been over 9 years since this bug was first reported. Is that some kind of record? Lame.
    – pete
    Jul 11, 2018 at 16:49

25 Answers 25

114

A workaround (until Google fix this bug) is to use an EditText with android:inputType="numberDecimal" and android:digits="0123456789.,".

Then add a TextChangedListener to the EditText with the following afterTextChanged:

public void afterTextChanged(Editable s) {
    double doubleValue = 0;
    if (s != null) {
        try {
            doubleValue = Double.parseDouble(s.toString().replace(',', '.'));
        } catch (NumberFormatException e) {
            //Error
        }
    }
    //Do something with doubleValue
}
7
  • 1
    @Zoombie for the comma (,) to show on your keyboard depends on the language set on your device. If your input has type numberDecimal and your language is English (United States) it will show on Nexus devices (reference). It's possible that non Nexus devices don't respect this Oct 1, 2014 at 14:32
  • 13
    It works, but be aware that it lets a text like "24,22.55" to get through. You might need to add some additional validation to fix this!
    – dimsuz
    Nov 3, 2014 at 19:09
  • 9
    Is this still the way to go? Jun 9, 2015 at 15:07
  • 4
    Seems like this is just trading one bug for another. As implemented above, this will work for locales that use , instead of . at the cost of the reverse which is more common worldwide. @southerton's tweak does help with that, however your users may be surprised when they hit a . and have a , appear in the input.
    – Nick
    Mar 11, 2017 at 15:24
  • 1
    It seems that it hasn't been fixed in Android 10 either.
    – asclepix
    Jan 27, 2022 at 9:51
37

A variation on the 'digit' solutions offered here:

char separator = DecimalFormatSymbols.getInstance().getDecimalSeparator();
input.setKeyListener(DigitsKeyListener.getInstance("0123456789" + separator));

Taking into account the locale separator.

5
  • This is the most clean answer to the original question. Thanks Jan 30, 2017 at 15:39
  • Place this in onCreate(), this is the way to go, IMHO. Apr 20, 2017 at 12:41
  • 6
    I like this, but be carefull... there are keyboards that don't care about the user locale, so the user that don't have the key , in their keyboards. Examples: Samsung keyboard (KitKat). Oct 30, 2017 at 14:47
  • 4
    This will allow duplicate decimal separators. See answer below to handle it: stackoverflow.com/a/45384821/6138589 Feb 6, 2019 at 1:50
  • I am using this solution in combination with com.google.android.material.textfield.TextInputEditText, it works like a charm, no duplicate separators.
    – Dwagner
    Oct 21, 2022 at 11:10
17

Following Code Currency Mask for EditText ($ 123,125.155)

Xml Layout

  <EditText
    android:inputType="numberDecimal"
    android:layout_height="wrap_content"
    android:layout_width="200dp"
    android:digits="0123456789.,$" />

Code

EditText testFilter=...
testFilter.addTextChangedListener( new TextWatcher() {
        boolean isEdiging;
        @Override public void onTextChanged(CharSequence s, int start, int before, int count) { }
        @Override public void beforeTextChanged(CharSequence s, int start, int count, int after) { }

        @Override public void afterTextChanged(Editable s) {
            if(isEdiging) return;
            isEdiging = true;

            String str = s.toString().replaceAll( "[^\\d]", "" );
            double s1 = Double.parseDouble(str);

            NumberFormat nf2 = NumberFormat.getInstance(Locale.ENGLISH);
            ((DecimalFormat)nf2).applyPattern("$ ###,###.###");
            s.replace(0, s.length(), nf2.format(s1));

            isEdiging = false;
        }
    });
1
  • 1
    This doesn't allow commas nor dots to be entered
    – a.ch.
    Apr 29, 2022 at 9:05
16

This is a known bug in the Android SDK. The only workaround is to create your own soft keyboard. You can find an example of implementation here.

