349

I'm working on a very basic shopping cart system.

I have a table items that has a column price of type integer.

I'm having trouble displaying the price value in my views for prices that include both Euros and cents. Am I missing something obvious as far as handling currency in the Rails framework is concerned?

1
  • if someone uses sql, then DECIMAL(19, 4) is a popular choice check this also check here World Currency Formats to decide how many decimal places to use , hope helps.
    – Shaiju T
    Oct 28, 2015 at 12:52

13 Answers 13

523

You'll probably want to use a DECIMAL type in your database. In your migration, do something like this:

# precision is the total number of digits
# scale is the number of digits to the right of the decimal point
add_column :items, :price, :decimal, :precision => 8, :scale => 2

In Rails, the :decimal type is returned as BigDecimal, which is great for price calculation.

If you insist on using integers, you will have to manually convert to and from BigDecimals everywhere, which will probably just become a pain.

As pointed out by mcl, to print the price, use:

number_to_currency(price, :unit => "€")
#=> €1,234.01
13
  • 16
    Use number_to_currency helper, more info at api.rubyonrails.org/classes/ActionView/Helpers/…
    – mlibby
    Jun 19, 2009 at 21:45
  • 51
    Actually, it's much safer and easier to use an integer in combination with acts_as_dollars. Have you ever been bitten by floating-point comparison? If not, don't make this your first experience. :) With acts_as_dollars, you put stuff in in 12.34 format, it's stored as 1234, and it comes out as 12.34.
    – Sarah Mei
    Jun 20, 2009 at 2:19
  • 51
    @Sarah Mei: BigDecimals + decimal column format avoids precisely that.
    – molf
    Jun 20, 2009 at 9:42
  • 123
    It's important not to just copy this answer blindly - precision 8, scale 2 gives you a maximum value of 999,999.99. If you need a number greater than a million then increase the precision!
    – Jon Cairns
    Jan 3, 2013 at 11:01
  • 28
    It's also important to not just blindly use a scale of 2 if you're handling different currencies – some north-african and arab currencies like the Omani Rial or the Tunisian Dinar have a scale of 3, so precision 8 scale 3 is more appropriate there. Apr 17, 2013 at 9:37
122

Here's a fine, simple approach that leverages composed_of (part of ActiveRecord, using the ValueObject pattern) and the Money gem

You'll need

  • The Money gem (version 4.1.0)
  • A model, for example Product
  • An integer column in your model (and database), for example :price

Write this in your product.rb file:

class Product > ActiveRecord::Base

  composed_of :price,
              :class_name => 'Money',
              :mapping => %w(price cents),
              :converter => Proc.new { |value| Money.new(value) }
  # ...

What you'll get:

  • Without any extra changes, all of your forms will show dollars and cents, but the internal representation is still just cents. The forms will accept values like "$12,034.95" and convert it for you. There's no need to add extra handlers or attributes to your model, or helpers in your view.
  • product.price = "$12.00" automatically converts to the Money class
  • product.price.to_s displays a decimal formatted number ("1234.00")
  • product.price.format displays a properly formatted string for the currency
  • If you need to send cents (to a payment gateway that wants pennies), product.price.cents.to_s
  • Currency conversion for free
9
  • 17
    I love this approach. But please note: make sure your migration for 'price' in this example doesn't allow nulls and defaults to 0 lest you go insane trying to figure out why this doesn't work.
    – Cory
    Nov 30, 2010 at 1:41
  • 3
    I found the money_column gem (extracted from Shopify) to be very straight forward to use...easier than the money gem, if you don't need currency conversion.
    – talyric
    Aug 29, 2011 at 21:56
  • 7
    It should be noted for all those using the Money gem that the Rails core team is discussing deprecating and removing "composed_of" from the framework. I suspect the gem will be updated to handle this if it happens, but if you are looking at Rails 4.0 you should be aware of this possibility
    – Peer Allan
    Oct 4, 2012 at 12:23
  • 1
    Regarding @PeerAllan's comment about the removal of composed_of here is more detail on that as well as an alternative implementation.
    – HerbCSO
    Oct 13, 2013 at 15:05
  • 3
    Also, this is really reasy using the rails-money gem.
    – fotanus
    May 5, 2014 at 22:04
28

Common practice for handling currency is to use decimal type. Here is a simple example from "Agile Web Development with Rails"

add_column :products, :price, :decimal, :precision => 8, :scale => 2 

This will allow you to handle prices from -999,999.99 to 999,999.99
You may also want to include a validation in your items like

def validate 
  errors.add(:price, "should be at least 0.01") if price.nil? || price < 0.01 
end 

to sanity-check your values.

2
  • 1
    This solution also enables you to use SQL sum and friends.
    – Larry K
    Oct 16, 2009 at 0:04
  • 5
    Could you possibly do: validates :price, :presence => true, :numericality => { :greater_than => 0 }
    – Galaxy
    Dec 13, 2011 at 1:50
20

Just a little update and a cohesion of all the answers for some aspiring juniors/beginners in RoR development that will surely come here for some explanations.

Working with money

Use :decimal to store money in the DB, as @molf suggested (and what my company uses as a golden standard when working with money).

# precision is the total number of digits
# scale is the number of digits to the right of the decimal point
add_column :items, :price, :decimal, precision: 8, scale: 2

Few points:

  • :decimal is going to be used as BigDecimal which solves a lot of issues.

