If the value is 200.3456
, it should be formatted to 200.34
.
If it is 200
, then it should be 200.00
.
-
2As Monn commented (in an answer), do you actually want 200.34 or 200.35 for 200.3456? As you accepted my answer, I guess you did want rounding (+ maybe also formatting) and not just truncating. But could you perhaps still clarify what you meant?– JonikMay 11, 2010 at 8:58
-
4Obviously not an answer to your question, but anyone reading this question should seriously consider why they really need to be using a Double instead of a BigDecimal.– Bill KJul 23, 2013 at 20:04
-
16@BillK I would assume because a BigDecimal takes a BigPerformanceHit.– JohnMerlinoJul 6, 2014 at 21:23
-
6This is not a duplicate. The other question wants a String as a result. This one wants a double and the solution is different.– Bogdan CalmacFeb 18, 2016 at 15:42
-
5Not a duplicate; formatting & rounding are two completely different things.– AStopherMar 28, 2016 at 18:44
13 Answers
Here's an utility that rounds (instead of truncating) a double to specified number of decimal places.
For example:
round(200.3456, 2); // returns 200.35
Original version; watch out with this
public static double round(double value, int places) {
if (places < 0) throw new IllegalArgumentException();
long factor = (long) Math.pow(10, places);
value = value * factor;
long tmp = Math.round(value);
return (double) tmp / factor;
}
This breaks down badly in corner cases with either a very high number of decimal places (e.g. round(1000.0d, 17)
) or large integer part (e.g. round(90080070060.1d, 9)
). Thanks to Sloin for pointing this out.
I've been using the above to round "not-too-big" doubles to 2 or 3 decimal places happily for years (for example to clean up time in seconds for logging purposes: 27.987654321987 -> 27.99). But I guess it's best to avoid it, since more reliable ways are readily available, with cleaner code too.
So, use this instead
(Adapted from this answer by Louis Wasserman and this one by Sean Owen.)
public static double round(double value, int places) {
if (places < 0) throw new IllegalArgumentException();
BigDecimal bd = BigDecimal.valueOf(value);
bd = bd.setScale(places, RoundingMode.HALF_UP);
return bd.doubleValue();
}
Note that HALF_UP
is the rounding mode "commonly taught at school". Peruse the RoundingMode documentation, if you suspect you need something else such as Bankers’ Rounding.
Of course, if you prefer, you can inline the above into a one-liner:
new BigDecimal(value).setScale(places, RoundingMode.HALF_UP).doubleValue()
And in every case
Always remember that floating point representations using float
and double
are inexact.
For example, consider these expressions:
999199.1231231235 == 999199.1231231236 // true
1.03 - 0.41 // 0.6200000000000001
For exactness, you want to use BigDecimal. And while at it, use the constructor that takes a String, never the one taking double. For instance, try executing this:
System.out.println(new BigDecimal(1.03).subtract(new BigDecimal(0.41)));
System.out.println(new BigDecimal("1.03").subtract(new BigDecimal("0.41")));
Some excellent further reading on the topic:
- Item 48: "Avoid
float
anddouble
if exact answers are required" in Effective Java (2nd ed) by Joshua Bloch - What Every Programmer Should Know About Floating-Point Arithmetic
If you wanted String formatting instead of (or in addition to) strictly rounding numbers, see the other answers.
Specifically, note that round(200, 0)
returns 200.0
. If you want to output "200.00", you should first round and then format the result for output (which is perfectly explained in Jesper's answer).
-
40Once again, downvotes are more useful with a comment. (Note that the question is ambiguous and my answer makes it clear that it doesn't tackle every interpretation of the question.)– JonikMay 11, 2010 at 9:05
-
-
3Read the first comment on that answer too. Obviously, if you're dealing with exact (e.g. monetary) values, you should not be using double in the first place. (In such case, use BigDecimal.)– JonikJul 4, 2013 at 6:44
-
2Thanks, this looks rock solid, btw this one liner more elegant : return new BigDecimal(value).setScale(places, BigDecimal.ROUND_HALF_UP).doubleValue();– lisakOct 11, 2013 at 13:52
-
3@lisak: In what situation does rounding to 18 digits make sense? Isn't the point of rounding to create a simplified representation? OK, maybe when calculating interest on a large loan .. but hopefully anyone doing financial calculations already knows to use
BigDecimal
instead ofdouble
to represent their values, so wouldn't be looking for this solution. To abuse a method, and then call itshitty
, is unprofessional. Nevertheless, it is good to highlight the limits of a solution. Aug 28, 2015 at 0:25
If you just want to print a double
with two digits after the decimal point, use something like this:
double value = 200.3456;
System.out.printf("Value: %.2f", value);
If you want to have the result in a String
instead of being printed to the console, use String.format()
with the same arguments:
String result = String.format("%.2f", value);
Or use class DecimalFormat
:
DecimalFormat df = new DecimalFormat("####0.00");
System.out.println("Value: " + df.format(value));
-
6And with
DecimalFormat
you can also select the rounding mode; default will match the OP's example or they may wantRoundingMode.DOWN
. May 11, 2010 at 7:03 -
1First two options give
-0.00
for a number greater than -0.005 and less than 0. This might not be optimal if you display the value on a report.– VoicuNov 20, 2014 at 23:01 -
@Voicu for your specific case, I think you should use 3 or more decimal places. That depends on how much is your error margin. Sep 17, 2015 at 17:13
-
3This answer is the real answer... the others round the double, which is an entirely different operation to formatting.– AStopherMar 28, 2016 at 18:46
-
what if you want to have the result in a double variable instead of a string?– Coder17Oct 20, 2017 at 10:38
I think this is easier:
double time = 200.3456;
DecimalFormat df = new DecimalFormat("#.##");
time = Double.valueOf(df.format(time));
System.out.println(time); // 200.35
Note that this will actually do the rounding for you, not just formatting.