6
  • 18
    Is there any news after four years? Mar 9, 2015 at 23:08
  • Experiencing this in Xamarin.Forms as well. The culture is {se-SV} and the numpad shows bot "," (decimal separator) and "." (thousand group separator) but upon pressing the "," nothing is entered in the text field and no event is raised
    – joacar
    Sep 10, 2015 at 8:05
  • I can confirm that the bug still exists.
    – Lensflare
    Sep 7, 2018 at 14:55
  • fixed in Android O developer preview
    – R00We
    Jul 9, 2019 at 19:28
  • 2
    @R00We I see this was marked as resolved in the issue tracker but I'm still seeing this issue when targeting API 29. Were you able to resolve this issue or just confirm that it was marked as resolved?
    – masterwok
    Sep 2, 2020 at 19:35
11

you could use the following for different locales

private void localeDecimalInput(final EditText editText){

    DecimalFormat decFormat = (DecimalFormat) DecimalFormat.getInstance(Locale.getDefault());
    DecimalFormatSymbols symbols=decFormat.getDecimalFormatSymbols();
    final String defaultSeperator=Character.toString(symbols.getDecimalSeparator());

    editText.addTextChangedListener(new TextWatcher() {

        @Override
        public void beforeTextChanged(CharSequence s, int start, int count, int after) {

        }

        @Override
        public void onTextChanged(CharSequence s, int start, int before, int count) {

        }

        @Override
        public void afterTextChanged(Editable editable) {
            if(editable.toString().contains(defaultSeperator))
                editText.setKeyListener(DigitsKeyListener.getInstance("0123456789"));
            else
                editText.setKeyListener(DigitsKeyListener.getInstance("0123456789" + defaultSeperator));
        }
    });
}
2
  • 1
    This is the best solution for me, but there are issue with some phones, eg Samsung, which are not showing the "," coma in the keyboard. So I changed this to allow both coma and dot, but then replacing accordingly to the locale Dec 10, 2019 at 13:14
  • 2
    This solution doesn't work in Samsung devices, FYI.
    – Jay
    Feb 3, 2021 at 8:51
9

You can use the following workaround to also include comma as a valid input:-

Through XML:

<EditText
    android:inputType="number"
    android:digits="0123456789.," />

Programmatically:

EditText input = new EditText(THE_CONTEXT);
input.setKeyListener(DigitsKeyListener.getInstance("0123456789.,"));

In this way Android system will show the numbers' keyboard and allow the input of comma. Hope this answers the question :)

2
  • With this solution when you tap in ",", but the edit text show "." Sep 14, 2016 at 11:00
  • This solution allows multiple commas or dots
    – a.ch.
    Apr 29, 2022 at 8:49
6

Martins answer won't work if you are instantiating the EditText programmatically. I went ahead and modified the included DigitsKeyListener class from API 14 to allow for both comma and period as decimal separator.

To use this, call setKeyListener() on the EditText, e.g.

// Don't allow for signed input (minus), but allow for decimal points
editText.setKeyListener( new MyDigitsKeyListener( false, true ) );

However, you still have to use Martin's trick in the TextChangedListener where you replace commas with periods

import android.text.InputType;
import android.text.SpannableStringBuilder;
import android.text.Spanned;
import android.text.method.NumberKeyListener;
import android.view.KeyEvent;

class MyDigitsKeyListener extends NumberKeyListener {

    /**
     * The characters that are used.
     *
     * @see KeyEvent#getMatch
     * @see #getAcceptedChars
     */
    private static final char[][] CHARACTERS = new char[][] {
        new char[] { '0', '1', '2', '3', '4', '5', '6', '7', '8', '9' },
        new char[] { '0', '1', '2', '3', '4', '5', '6', '7', '8', '9', '-' },
        new char[] { '0', '1', '2', '3', '4', '5', '6', '7', '8', '9', '.', ',' },
        new char[] { '0', '1', '2', '3', '4', '5', '6', '7', '8', '9', '-', '.', ',' },
    };

    private char[] mAccepted;
    private boolean mSign;
    private boolean mDecimal;

    private static final int SIGN = 1;
    private static final int DECIMAL = 2;

    private static MyDigitsKeyListener[] sInstance = new MyDigitsKeyListener[4];

    @Override
    protected char[] getAcceptedChars() {
        return mAccepted;
    }

    /**
     * Allocates a DigitsKeyListener that accepts the digits 0 through 9.
     */
    public MyDigitsKeyListener() {
        this(false, false);
    }

    /**
     * Allocates a DigitsKeyListener that accepts the digits 0 through 9,
     * plus the minus sign (only at the beginning) and/or decimal point
     * (only one per field) if specified.
     */
    public MyDigitsKeyListener(boolean sign, boolean decimal) {
        mSign = sign;
        mDecimal = decimal;

        int kind = (sign ? SIGN : 0) | (decimal ? DECIMAL : 0);
        mAccepted = CHARACTERS[kind];
    }

