Update: Having those mixed requirements (i.e. at least 2 digits after the decimal point should be displayed, but as many as necessary) is not trivially implemented, but you can come close:
Combine stripTrailingZeros() with DecimalFormat to get the desired behaviour (or close to it):
DecimalFormat df = new DecimalFormat("0.00########")
String formatted = df.format(bigDecimal.stripTrailingZeros())
This will format any BigDecimal value with at least 2 digits after the decimal point and up to 10 digits after the decimal point, if it improves the precision.
BigDecimal values with more than 10 digits after the decimal point will still be cut off:
input | output
-----------------+----------
1.20000 | 1.20
1.23000 | 1.23
1.2301 | 1.2301
1.230001000 | 1.230001
1.2300000000001 | 1.23
Original answer:
If you always want to have exactly 2 digits after the comma and know that you won't lose precision this way, then you can call setScale(2, RoundingMode.UNNECESSARY):
System.out.println(new BigDecimal("1.23000").setScale(2, RoundingMode.UNNECESSARY));
This code will print 1.23. Note that this will throw an ArithmeticException when rounding would be necessary (i.e. anything after the first 2 digits is not zero).
If your values can have a higher precision and you want to apply some rounding, simply replace RoundingMode.UNNECESSARY with the appropriate value:
System.out.println(new BigDecimal("1.2301").setScale(2, RoundingMode.CEILING));
This will print 1.24.
If you don't know the exact number of digits but want as few as possible (i.e. you want the smallest possible scale for your BigDecimal) then calling stripTrailingZeros() will do exactly what you want:
System.out.println(new BigDecimal("1.230001000").stripTrailingZeros();
This will print 1.230001.
1.230223000be turned into1.230223, but1.0000should print1.00? – Joachim Sauer May 30 '11 at 13:05