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I'm trying format a float to have a dollar sign in front of the number. Currently I'm trying to get it to print 150 spaces from the left side.

System.out.printf("%150.2f", orderTotal);

This is what I'm using but I can't figure out where to put the $ I guess I could make the entire thing into a String, but I was wondering if there is a way to do what I'm looking for?

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  • \$ does that work? -- Or wait, you want 150 spaces to the left then print $ + orderTotal?
    – Emz
    Dec 12, 2014 at 1:16
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    Anything you put in a format string outside a format specifier will appear just as you put it. Here %150.2f is the format specifier, so anything you put before or after that will appear literally.
    – ajb
    Dec 12, 2014 at 1:17
  • @ajb: Which is a problem, isn’t it, when adding 150 spaces to the left side?
    – Ry-
    Dec 12, 2014 at 1:17
  • @Emz The backslash will not work. This is a format string, not a regex.
    – ajb
    Dec 12, 2014 at 1:18
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    @Emz yeah I want the $ then the orderTotal but all together. Currently I'm using String orderTotalString = "$" + orderTotal; System.out.printf("%150s", orderTotalString); This is giving me somewhat desired results I don't get the 2 decimal point float like I want but it is giving me something similar
    – k3vy w3vy
    Dec 12, 2014 at 1:18

4 Answers 4

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How about

System.out.printf("%150s", String.format ("$%.2f", orderTotal));
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System.out.printf("%150s$%.2f", "", orderTotal);
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String.format is just the wrong tool for the task. Check out DecimalFormat.getCurrencyInstance that's what you want to use.

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  • Please show what pattern you would use for the OP's question Dec 12, 2014 at 1:55
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I think this will give you what you want:

System.out.printf("%150s", "$" + String.format("%.2f", orderTotal));

Using %150s put you on the right track, I think. To format your float so that it has two decimal places, but without adding any extra spaces to the left, just leave off the width field in the format specifier.

I'm assuming here that you want the entire field to have a width of 150; that is, if the currency part is "$101.20", then you want to append 143 spaces on the left. If you actually want 150 spaces regardless of the amount, then Reimeus' answer will work.

Also, consider using BigDecimal instead of float or double when dealing with currency. The floating-point types can't handle numbers with decimal places exactly.

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