    /**
     * Returns a DigitsKeyListener that accepts the digits 0 through 9.
     */
    public static MyDigitsKeyListener getInstance() {
        return getInstance(false, false);
    }

    /**
     * Returns a DigitsKeyListener that accepts the digits 0 through 9,
     * plus the minus sign (only at the beginning) and/or decimal point
     * (only one per field) if specified.
     */
    public static MyDigitsKeyListener getInstance(boolean sign, boolean decimal) {
        int kind = (sign ? SIGN : 0) | (decimal ? DECIMAL : 0);

        if (sInstance[kind] != null)
            return sInstance[kind];

        sInstance[kind] = new MyDigitsKeyListener(sign, decimal);
        return sInstance[kind];
    }

    /**
     * Returns a DigitsKeyListener that accepts only the characters
     * that appear in the specified String.  Note that not all characters
     * may be available on every keyboard.
     */
    public static MyDigitsKeyListener getInstance(String accepted) {
        // TODO: do we need a cache of these to avoid allocating?

        MyDigitsKeyListener dim = new MyDigitsKeyListener();

        dim.mAccepted = new char[accepted.length()];
        accepted.getChars(0, accepted.length(), dim.mAccepted, 0);

        return dim;
    }

    public int getInputType() {
        int contentType = InputType.TYPE_CLASS_NUMBER;
        if (mSign) {
            contentType |= InputType.TYPE_NUMBER_FLAG_SIGNED;
        }
        if (mDecimal) {
            contentType |= InputType.TYPE_NUMBER_FLAG_DECIMAL;
        }
        return contentType;
    }

    @Override
    public CharSequence filter(CharSequence source, int start, int end,
                               Spanned dest, int dstart, int dend) {
        CharSequence out = super.filter(source, start, end, dest, dstart, dend);

        if (mSign == false && mDecimal == false) {
            return out;
        }

        if (out != null) {
            source = out;
            start = 0;
            end = out.length();
        }

        int sign = -1;
        int decimal = -1;
        int dlen = dest.length();

        /*
         * Find out if the existing text has '-' or '.' characters.
         */

        for (int i = 0; i < dstart; i++) {
            char c = dest.charAt(i);

            if (c == '-') {
                sign = i;
            } else if (c == '.' || c == ',') {
                decimal = i;
            }
        }
        for (int i = dend; i < dlen; i++) {
            char c = dest.charAt(i);

            if (c == '-') {
                return "";    // Nothing can be inserted in front of a '-'.
            } else if (c == '.' ||  c == ',') {
                decimal = i;
            }
        }

        /*
         * If it does, we must strip them out from the source.
         * In addition, '-' must be the very first character,
         * and nothing can be inserted before an existing '-'.
         * Go in reverse order so the offsets are stable.
         */

        SpannableStringBuilder stripped = null;

        for (int i = end - 1; i >= start; i--) {
            char c = source.charAt(i);
            boolean strip = false;

            if (c == '-') {
                if (i != start || dstart != 0) {
                    strip = true;
                } else if (sign >= 0) {
                    strip = true;
                } else {
                    sign = i;
                }
            } else if (c == '.' || c == ',') {
                if (decimal >= 0) {
                    strip = true;
                } else {
                    decimal = i;
                }
            }

            if (strip) {
                if (end == start + 1) {
                    return "";  // Only one character, and it was stripped.
                }

                if (stripped == null) {
                    stripped = new SpannableStringBuilder(source, start, end);
                }

                stripped.delete(i - start, i + 1 - start);
            }
        }

        if (stripped != null) {
            return stripped;
        } else if (out != null) {
            return out;
        } else {
            return null;
        }
    }
}
1
4

IMHO the best approach for this problem is to just use the InputFilter. A nice gist is here DecimalDigitsInputFilter. Then you can just:

editText.setInputType(TYPE_NUMBER_FLAG_DECIMAL | TYPE_NUMBER_FLAG_SIGNED | TYPE_CLASS_NUMBER)
editText.setKeyListener(DigitsKeyListener.getInstance("0123456789,.-"))
editText.setFilters(new InputFilter[] {new DecimalDigitsInputFilter(5,2)});
3
  • It's worked like a charm, thank you! (after so many wrong solution above... :( ) But I have a question: How can i achieve that comma (",") displayed on the screen not dot (".") because in Hungary we using comma as decimal separator. May 24, 2019 at 10:51
  • 1
    android:digits="0123456789," setting can be add to the EditText. Moreover, instead of returning null in the DecimalDigitsInputFilter, you can return source.replace(".", ",") according to the answer stackoverflow.com/a/40020731/1510222 there is no way to hide dot in a standard keyboard May 28, 2019 at 5:47
  • Man it's amazing solution . Thank you . 5 years after your answer . But it saved my life
    – Peter
    Jun 22, 2022 at 9:31
3

