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What is the best way to format the following number that is given to me as a String?

String number = "1000500000.574" //assume my value will always be a String

I want this to be a String with the value: 1,000,500,000.57

How can I format it as such?

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3 Answers

up vote 23 down vote accepted

You might want to look at the DecimalFormat class; it supports different locales (eg: in some countries that would get formatted as 1.000.500.000,57 instead).

You also need to convert that string into a number, this can be done with:

double amount = Double.parseDouble(number);

Code sample:

String number = "1000500000.574";
double amount = Double.parseDouble(number);
DecimalFormat formatter = new DecimalFormat("#,###.00");

System.out.println(formatter.format(amount));

See it on ideone

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can you show an example of how I can use NumberFormat with this particular case? – Sheehan Alam Sep 8 '10 at 23:45
1  
@Sheehan Added code sample – NullUserException Sep 8 '10 at 23:54
Excellent answer. Thank you – mcmu11en May 11 '12 at 14:39
1  
This must be asked 123123 times per month. – huseyin tugrul buyukisik Sep 13 '12 at 18:47

Once you've converted your String to a number, you can use

// format the number for the default locale
NumberFormat.getInstance().format(num)

or

// format the number for a particular locale
NumberFormat.getInstance(locale).format(num)
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I've created my own formatting utility. Which is extremely fast at processing the formatting along with giving you many features :)

It supports:

  • Comma Formatting E.g. 1234567 becomes 1,234,567.
  • Prefixing with "Thousand(K),Million(M),Billion(B),Trillion(T)".
  • Precision of 0 through 15.
  • Precision re-sizing (Means if you want 6 digit precision, but only have 3 available digits it forces it to 3).
  • Prefix lowering (Means if the prefix you choose is too large it lowers it to a more suitable prefix).

The code can be found here. You call it like this:

public static void main(String[])
{
   int settings = ValueFormat.COMMAS | ValueFormat.PRECISION(2) | ValueFormat.MILLIONS;
   String formatted = ValueFormat.format(1234567, settings);
}

I should also point out this doesn't handle decimal support, but is very useful for integer values. The above example would show "1.23M" as the output. I could probably add decimal support maybe, but didn't see too much use for it since then I might as well merge this into a BigInteger type of class that handles compressed char[] arrays for math computations.

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