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Does anyone know of an already implemented money type for the .NET framework that supports i18n (currencies, formatting, etc)? I have been looking for a well implemented type and can't seem to find one.

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    Interestingly enough, this question got closed for being a duplicate of a newer question. How that works, you've got me.
    – Mateo
    Nov 11, 2012 at 20:56

3 Answers 3

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Check this article A Money type for the CLR

A convenient, high-performance money structure for the CLR which handles arithmetic operations, currency types, formatting, and careful distribution and rounding without loss.

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  • Very interesting. This would have helped on a past project of mine. Nov 8, 2008 at 4:01
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    It has problems: (1) I've seen many cases where equal Money values don't equate as equal and you have to cast to decimal first. (2) It's very fat: it contains: Int64, Int32, 3 strings, and a UInt16. The author didn't understand the nature of the decimal type. (3) The hash function is rather suboptimal. (4) You can have fractional cents (that's fine) but the ToString() rounds to two decimal places.
    – dan-gph
    Jan 4, 2012 at 7:40
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    Re (1), I should have said that I've seen a case where two equal Money values didn't equate as equal (the internal value of one of them was not normalized properly).
    – dan-gph
    Jan 5, 2012 at 3:36
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    While I'm cataloguing problems: (5) It has an implicit conversion from double, which is dangerous (decimal doesn't have that). (6) The IConvertible.ToBoolean is inverted (0 converts to true). (7) Unsupported IConvertible conversions throw NotSupportedException rather than InvalidCastException as per the spec.
    – dan-gph
    Jan 5, 2012 at 5:30
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    (8) The MoneyDistributer only has 3 unit tests. That makes me nervous because there are a lot of corner cases that are not tested.
    – dan-gph
    Jan 5, 2012 at 5:42
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I think you want to use the decimal data type, and use the appropriate overload for ToString().

CultureInfo current  = CultureInfo.CurrentCulture;
decimal myMoney = 99.99m;

//formats as money in current culture, like $99.99
string formattedMoney = myMoney.ToString("C", current); 
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  • yeah... make sure you use the decimal type for money. Float is NOT accurate for decimal values. Nov 8, 2008 at 4:55
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    What about currencies other than the used in current culture? Oct 12, 2014 at 9:57
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i would use integer/long, and use a very low denomination like cents (or pence) - then there would be no decimal to work with, and all calculations can be rounded to the nearest cent.

or, take a look at Martin Fowler's book "Patterns of Enterprise Application Architecture". In that book, he talked about how to implement a money class. http://www.amazon.com/Enterprise-Application-Architecture-Addison-Wesley-Signature/dp/0321127420

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    You have it slightly wrong here. It's not a very low denomination, it's the lowest denomination. It's the only bulletproof answer I've ever found--if you have precision beyond reality you're going to get fractions carried after divisions that shouldn't be carried. Nov 8, 2008 at 6:38
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    The cent is not the lowest denomination in American currency, though; otherwise gas stations couldn't sell gas at $2.149/gal, which they do. Likewise, percentages (such as interest) often result in fractional cents, and rounding isn't always appropriate in intermediate steps. Nov 8, 2008 at 18:58
  • @technophile is right. But I still agree with Chii, using integers to store and process currency for most cases is much more reliable and easier to work with than decimals. Especially when you dont have to think about how decimal point is sometimes a comma in europe
    – userSteve
    Jun 1, 2022 at 10:33

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