I have a solution that allows the user to enter both the dot and the comma (if available on the keyboard), but only displays the locale default separator. In addition it will not allow the user to enter more than 1 separator. No issues with references to EditText or infinite loops. It is a combination of several answers in this thread suited to my needs.

As with the accepted answer, configure the EditText accordingly:

android:inputType="numberDecimal"
android:digits="0123456789.,"

Then set a custom TextWatcher on the EditText:

myEditText.addTextChangedListener(FlexibleDecimalSeparatorTextWatcher())

And include the custom TextWatcher:

import android.text.Editable
import android.text.SpannableStringBuilder
import android.text.TextWatcher
import android.widget.EditText
import java.text.DecimalFormatSymbols

/**
 * The [FlexibleDecimalSeparatorTextWatcher] allows the user to input both the comma (,) and dot (.) as a decimal separator,
 * and will then automatically convert each entered separator into the locale default separator.
 * If the user were to enter multiple separators - every separator but the first will be removed.
 *
 * To provide comma and dot support, set the [EditText] inputType to 'numberDecimal' and its digits to '0123456789.,'.
 */
class FlexibleDecimalSeparatorTextWatcher : TextWatcher {
companion object {
    private val DECIMAL_SEPARATORS = listOf('.', ',')
    private val LOCALE_DEFAULT_DECIMAL_SEPARATOR = DecimalFormatSymbols.getInstance().decimalSeparator
}

override fun beforeTextChanged(s: CharSequence?, start: Int, count: Int, after: Int) {}
override fun onTextChanged(s: CharSequence?, start: Int, before: Int, count: Int) {}

override fun afterTextChanged(s: Editable?) {
    if (s != null) {
        val textWithConvertedSeparators = convertSeparatorsToLocaleDefault(s.toString())
        val textWithoutMultipleSeparators = removeAdditionalSeparators(textWithConvertedSeparators)

        // Make the change if required. This only triggers one additional afterTextChanged call if there were changes.
        if(s.toString() != textWithoutMultipleSeparators) {
            s.replace(0, s.length, SpannableStringBuilder(textWithoutMultipleSeparators))
        }
    }
}

/**
 * This function converts all entered separators (in [DECIMAL_SEPARATORS]) to the [LOCALE_DEFAULT_DECIMAL_SEPARATOR].
 */
private fun convertSeparatorsToLocaleDefault(original: String): String {
    var result = original
    DECIMAL_SEPARATORS.forEach { separator ->
        if (separator != LOCALE_DEFAULT_DECIMAL_SEPARATOR && result.contains(separator)) {
            result = result.replace(separator, LOCALE_DEFAULT_DECIMAL_SEPARATOR)
        }
    }
    return result
}

/**
 * Strip out all separators but the first.
 * In this function we assume all separators are already converted to the locale default.
 */
private fun removeAdditionalSeparators(original: String): String {
    var result = original
    var separatorCount = result.count { c -> c == LOCALE_DEFAULT_DECIMAL_SEPARATOR }
    if(separatorCount > 1) {
        // We will reverse the text so we can keep stripping the last (first in reverse) separator off.
        var textReversed = result.reversed()
        val separatorRegex = Regex.fromLiteral(LOCALE_DEFAULT_DECIMAL_SEPARATOR.toString())
        while (separatorCount > 1) {
            textReversed = textReversed.replaceFirst(separatorRegex, "")
            separatorCount--
        }
        // And finally we reverse it back to the original order.
        result = textReversed.reversed()
    }
    return result
}

}

2

For Mono(Droid) solutions:

decimal decimalValue = decimal.Parse(input.Text.Replace(",", ".") , CultureInfo.InvariantCulture);
2

All the other posts here had major holes in them, so here's a solution that will:

  • Enforce commas or periods based on region, will not let you type the opposite one.
  • If the EditText starts with some value, it replaces the correct separator as needed.

