36

I'm looking for a way to format a string into currency without using the TextField hack.

For example, i'd like to have the number "521242" converted into "5,212.42" Or if I have a number under 1$, I would like it to look like this: "52" -> "0.52"

Thanks

8 Answers 8

67

You probably want something like this (assuming currency is a float):

NSNumberFormatter *numberFormatter = [[NSNumberFormatter alloc] init];
[numberFormatter setNumberStyle: NSNumberFormatterCurrencyStyle];
NSString *numberAsString = [numberFormatter stringFromNumber:[NSNumber numberWithFloat:currency]];

From your requirements to treat 52 as .52 you may need to divide by 100.0.

The nice thing about this approach is that it will respect the current locale. So, where appropriate it will format your example as "5.212,42".

Update: I was, perhaps, a little speedy in posting my example. As pointed out by Conrad Shultz below, when dealing with currency amounts, it would be preferable to store the quantities as NSDecimalNumbers. This will greatly reduce headaches with rounding errors. If you do this the above code snippet becomes (assuming currency is a NSDecimalNumber*):

NSNumberFormatter *numberFormatter = [[NSNumberFormatter alloc] init];
[numberFormatter setNumberStyle: NSNumberFormatterCurrencyStyle];
NSString *numberAsString = [numberFormatter stringFromNumber:currency];
7
  • 31
    Never use floats for exact values (especially currency)! Use NSDecimalNumber/NSDecimal. Aug 3, 2012 at 0:57
  • Awesome! I had it working but was struggling with the double decimal.. It was so obvious that I missed it. Thank you! Aug 3, 2012 at 0:58
  • 1
    @ConradShultz (+1) A good point, but I tend avoid such sweeping statements. Things which may be exactly representable in decimal can quickly become in exact (e.g I take your "exact" number and divide it by three). The performance overhead of NSDecimalNumber/NSDecimal can soon outweigh the benefits.
    – idz
    Aug 3, 2012 at 1:26
  • 2
    @idz Sure - which is why you then need a policy for handling those cases. But using a float will break at some point, and when you least expect it. When you're working with currency, where every penny counts, float is unacceptable. (FWIW, NSDecimalNumber is pretty lightweight; I've never seen any problems even working with thousands of calculations in real-time.) Aug 3, 2012 at 1:34
  • @ConradShultz - Sorry had to play Devil's Advocate ;-)
    – idz
    Aug 3, 2012 at 1:36
12

I use this code. This work for me

1) Add UITextField Delegate to header file

2) Add this code (ARC enabled)

- (BOOL)textField:(UITextField *)textField shouldChangeCharactersInRange:(NSRange)range replacementString:(NSString *)string {

NSString *cleanCentString = [[textField.text
                              componentsSeparatedByCharactersInSet:
                              [[NSCharacterSet decimalDigitCharacterSet] invertedSet]]
                             componentsJoinedByString:@""];
// Parse final integer value
NSInteger centAmount = cleanCentString.integerValue;
// Check the user input
if (string.length > 0)
{
    // Digit added
    centAmount = centAmount * 10 + string.integerValue;
}
else
{
    // Digit deleted
    centAmount = centAmount / 10;
}
// Update call amount value
NSNumber *amount = [[NSNumber alloc] initWithFloat:(float)centAmount / 100.0f];
// Write amount with currency symbols to the textfield
NSNumberFormatter *_currencyFormatter = [[NSNumberFormatter alloc] init];
[_currencyFormatter setNumberStyle:NSNumberFormatterCurrencyStyle];
[_currencyFormatter setCurrencyCode:@"USD"];
[_currencyFormatter setNegativeFormat:@"-¤#,##0.00"];
textField.text = [_currencyFormatter stringFromNumber:amount];
return NO; }
2
  • 7
    Never use floats for exact values (especially currency)! Use NSDecimalNumber/NSDecimal. Aug 3, 2012 at 0:57
  • 1
    How would it be possible to ensure that e.g. Japanese formatting for YEN is correct when you hardcode the division by 100 since YEN do not have something like cents... Compare Locale Awareness on nshipster.com/nsformatter If you format 1000 to Japanese YEN it becomes "¥1,000". Do I really have to maintain a mapping table with division factors for each supported country or is there a NumberFormatter option?
    – blackjacx
    Jun 29, 2018 at 15:15
6

swift 2.0 version:

    let _currencyFormatter : NSNumberFormatter = NSNumberFormatter()
    _currencyFormatter.numberStyle = NSNumberFormatterStyle.CurrencyStyle
    _currencyFormatter.currencyCode = "EUR"
    textField.text = _currencyFormatter.stringFromNumber(amount);
0
3

Use the following code and it will resolve all your issues....

