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I understand that BigDecimal is recommended best practice for representing monetary values in Java. What do you use? Is there a better library that you prefer to use instead?

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BigDecimal all the way. I've heard of some folks creating their own Cash or Money classes which encapsulate a cash value with the currency, but under the skin it's still a BigDecimal, probably with BigDecimal.ROUND_HALF_EVEN rounding.

Edit: As Don mentions in his answer, there are open sourced projects like timeandmoney, and whilst I applaud them for trying to prevent developers from having to reinvent the wheel, I just don't have enough confidence in a pre-alpha library to use it in a production environment. Besides, if you dig around under the hood, you'll see they use BigDecimal too.

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    +1. We've decided to add a container class that consumes a currency, too. This comes in handy when rendering monetary values in tables. Nov 13, 2008 at 6:01
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    yep, that's a pretty common approach and it makes a lot of sense. One caveat to this is when you have to deal with Japanese Yen, as they don't have a minor currency denomination like cents, so it needs it's own rounding rules.
    – ninesided
    Nov 13, 2008 at 10:34
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    @ninesided gives a great example of why rolling your own is a bad answer. "Oh, and by the way, it doesn't work for $CURRENCY_X." That's a good sign that it also doesn't work for lots of other currencies. Nov 1, 2011 at 14:05
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    @JamesMoore I disagree that "rolling your own" is a bad approach, you just need to be aware of the possible limitations of the approach that you choose, hence the reason for me mentioning it. It is trivial to implement different rounding rules per currency, but if your system only needs to deal in USD or EUR then you don't need to over engineer things.
    – ninesided
    Nov 1, 2011 at 14:14
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    Take a look at stackoverflow.com/questions/5134237/… for just one reason why BigDecimal is a problem. Planet-wide accounting is just a swamp of special cases, and trying to sweep them all under the rug of BigDecimal just doesn't work. Nov 1, 2011 at 14:15
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It can be useful to people arriving here by search engines to know about JodaMoney: http://www.joda.org/joda-money/.

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  • Thanks. I've been meaning to add a follow-up note about Joda Money. Have you used it?
    – dshaw
    Jan 27, 2010 at 14:37
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    +1 looks interesting, glad to see it's BigDecimal under the hood!
    – ninesided
    Nov 1, 2011 at 14:22
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I'm not expressing my opinion here, but there are quite good arguments against BigDecimal that someone should probably throw out:

http://lemnik.wordpress.com/2011/03/25/bigdecimal-and-your-money/

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  • 10 years later, BigDecimal won.
    – MarkHu
    Oct 19, 2021 at 2:15
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A convenient library that I ran into earlier is the Joda-Money library. One of its implementations is indeed based on BigDecimal. It is based on the ISO-4217 specification for currencies and can support a customized currency list (loaded via CVS).

This library has a small number of files that one can quickly go through if modifications are needed. Joda-Money is published under the Apache 2.0 license.

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If you are just using dollars and cents, I'd use a long (offset by 2 decimal places). If you need more detail, big decimal may be the way to go.

Either way, I'd probably extend the class to have a .toString() that uses the correct format, and as a place to put other methods that might come up (For a long, multiplying and dividing will go awry if the decimal isn't adjusted)

Also, if you use define your own class and interface, then you can replace the implementation at will.

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    Watch out, even long could be too short to hold the US Federal Debt in Cents ... if not now then in a few years.
    – Ingo
    Jul 23, 2013 at 18:56
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    I agree--any huge numbers of dollars (or maybe if you are tracking money in Yen) you should be using BigDecimal--but even then I'd seriously consider using a container class for it. I think most programming complexity comes from people not defining small, simple classes around collections and intrinsic types.
    – Bill K
    Jul 23, 2013 at 20:01
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BigDecimal or another fixed point representation is what is generally needed for money.

Floating point (Double, Float) representations and calculations are inexact, leading to erroneous results.

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    Strictly speaking, BigDecimal is also inexact; it just corresponds better with the decimal rounding we're used to in daily life, and allows you to specify rounding modes. Jul 16, 2009 at 13:17
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    @Michael Borgwardt BigDecimal differs from IEEE FP in that an explicit scale is specified. While not all operations are exact, this ensures that a set of operations and behavior is always exact and the scale is constant whereas the scale for IEEE FP decreases with value.
    – user166390
    Mar 12, 2011 at 21:34
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    What does that have to do with money? Accounting organizations around the world usually have very specific requirements for how you do math in their currency. Does BigDecimal precisely match each and every one of these standards? Will it do so next year, when those standards change? And BigDecimal doesn't even come close to specifying useful rounding rules for currencies. Nov 1, 2011 at 14:00
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You have to be so careful when dealing with time and money.