In the XML:

<EditText
    ...
    android:inputType="numberDecimal" 
    ... />

Class variable:

private boolean isDecimalSeparatorComma = false;

In onCreate, find the separator used in the current locale:

if (Build.VERSION.SDK_INT >= Build.VERSION_CODES.N) {
    NumberFormat nf = NumberFormat.getInstance();
    if (nf instanceof DecimalFormat) {
        DecimalFormatSymbols sym = ((DecimalFormat) nf).getDecimalFormatSymbols();
        char decSeparator = sym.getDecimalSeparator();
        isDecimalSeparatorComma = Character.toString(decSeparator).equals(",");
    }
}

Also onCreate, Use this to update it if you're loading in a current value:

// Replace editText with commas or periods as needed for viewing
String editTextValue = getEditTextValue(); // load your current value
if (editTextValue.contains(".") && isDecimalSeparatorComma) {
    editTextValue = editTextValue.replaceAll("\\.",",");
} else if (editTextValue.contains(",") && !isDecimalSeparatorComma) {
    editTextValue = editTextValue.replaceAll(",",".");
}
setEditTextValue(editTextValue); // override your current value

Also onCreate, Add the Listeners

editText.addTextChangedListener(editTextWatcher);

if (isDecimalSeparatorComma) {
    editText.setKeyListener(DigitsKeyListener.getInstance("0123456789,"));
} else {
    editText.setKeyListener(DigitsKeyListener.getInstance("0123456789."));
}

editTextWatcher

TextWatcher editTextWatcher = new TextWatcher() {
    @Override
    public void beforeTextChanged(CharSequence s, int start, int count, int after) { }

    @Override
    public void onTextChanged(CharSequence s, int start, int before, int count) { }

    @Override
    public void afterTextChanged(Editable s) {
        String editTextValue = s.toString();

        // Count up the number of commas and periods
        Pattern pattern = Pattern.compile("[,.]");
        Matcher matcher = pattern.matcher(editTextValue);
        int count = 0;
        while (matcher.find()) {
            count++;
        }

        // Don't let it put more than one comma or period
        if (count > 1) {
            s.delete(s.length()-1, s.length());
        } else {
            // If there is a comma or period at the end the value hasn't changed so don't update
            if (!editTextValue.endsWith(",") && !editTextValue.endsWith(".")) {
                doSomething()
            }
        }
    }
};

doSomething() example, convert to standard period for data manipulation

private void doSomething() {
    try {
        String editTextStr = editText.getText().toString();
        if (isDecimalSeparatorComma) {
            editTextStr = editTextStr.replaceAll(",",".");
        }
        float editTextFloatValue = editTextStr.isEmpty() ?
                0.0f :
                Float.valueOf(editTextStr);

        ... use editTextFloatValue
    } catch (NumberFormatException e) {
        Log.e(TAG, "Error converting String to Double");
    }
}
1

You could do the following:

DecimalFormatSymbols d = DecimalFormatSymbols.getInstance(Locale.getDefault());
input.setFilters(new InputFilter[] { new DecimalDigitsInputFilter(5, 2) });
input.setKeyListener(DigitsKeyListener.getInstance("0123456789" + d.getDecimalSeparator()));

And then you could use an input filter:

    public class DecimalDigitsInputFilter implements InputFilter {

Pattern mPattern;

public DecimalDigitsInputFilter(int digitsBeforeZero, int digitsAfterZero) {
    DecimalFormatSymbols d = new DecimalFormatSymbols(Locale.getDefault());
    String s = "\\" + d.getDecimalSeparator();
    mPattern = Pattern.compile("[0-9]{0," + (digitsBeforeZero - 1) + "}+((" + s + "[0-9]{0," + (digitsAfterZero - 1) + "})?)||(" + s + ")?");
}

@Override
public CharSequence filter(CharSequence source, int start, int end, Spanned dest, int dstart, int dend) {

    Matcher matcher = mPattern.matcher(dest);
    if (!matcher.matches())
        return "";
    return null;
}

}

2
  • there might be a space between thousand and hundred, this pattern would refuse the formatted input
    – Eric Zhao
    Mar 14, 2018 at 11:05
  • 1
    Which culture uses white space as a decimal group separator, @EricZhao? Dec 2, 2020 at 7:58
1

to get localize your input use:

char sep = DecimalFormatSymbols.getInstance().getDecimalSeparator();

and then add:

textEdit.setKeyListener(DigitsKeyListener.getInstance("0123456789" + sep));

than don't forget to replace "," with "." so Float or Double can parse it without errors.