-
20Please note that this will break if the user locale is not US-en or similar. For example in Spanish, the format would be "#,##". Use Jonik's answer instead.– JhovannyNov 9, 2014 at 21:11
-
-
@Jhovanny you cant declare a double like that double time = 200,3456 with throw errors... Jul 10, 2021 at 4:57
The easiest way, would be to do a trick like this;
double val = ....;
val = val*100;
val = Math.round(val);
val = val /100;
if val starts at 200.3456 then it goes to 20034.56 then it gets rounded to 20035 then we divide it to get 200.34.
if you wanted to always round down we could always truncate by casting to an int:
double val = ....;
val = val*100;
val = (double)((int) val);
val = val /100;
This technique will work for most cases because for very large doubles (positive or negative) it may overflow. but if you know that your values will be in an appropriate range then this should work for you.
-
3Good simple answer. I would just add that
Math.Round
should beMath.round
. And the result fromMath.Round(val);
should be a cast as a double as it normally returns a long:val = (double) Math.round(val);
– dbjohnDec 14, 2010 at 15:51 -
1Perfect answer, because result of value will be calculated with comma in the other answers. For example, double value is 3.72 and if I use
format()
function, new double value changes 3,72 and If I wanna set this new value to double property, it will be throwed exception of NumberFormatException: For input string: "3,72". But you got this logical operation, not function. Best regards. May 2, 2014 at 5:54 -
1
Please use Apache commons math:
Precision.round(10.4567, 2)
-
1This doesn't actually do anything in a pass-by-value language like Java, let alone what the OP asked for. Nov 17, 2014 at 8:35
-
30@EJP why are you being so picky? all one has to do is assign the return value to a variable... Dec 15, 2014 at 12:08
-
3Note that internally, Precision.round simply converts the Double to a BigDecimal and back again, like in Jonik's solution.– sffcDec 9, 2016 at 21:13
-
3I think it is a very clean solution, even though it makes you dependent on a library. Feb 16, 2017 at 15:10
-
@HendyIrawan It doesn't do what the OP asked for. It can't. No solution that stores the result in floating-point can possibly work. See my answer in the duplicate for why. Mar 23, 2019 at 22:31
function Double round2(Double val) {
return new BigDecimal(val.toString()).setScale(2,RoundingMode.HALF_UP).doubleValue();
}
Note the toString()!!!!
This is because BigDecimal converts the exact binary form of the double!!!
These are the various suggested methods and their fail cases.
// Always Good!
new BigDecimal(val.toString()).setScale(2,RoundingMode.HALF_UP).doubleValue()
Double val = 260.775d; //EXPECTED 260.78
260.77 - WRONG - new BigDecimal(val).setScale(2,RoundingMode.HALF_UP).doubleValue()
Double val = 260.775d; //EXPECTED 260.78
260.77 - TRY AGAIN - Math.round(val * 100.d) / 100.0d
Double val = 256.025d; //EXPECTED 256.03d
256.02 - OOPS - new DecimalFormat("0.00").format(val)
// By default use half even, works if you change mode to half_up
Double val = 256.025d; //EXPECTED 256.03d
256.02 - FAIL - (int)(val * 100 + 0.5) / 100.0;
-
8Should be the accepted answer because the accepted one is such messy compared to your clean and readable answer– singe3Jul 1, 2015 at 20:10
-
1I just changed
BigDecimal(val.toString())
byBigDecimal(Double.toString(value))
to avoid error on val.toString() in case you usedouble
insteadDouble
. May 9, 2021 at 19:57
double value= 200.3456;
DecimalFormat df = new DecimalFormat("0.00");
System.out.println(df.format(value));
If you really want the same double, but rounded in the way you want you can use BigDecimal, for example
new BigDecimal(myValue).setScale(2, RoundingMode.HALF_UP).doubleValue();
double d = 28786.079999999998;
String str = String.format("%1.2f", d);
d = Double.valueOf(str);
For two rounding digits. Very simple and you are basically updating the variable instead of just display purposes which DecimalFormat does.
x = Math.floor(x * 100) / 100;
Rounding a double is usually not what one wants. Instead, use String.format()
to represent it in the desired format.
-
3I need to round a double to use it as a granularity level in further calculations– odiszapcMar 6, 2016 at 5:56
-
@odiszapc: Then you're using the wrong datatype. You need to use arbitrary-precision types if you want to be able to specify arbitrary precision. Mar 6, 2016 at 10:29
-
1I get doubles from DB, it's native DB type. But then I round it special to use rounded values as a key to build matrix. Of course this key is a formatted String gotten with String.format method.– odiszapcMar 6, 2016 at 15:02
In your question, it seems that you want to avoid rounding the numbers as well? I think .format() will round the numbers using half-up, afaik?
so if you want to round, 200.3456 should be 200.35 for a precision of 2. but in your case, if you just want the first 2 and then discard the rest?
You could multiply it by 100 and then cast to an int (or taking the floor of the number), before dividing by 100 again.
200.3456 * 100 = 20034.56;
(int) 20034.56 = 20034;
20034/100.0 = 200.34;
You might have issues with really really big numbers close to the boundary though. In which case converting to a string and substring'ing it would work just as easily.
-
1thanks for your answer. It is working fine if the value is 200.3456, but if the value is 200, then it should be 200.00– RajeshMay 11, 2010 at 7:08