I'm sure this would be a simple question to answer but I can't for the life of me decide what has to be done. So here's it: assuming we follow the "best practice" of using BigDecimal for financial calculations, how can one handle stuff (computations) which throw an exception?
As as example: suppose, I have to split a "user amount" for investing in bonds between "n" different entities. Now consider the case of user submitting $100 for investing to be split between 3 bonds. The equivalent code would look like:
public static void main(String[] args) throws Exception {
BigDecimal bd1 = new BigDecimal("100.0");
BigDecimal bd2 = new BigDecimal("3");
System.out.println(bd1.divide(bd2));
}
But as we all know, this particular code snippet would throw an ArithmeticException since the division is non-terminating. How does one handle such scenarios in their code when using infinite precision data types during computations?
TIA,
sasuke
UPDATE: Given that RoundingMode would help remedy this issue, the next question is, why is 100.0/3 not 33.33 instead of 33.3? Wouldn't 33.33 be a "more" accurate answer as in you expect 33 cents instead of 30? Is there any way wherein I can tweak this?
bd1.divide(bd2, 2, RoundingMode.HALF_EVEN)(as shown below) and the result is 33.33` – krock Oct 1 '11 at 7:44