1
  • 2
    This solution lets entering multiple commas Dec 24, 2018 at 11:24
1

I can confirm that the fixes proposed do not work on Samsung IMEs (at least on S6 and S9) and maybe LG. They still show a dot as decimal separator regardless of locale. Switching to Google's IME fixes this but is hardly an option for most developers.

It also has not been fixed in Oreo for these keyboards since it is a fix that Samsung and/or LG have to do and then to push even to their ancient handsets.

I have instead forked the number-keyboard project and added a mode where it behaves like an IME: fork. See the project sample for details. This has worked quite well for me and is similar to many of the "PIN entry" fake IMEs you see in banking apps.

Sample app screenshot

1

You could use inputType="phone", however in that case you would have to deal with multiple , or . being present, so additional validation would be necessary.

1

My fix for KOTLIN

I came across the same bug, which i fixed with:

val separator = DecimalFormatSymbols.getInstance().decimalSeparator
mEditText.keyListener = DigitsKeyListener.getInstance("0123456789$separator")

and this works quite fine. !BUT! on Samsung Keyboards, the separator is NOT shown, so you cannot type in decimal numbers.

so i had to fix this issue with checking, if Samsung Keyboard is used:

    val x = Settings.Secure.getString(getContentResolver(), Settings.Secure.DEFAULT_INPUT_METHOD);
    if (x.toLowerCase().contains("samsung")) {}
  

But then you still have the "." as decimal separator. Therefore you have to replace the dot with comma, if the separator is comma:

val separator: Char = DecimalFormatSymbols.getInstance().decimalSeparator
 
  if (separator == ',') {
     mEditText.addTextChangedListener(object : TextWatcher {
                        override fun beforeTextChanged(s: CharSequence?, start: Int, count: Int, after: Int) = Unit
    
                        override fun onTextChanged(s: CharSequence?, start: Int, before: Int, count: Int) = Unit
    
                        override fun afterTextChanged(s: Editable?) {
    
                            if (!s.isNullOrEmpty()) {
                                
                                    if (s.toString().contains(".")) {
                                        val replaced = s.toString().replace('.', separator)
                                        mEditText.setText(replaced)
                                        mEditText.setSelection(replaced.length)
                                    }
    
                                
                            }
                        }
                    })
                }

But then you have to check that nobody types more "," in the EditTextfield. This can be done with a Regex.

My whole solution:

val x = Settings.Secure.getString(getContentResolver(), Settings.Secure.DEFAULT_INPUT_METHOD);
  if (x.toLowerCase().contains("samsung")) {
         val Number_REGEX: Pattern =  Pattern.compile("^([1-9])*([.,]{1}[0-9]{0,10})?$")
         val separator: Char = DecimalFormatSymbols.getInstance().decimalSeparator
         if (separator == ',') {
            mEditText.addTextChangedListener(object : TextWatcher {
                override fun beforeTextChanged(s: CharSequence?, start: Int, count: Int, after: Int) = Unit

                override fun onTextChanged(s: CharSequence?, start: Int, before: Int, count: Int) = Unit

                override fun afterTextChanged(s: Editable?) {

                    if (!s.isNullOrEmpty()) {
                        val matcherMail = Number_REGEX.matcher(s.toString())
                        if (!matcherMail.matches()) {
                            val length: Int = s.length

                            s.delete(length - 1, length);
                        } else {
                            if (s.toString().contains(".")) {
                                val replaced = s.toString().replace('.', separator)
                                mEditText.setText(replaced)
                                mEditText.setSelection(replaced.length)
                            }

                        }
                    }
                }
            })
        }
    } else {
        val separator = DecimalFormatSymbols.getInstance().decimalSeparator
        mEditText.keyListener = DigitsKeyListener.getInstance("0123456789$separator")
       
    }

xml file:

 <com.google.android.material.textfield.TextInputEditText
        android:id="@+id/tEditText"
        android:layout_width="match_parent"
        android:layout_height="wrap_content"
        android:hint="Input"
        android:inputType="numberDecimal"
        android:imeOptions="actionDone"/>

If you want to use the number, make sure to get the right format:

val x = NumberFormat.getInstance().parse(mEditText.text.toString()).toDouble()
0

Android has a built in number formatter.