  • precision and scale should be adjusted, depending on what you are representing

    • If you work with receiving and sending payments, precision: 8 and scale: 2 gives you 999,999.99 as the highest amount, which is fine in 90% of cases.

    • If you need to represent the value of a property or a rare car, you should use a higher precision.

    • If you work with coordinates (longitude and latitude), you will surely need a higher scale.

How to generate a migration

To generate the migration with the above content, run in terminal:

bin/rails g migration AddPriceToItems price:decimal{8-2}

or

bin/rails g migration AddPriceToItems 'price:decimal{5,2}'

as explained in this blog post.

Currency formatting

KISS the extra libraries goodbye and use built-in helpers. Use number_to_currency as @molf and @facundofarias suggested.

To play with number_to_currency helper in Rails console, send a call to the ActiveSupport's NumberHelper class in order to access the helper.

For example:

ActiveSupport::NumberHelper.number_to_currency(2_500_000.61, unit: '€', precision: 2, separator: ',', delimiter: '', format: "%n%u")

gives the following output

2500000,61€

Check the other options of number_to_currency helper.

Where to put it

You can put it in an application helper and use it inside views for any amount.

module ApplicationHelper    
  def format_currency(amount)
    number_to_currency(amount, unit: '€', precision: 2, separator: ',', delimiter: '', format: "%n%u")
  end
end

Or you can put it in the Item model as an instance method, and call it where you need to format the price (in views or helpers).

class Item < ActiveRecord::Base
  def format_price
    number_to_currency(price, unit: '€', precision: 2, separator: ',', delimiter: '', format: "%n%u")
  end
end

And, an example how I use the number_to_currency inside a contrroler (notice the negative_format option, used to represent refunds)

def refund_information
  amount_formatted = 
    ActionController::Base.helpers.number_to_currency(@refund.amount, negative_format: '(%u%n)')
  {
    # ...
    amount_formatted: amount_formatted,
    # ...
  }
end
13

If you are using Postgres (and since we're in 2017 now) you might want to give their :money column type a try.

add_column :products, :price, :money, default: 0
1
  • 1
    Internet seems very wary of this approach. Aka folks saying "Whatever you do, DONT use the postgres money type" - Don't use money You can go down the rabbit hole here, but to save yoy time none of these half dozen answers provide a confident yes to using it and all suggest alternative approaches.
    – Evolve
    Jun 27 at 2:54
9

Use money-rails gem. It nicely handles money and currencies in your model and also has a bunch of helpers to format your prices.

2
  • Yeah, I agree with this. Generally, I handle money by storing it as cents (integer) and using a gem like acts-as-money or money (money-rails) to handle the data in-memory. Handling it in integers prevents those nasty rounding errors. E.g. 0.2 * 3 => 0.6000000000000001 This, of course, only works if you don't need to handle fractions of a cent.
    – Chad M
    Mar 2, 2016 at 18:34
  • This is very nice if you are using rails. Drop it in and don't worry about the issues with a decimal column. If you use this with a view, this answer may be helpful as well: stackoverflow.com/questions/18898947/…
    – mooreds
    Apr 7, 2016 at 20:57
5

Using Virtual Attributes (Link to revised(paid) Railscast) you can store your price_in_cents in an integer column and add a virtual attribute price_in_dollars in your product model as a getter and setter.

# Add a price_in_cents integer column
$ rails g migration add_price_in_cents_to_products price_in_cents:integer

# Use virtual attributes in your Product model
# app/models/product.rb

def price_in_dollars
  price_in_cents.to_d/100 if price_in_cents
end

def price_in_dollars=(dollars)
  self.price_in_cents = dollars.to_d*100 if dollars.present?
end

Source: RailsCasts #016: Virtual Attributes: Virtual attributes are a clean way to add form fields that do not map directly to the database. Here I show how to handle validations, associations, and more.

1
  • 1
    this leaves 200.0 one digit
    – ajbraus
    Nov 28, 2013 at 17:27
3

Definitely integers.

And even though BigDecimal technically exists 1.5 will still give you a pure Float in Ruby.

2

If someone is using Sequel the migration would look something like:

add_column :products, :price, "decimal(8,2)"

somehow Sequel ignores :precision and :scale

(Sequel Version: sequel (3.39.0, 3.38.0))

0
2

My underlying APIs were all using cents to represent money, and I didn't want to change that. Nor was I working with large amounts of money. So I just put this in a helper method:

sprintf("%03d", amount).insert(-3, ".")

That converts the integer to a string with at least three digits (adding leading zeroes if necessary), then inserts a decimal point before the last two digits, never using a Float. From there you can add whatever currency symbols are appropriate for your use case.

It's definitely quick and dirty, but sometimes that's just fine!

1
  • Can't believe nobody upvoted you. This was the only thing that worked to get my Money object nicely into a form such that an API can take it. (Decimal)
    – Code-MonKy
    Feb 16, 2017 at 12:40
2

I am using it on this way:

number_to_currency(amount, unit: '€', precision: 2, format: "%u %n")

Of course that the currency symbol, precision, format and so on depends on each currency.

1

You can pass some options to number_to_currency (a standard Rails 4 view helper):

number_to_currency(12.0, :precision => 2)
# => "$12.00"

As posted by Dylan Markow

0

Simple code for Ruby & Rails

<%= number_to_currency(1234567890.50) %>

OUT PUT => $1,234,567,890.50

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