When you are working with money, I hope everybody should know never to use a float or a double.

But I am unsure about BigDecimal.

In most cases you'll be fine if you just keep track of cents in a int or long. This way you never deal with a decimal place.

You only display dollars when you print it. Always work with cents internal using integers. This may be tricky if need to divide or need to use Math.abs().

However, you might care able half a cent, or even one hundredth of a cent. I don't know what's a good way to do this. You might just need to deal with thousandth of cents and use a long. Or maybe you'll be forced to use BigDecimal

I would do a lot more reading on this, but ignore everybody who starts talking about using a float or double to represent money. They are just asking for trouble.

I feel my advice isn't complete, so please put more though into it. You are dealing with dangerous types!

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    Why would you need to be "forced" to use BigDecimal? What are you unsure about? It's clearly superior to working with cents, as it allows you to explicitly specify rounding modes. Jul 16, 2009 at 13:20
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    @MichaelBorgwardt: yes, it allows you to specify a tiny subset of the rounding modes you need for currencies. So? (Hint: rounding currencies is decided, usually, by national accounting organizations. They're perfectly happy to toss in weird special cases. See stackoverflow.com/questions/5134237/… for just one of the many entertaining reasons why BigDecimal rounding is completely useless here.) Nov 1, 2011 at 14:12
  • @James: How exactly is it "useless"? How would implementing thos special cases be harder with BigDecimal than with something else? Nov 1, 2011 at 16:56
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    OK, completely useless is too strong. In the complicated class that abstracts currency, BigDecimal's rounding rules are probably useful in some specific instances to build a subset of the ways currency rounding happens. But the general case is that rounding rules for currencies require mechanisms that are subject to change over time (since human accounting agencies make up the rules, and are free to change them). The question isn't about Euros (or whatever replaces Euros next month...), or dollars in 2011, it's about currency, so you have to deal with lots of nasty complexity. Nov 1, 2011 at 18:10
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Creating a Money class is the way to go. Using BigDecimal( or even an int) underneath. Then using Currency class to define rounding convention.

Unfortunately without operator overloading Java makes it quite unpleasant creating such basic types.

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There is a better library, timeandmoney. IMO, it far superior to the libraries provided by the JDK for representing these 2 concepts.

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    This answer was posted three years ago. Today, the timeandmoney project is still pre-alpha according to that link. Nov 1, 2011 at 14:02
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    @JamesMoore Good call. The answer is now 7 years old and the project is still not stable.
    – Navin
    Sep 7, 2015 at 14:26
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Definitely not BigDecimal. There are so many special rules for rounding and presentation that you have to worry about.

Martin Fowler recommends the implementation of a dedicated Money class to represent currency amounts, and that also implements rules for currency conversion.

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    and the underlying data type of his Money class? BigDecimal.
    – ninesided
    Nov 13, 2008 at 20:42
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    That's not true. You could use Integer in the money class, which is what Martin does. I have done this many times.
    – egervari
    Apr 24, 2011 at 4:50
  • The recommendation is correct though; calculations involving money are a vast swamp of special cases that change over time. BigDecimal may be useful as a tiny part of the solution, but it's certainly not general. Nov 1, 2011 at 14:08
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Hey, here's a very interesting article on BigDecimal, and an illustrative example of why sometimes it is used instead of doubles. BigDecimal Tutorial.

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You can use the DecimalFormat class when ultimately displaying a currency value. It provides localization support and is pretty extensible.

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I would encapsulate BigDecimal in Money class that also has a currency just as someone mentioned above. The important thing is that you do an extreme amount of unit tests and especially if working with different currencies. Also it is a good idea if you add a convinient constructor that takes a string or a factory method that does the same so that you can write your tests something like this:

   assertEquals(Money.create("100.0 USD").add("10 GBP"),Money.create("116 USD"));
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There are always constraints and specifics involved. Anyone without sufficient experience to appreciate the subtle issues outlined in the following article should seriously reconsider before dealing with real-world financial data:

http://lemnik.wordpress.com/2011/03/25/bigdecimal-and-your-money

BigDecimal is hardly the only correct representation or the only piece of the puzzle. Given certain conditions, using a Money class backed by cents stored as an integer could be sufficient and would be much faster than BigDecimal. Yes, that implies the use of dollars as currency and limits amounts but such constraints are perfectly acceptable for many use cases and all currencies have special cases for rounding and sub-denominations anyway, so there's no "universal" solution.

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    This seems to be a comment on another post instead of an actual answer. It's also overly vitriolic. Please try to be more civil in the future. Jul 23, 2013 at 17:29

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