You can add this to your EditText to allow decimals and commas: android:inputType="numberDecimal" and android:digits="0123456789.,"

Then somewhere in your code, either when user clicks save or after text is entered (use a listener).

// Format the number to the appropriate double
try { 
    Number formatted = NumberFormat.getInstance().parse(editText.getText().toString());
    cost = formatted.doubleValue();
} catch (ParseException e) {
    System.out.println("Error parsing cost string " + editText.getText().toString());
    cost = 0.0;
}
0

I decided to change comma to dot only while editing. Here is my tricky and relative simple workaround:

    editText.setOnFocusChangeListener(new View.OnFocusChangeListener() {
        @Override
        public void onFocusChange(View v, boolean hasFocus) {
            EditText editText = (EditText) v; 
            String text = editText.getText().toString();
            if (hasFocus) {
                editText.setText(text.replace(",", "."));
            } else {
                if (!text.isEmpty()) {
                    Double doubleValue = Double.valueOf(text.replace(",", "."));
                    editText.setText(someDecimalFormatter.format(doubleValue));
                }
            }
        }
    });

someDecimalFormatter will use comma or dot depends on Locale

0

My solution is:

  • In main activity:

    char separator =DecimalFormatSymbols.getInstance().getDecimalSeparator(); textViewPitchDeadZone.setKeyListener(DigitsKeyListener.getInstance("0123456789" + separator));

  • In xml file: android:imeOptions="flagNoFullscreen" android:inputType="numberDecimal"

and I took the double in the editText as a String.

0

It's more than 8 years passed and I am surprised, this issue isn't fixed yet...
I struggled with this simple issue since the most upvoted answer by @Martin lets typing multiple separators, i.e. user can type in "12,,,,,,12,1,,21,2,"
Also, the second concern is that on some devices comma is not shown on the numerical keyboard (or requires multiple pressing of a dot button)

Here is my workaround solution, which solves the mentioned problems and lets user typing '.' and ',', but in EditText he will see the only decimal separator which corresponds to current locale:

editText.apply { addTextChangedListener(DoubleTextChangedListener(this)) }

And the text watcher:

  open class DoubleTextChangedListener(private val et: EditText) : TextWatcher {

    init {
        et.inputType = InputType.TYPE_CLASS_NUMBER or InputType.TYPE_NUMBER_FLAG_DECIMAL
        et.keyListener = DigitsKeyListener.getInstance("0123456789.,")
    }

    private val separator = DecimalFormatSymbols.getInstance().decimalSeparator

    override fun beforeTextChanged(s: CharSequence?, start: Int, count: Int, after: Int) {
        //empty
    }

    @CallSuper
    override fun onTextChanged(s: CharSequence, start: Int, before: Int, count: Int) {
        et.run {
            removeTextChangedListener(this@DoubleTextChangedListener)
            val formatted = toLocalizedDecimal(s.toString(), separator)
            setText(formatted)
            setSelection(formatted.length)
            addTextChangedListener(this@DoubleTextChangedListener)
        }
    }

    override fun afterTextChanged(s: Editable?) {
        // empty
    }

    /**
     * Formats input to a decimal. Leaves the only separator (or none), which matches [separator].
     * Examples:
     * 1. [s]="12.12", [separator]=',' -> result= "12,12"
     * 2. [s]="12.12", [separator]='.' -> result= "12.12"
     * 4. [s]="12,12", [separator]='.' -> result= "12.12"
     * 5. [s]="12,12,,..,,,,,34..,", [separator]=',' -> result= "12,1234"
     * 6. [s]="12.12,,..,,,,,34..,", [separator]='.' -> result= "12.1234"
     * 7. [s]="5" -> result= "5"
     */
    private fun toLocalizedDecimal(s: String, separator: Char): String {
        val cleared = s.replace(",", ".")
        val splitted = cleared.split('.').filter { it.isNotBlank() }
        return when (splitted.size) {
            0 -> s
            1 -> cleared.replace('.', separator).replaceAfter(separator, "")
            2 -> splitted.joinToString(separator.toString())
            else -> splitted[0]
                    .plus(separator)
                    .plus(splitted.subList(1, splitted.size - 1).joinToString(""))
        }
    }
}
0