NSNumberFormatter *numberFormatter = [[NSNumberFormatter alloc] init];
[numberFormatter setNumberStyle: NSNumberFormatterCurrencyStyle];
NSString *numberAsString = [numberFormatter stringFromNumber:[NSNumber numberWithDouble:[currency doubleValue]]];
2

This is what I have found reworking AAV answer using NSDecimalNumbers.

- (BOOL)textField:(UITextField *)textField shouldChangeCharactersInRange:(NSRange)range replacementString:(NSString *)string {

NSString *cleanCentString = [[textField.text
                              componentsSeparatedByCharactersInSet:
                              [[NSCharacterSet decimalDigitCharacterSet] invertedSet]]
                             componentsJoinedByString:@""];


// Parse final integer value
NSDecimalNumber *price = [NSDecimalNumber decimalNumberWithMantissa:[cleanCentString integerValue]
                                                           exponent:-2
                                                         isNegative:NO];

NSDecimalNumber *entry = [NSDecimalNumber decimalNumberWithMantissa:[string integerValue]
                                                           exponent:-2
                                                         isNegative:NO];

NSDecimalNumber *multiplier = [NSDecimalNumber decimalNumberWithMantissa:1
                                                            exponent:1
                                                          isNegative:NO];

NSDecimalNumberHandler *handler = [NSDecimalNumberHandler decimalNumberHandlerWithRoundingMode:NSRoundPlain
                                                                                         scale:2
                                                                              raiseOnExactness:NO
                                                                               raiseOnOverflow:NO
                                                                              raiseOnUnderflow:NO
                                                                           raiseOnDivideByZero:NO];
NSDecimalNumber *result;

// Check the user input
if (string.length > 0)
{
    // Digit added
    result = [price decimalNumberByMultiplyingBy:multiplier withBehavior:handler];
    result = [result decimalNumberByAdding:entry];
}
else
{
    // Digit deleted
    result = [price decimalNumberByDividingBy:multiplier withBehavior:handler];
}

// Write amount with currency symbols to the textfield
NSNumberFormatter *_currencyFormatter = [[NSNumberFormatter alloc] init];
[_currencyFormatter setNumberStyle:NSNumberFormatterCurrencyStyle];
[_currencyFormatter setCurrencyCode:@"USD"];
textField.text = [_currencyFormatter stringFromNumber:result];

return NO;
}
1
func getCurrencyFormat(price:String)->String{
    let convertPrice = NSNumber(double: Double(price)!)
    let formatter = NSNumberFormatter()
    formatter.numberStyle = .CurrencyStyle
    formatter.currencyCode = "USD"        

    let convertedPrice = formatter.stringFromNumber(convertPrice)       
    return convertedPrice!
}

Note:- A currency code is a three-letter code that is, in most cases, composed of a country’s two-character Internet country code plus an extra character to denote the currency unit. For example, the currency code for the Australian dollar is “AUD”.

1

For Swift tested code (ref from AAV's code)

func textField(textField: UITextField, shouldChangeCharactersInRange range: NSRange, replacementString string: String) -> Bool{

    let strMain : NSString = string

    let arrTemp : NSArray = (textField.text?.componentsSeparatedByCharactersInSet(NSCharacterSet.decimalDigitCharacterSet().invertedSet))!
    let str: NSString = arrTemp.componentsJoinedByString("")

    //NSInteger centAmount = cleanCentString.integerValue;
    var centAmount : NSInteger = str.integerValue

    if (string.length > 0)
    {
        // Digit added
        centAmount = centAmount * 10 + strMain.integerValue;
    }
    else {
        // Digit deleted
        centAmount = centAmount / 10;
    }

    let amount = (Double(centAmount) / 100.0)

    let currencyFormatter = NSNumberFormatter()
    currencyFormatter.numberStyle = .CurrencyStyle
    currencyFormatter.currencyCode = "USD"
    currencyFormatter.negativeFormat = "-¤#,##0.00"
    let convertedPrice = currencyFormatter.stringFromNumber(amount)

    print(convertedPrice)

    txtAmount.text = convertedPrice! //set text to your textfiled
    return false //return false for exact out put
}

note : if you want to remove the default currency symbol from input you can use currencySymbol to blank as below

currencyFormatter.currencyCode = nil
currencyFormatter.currencySymbol = ""

Happy coding!

0

One thing about using formatters is they are expensive to create. It is best to create them once per view or viewController. Using lazy is the perfect solution for avoiding this overhead. This also moves a lot of boilerplate up out of the way of your main code.

class MyViewController: UIViewController {
    @IBOutlet var priceLabel: UILabel!

    private lazy var currencyFormatter: NumberFormatter = {
        let formatter = NumberFormatter()
        formatter.currencySymbol = "$"
        formatter.numberStyle = .currency
        return formatter
    }()

     // rest of class
 }

To use it, as noted elsewhere it is best to use Decimal for currency, Double is an approximation.

priceLabel.text = currencyFormatter.string(for: Decimal(9.48))

Output:

$9.48

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