1

I have float numbers:

var a = parseFloat("12.999");
var b = parseFloat("14");

And I want to display them as:

12.99
14.00 -> with zeros

But without round, only truncate. How to do it?

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2 Answers 2

6

You use a combination of the Math.floor() and Number.prototype.toFixed() function, like this:

console.log((Math.floor(a * 100) * 0.01).toFixed(2));
console.log((Math.floor(b * 100) * 0.01).toFixed(2));

Math.floor() will truncate the value to the closest lower integer. That is why you need to first multiply by 100 and then multiply by 0.01.

Number.prototype.toFixed() will format your output using a set number of decimals.

Most languages do have functions called round, ceil, floor or similar ones, but almost all of them round to the nearest integer, so the multiply-round-divide chain (or divide-round-multiply for rounding to tens, hundreds, thousands...) is a good pattern to know.

3
  • You could also perform a bitwise or with zero, but I have always felt that the floor function is easier to read and understand when dealing with real numbers and not, say, bitfields. Feb 17, 2016 at 12:08
  • 1
    There is nothing wrong with the answer. The only thing wrong is where I tapped! I pushed the wrong button and didn't realise until now. Sorry. In the meantime the answer got locked and I can't correct it now. If you could please make a simple edit (anything), the lock will be removed and I will be able to upvote instead. Sorry again.
    – Arman Ozak
    Feb 17, 2016 at 13:06
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    Thanks a lot Anders. Nice answer by the way.
    – Arman Ozak
    Feb 17, 2016 at 13:11
1

You can first truncat the part, you do not need.

function c(x, p) {
    return ((x * Math.pow(10, p) | 0) / Math.pow(10, p)).toFixed(p);
}

document.write(c(12.999, 2) + '<br>');
document.write(c(14, 2));

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  • 2
    If you're going to make a method you might as well put toFixed in there and calculate 100 with Math.pow (almost correct, but there's no reason to calculate the same Math.pow(10, p) twice!).
    – h2ooooooo
    Feb 17, 2016 at 12:03

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