Simple solution, make a custom control. (this is made in Xamarin android but should port easily to java)

public class EditTextDecimalNumber:EditText
{
    readonly string _numberFormatDecimalSeparator;

    public EditTextDecimalNumber(Context context, IAttributeSet attrs) : base(context, attrs)
    {
        InputType = InputTypes.NumberFlagDecimal;
        TextChanged += EditTextDecimalNumber_TextChanged;
        _numberFormatDecimalSeparator = System.Threading.Thread.CurrentThread.CurrentUICulture.NumberFormat.NumberDecimalSeparator;

        KeyListener = DigitsKeyListener.GetInstance($"0123456789{_numberFormatDecimalSeparator}");
    }

    private void EditTextDecimalNumber_TextChanged(object sender, TextChangedEventArgs e)
    {
        int noOfOccurence = this.Text.Count(x => x.ToString() == _numberFormatDecimalSeparator);
        if (noOfOccurence >=2)
        {
            int lastIndexOf = this.Text.LastIndexOf(_numberFormatDecimalSeparator,StringComparison.CurrentCulture);
            if (lastIndexOf!=-1)
            {
                this.Text = this.Text.Substring(0, lastIndexOf);
                this.SetSelection(this.Text.Length);
            }

        }
    }
}
0

I had to come up with a work around on my side that it consisted of a mix of different answers. This will allow for "," or "." for up to one decimal

This is my editText:

val separator: Char = DecimalFormatSymbols.getInstance().decimalSeparator
editTextBox.filters = arrayOf<InputFilter>(DecimalDigitsInputFilter(5, 1, separator))
editTextBox.keyListener = DigitsKeyListener.getInstance("0123456789$separator")

and my class to handle specific regex:

class DecimalDigitsInputFilter(
    digitsBeforeZero: Int, 
    digitsAfterZero: Int, 
    separator: Char
) : InputFilter {
    private val mPattern: Pattern =
        Pattern.compile("[0-9]{0," + (digitsBeforeZero - 1) + "}+((\\$separator[0-9]{0," + (digitsAfterZero - 1) + "})?)||(\\$separator)?")

    override fun filter(source: CharSequence, start: Int, end: Int, dest: Spanned, dstart: Int, dend: Int): CharSequence? {
        val matcher = mPattern.matcher(dest)
        return if (!matcher.matches()) "" else null
    }
}
0
EditText.inputType =
    TYPE_NUMBER_FLAG_DECIMAL or TYPE_NUMBER_FLAG_SIGNED or TYPE_CLASS_NUMBER

EditText.keyListener = DigitsKeyListener.getInstance("0123456789,-")

EditText.addTextChangedListener(object : TextWatcher {
    var beforeText = ""

    override fun beforeTextChanged(s: CharSequence?, start: Int, count: Int, after: Int) {
        beforeText = s.toString()
    }

    override fun onTextChanged(s: CharSequence?, start: Int, before: Int, count: Int) {}

    override fun afterTextChanged(s: Editable?) {
        if (s != null) {
            if (s.length > 1 && s.last() == '-') {
                s.replace(0, s.length, beforeText)
            }

            if (s.length == 1 && s.last() == ',') {
                s.replace(0, s.length, beforeText)
            }

            if (s.length > 1 && beforeText.length < s.length && beforeText.contains(',') && s.last() == ',') {
                s.replace(0, s.length, beforeText)
            }
        }
    }
})
1
  • Your answer could be improved with additional supporting information. Please edit to add further details, such as citations or documentation, so that others can confirm that your answer is correct. You can find more information on how to write good answers in the help center.
    – Community Bot
    Mar 2 at 13:26
-1

I don't know why your answers are so complicated. If there's a bug in SDK you must override it or go around.

I have chosen the second way to solve that problem. If you format your string as Locale.ENGLISH and then put it to the EditText (even as an empty string). Example:

String.format(Locale.ENGLISH,"%.6f", yourFloatNumber);

Chasing that solution your result are compatible with the shown keyboard. Then float and double numbers work in typical for programming languages manner with dot instead of comma.

-5

I think this solution is less complex than the others written here:

<EditText
    android:inputType="numberDecimal"
    android:digits="0123456789," />

This way when you press the '.' in the soft keyboard nothing happens; only numbers and comma are allowed.

1
  • 5
    if you do this then you'll just break all the locales that use '.' instead.
    – Nick
    Mar 11, 2017 at 15:28

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