123

How do I round up currentRatio to two decimal places?

let currentRatio = Double (rxCurrentTextField.text!)! / Double (txCurrentTextField.text!)!
railRatioLabelField.text! = "\(currentRatio)"
3
  • Do you want to just round currentRatio to two decimal places, or always round up? Ex: do you want 3.141 -> 3.14 or 3.141 -> 3.14?
    – JAL
    Jan 21, 2016 at 17:28
  • Hi JAL, I want 3.149 to display as 3.15. However 3.141 should display 3.14. Thanks
    – Del Hinds
    Jan 21, 2016 at 19:43
  • See the first part of my answer for the correct rounding.
    – JAL
    Jan 21, 2016 at 19:48

13 Answers 13

235

Use a format string to round up to two decimal places and convert the double to a String:

let currentRatio = Double (rxCurrentTextField.text!)! / Double (txCurrentTextField.text!)!
railRatioLabelField.text! = String(format: "%.2f", currentRatio)

Example:

let myDouble = 3.141
let doubleStr = String(format: "%.2f", myDouble) // "3.14"

If you want to round up your last decimal place, you could do something like this (thanks Phoen1xUK):

let myDouble = 3.141
let doubleStr = String(format: "%.2f", ceil(myDouble*100)/100) // "3.15"
5
  • Needs to be 3.15 if rounding up to two decimal places. Jan 21, 2016 at 17:23
  • I thought the OP just wanted to round to two decimal places, rounding up or down as necessary. Just added a comment asking for clarification.
    – JAL
    Jan 21, 2016 at 17:29
  • Hi Jal, Thank you, I used your answer which worked with a slight modification as follows:- _ = Double (rxCurrentTextField.text!)! / Double (txCurrentTextField.text!)! railRatioLabelField.text! = String(format: "%.2f", currentRatio)
    – Del Hinds
    Jan 21, 2016 at 19:50
  • 3
    This answers is to the question: "How to display Double with two digits in text label" or "... as string", this answer does not answer the question "Round up double to 2 decimal places"
    – mnl
    Oct 13, 2017 at 16:14
  • @JAL i need olny .5 or 0 after point For ex. if we have 23.4 it should give 23.5 and if 23.8 it should 24.0
    – guru
    Nov 13, 2019 at 14:28
67

(Swift 4.2 Xcode 11) Simple to use Extension:-

extension Double {
    func round(to places: Int) -> Double {
        let divisor = pow(10.0, Double(places))
        return (self * divisor).rounded() / divisor
    }
}

Use:-

if let distanceDb = Double(strDistance) {
   cell.lblDistance.text = "\(distanceDb.round(to:2)) km"
}
4
  • Brilliant. I actually wanted to convert to the same property (double). Your extension solved my problem. Thank you! Sep 4, 2019 at 16:03
  • :-) Happy coding
    – Mehul
    Sep 5, 2019 at 6:14
  • I think yours is the correct answer. I'd just like to add a syntax modification to the func. func round(to places: Int) -> Double {
    – 23inhouse
    Jan 14, 2020 at 14:49
  • 1
    @23inhouse, I have updated the answer as per your suggestions. Thanks
    – Mehul
    Feb 11, 2020 at 6:14
39

Updated to SWIFT 4 and the proper answer for the question

If you want to round up to 2 decimal places you should multiply with 100 then round it off and then divide by 100

var x = 1.5657676754 
var y = (x*100).rounded()/100
print(y)  // 1.57 
6
  • 1
    Hi - I dont understand how you do your calculation in terms of returning a certain number of decimal. What if I want it to return 3 decimal place?
    – Sipho Koza
    May 17, 2018 at 14:03
  • @SiphoKoza just multiply it by 1000 and then divide by 1000 May 17, 2018 at 15:55
  • This is not really the "proper" answer because internally, the number is saved in floating point, with is base 2, and you're trying to represent a base 10 number. For some numbers there is not an exact representation, and you'll wind up with too many digits when you go to print the value. The proper answer should return a string, not a Double or Float. May 12, 2019 at 0:09
  • @levan It works for zero too, just make sure it's a double Jul 24, 2019 at 7:35
  • 1
    Great answer, I think that this should be the accepted one. Oct 5, 2020 at 22:45
17

Consider using NumberFormatter for this purpose, it provides more flexibility if you want to print the percentage sign of the ratio or if you have things like currency and large numbers.

let amount = 10.000001
let formatter = NumberFormatter()
formatter.numberStyle = .decimal
formatter.maximumFractionDigits = 2
let formattedAmount = formatter.string(from: amount as NSNumber)! 
print(formattedAmount) // 10
1
  • 1
    I have gone through many, this is BY FAR, the BEST solution! Thank you so much!
    – kalafun
    Dec 1, 2020 at 17:48
14

Adding to above answer if we want to format Double multiple times, we can use protocol extension of Double like below:

extension Double {
    var dollarString:String {
        return String(format: "$%.2f", self)
    }
}

let a = 45.666

print(a.dollarString) //will print "$45.67"
1
  • 1
    Shouldn't be print(a.dollarString) ?
    – glm4
    Oct 19, 2017 at 18:06
12

Just a quick follow-up answer for noobs like me:

You can make the other answers super easily implementable by using a function with an output. E.g.

  func twoDecimals(number: Float) -> String{
    return String(format: "%.2f", number)
}

This way, whenever you want to grab a value to 2 decimal places you just type

twoDecimals('Your number here')

...

Simples!

P.s. You could also make it return a Float value, or anything you want, by then converting it again after the String conversion as follows:

 func twoDecimals(number: Float) -> Float{
    let stringValue = String(format: "%.2f", number)
    return Float(stringValue)!
}

Hope that helps.

6

The code for specific digits after decimals is:

var roundedString = String(format: "%.2f", currentRatio)

Here the %.2f tells the swift to make this number rounded to 2 decimal places.

4

@Rounded, A swift 5.1 property wrapper Example :

struct GameResult {
    @Rounded(rule: NSDecimalNumber.RoundingMode.up,scale: 4)
    var score: Decimal
}

var result = GameResult()
result.score = 3.14159265358979
print(result.score) // 3.1416
1
  • how can we use this with codable ?
    – devarshi
    Mar 25, 2021 at 11:17
3

Maybe also:

// Specify the decimal place to round to using an enum
public enum RoundingPrecision {
    case ones
    case tenths
    case hundredths
    case thousands
}

extension Double {
    // Round to the specific decimal place
    func customRound(_ rule: FloatingPointRoundingRule, precision: RoundingPrecision = .ones) -> Double {
        switch precision {
        case .ones: return (self * Double(1)).rounded(rule) / 1
        case .tenths: return (self * Double(10)).rounded(rule) / 10
        case .hundredths: return (self * Double(100)).rounded(rule) / 100
        case .thousands: return (self * Double(1000)).rounded(rule) / 1000
        }
    }
}

let value: Double = 98.163846
print(value.customRound(.toNearestOrEven, precision: .ones)) //98.0
print(value.customRound(.toNearestOrEven, precision: .tenths)) //98.2
print(value.customRound(.toNearestOrEven, precision: .hundredths)) //98.16
print(value.customRound(.toNearestOrEven, precision: .thousands)) //98.164

Keeps decimals, does not truncate but rounds

See for more details even specified rounding rules

2
String(format: "%.2f", Double(round(1000*34.578)/1000))

Output: 34.58

0

Try this , you will get a better result instead of 0.0

extension Double {
    func rounded(toPlaces places:Int) -> Double {
        let divisor = pow(10.0, Double(places))
        return (self * divisor).rounded() / divisor
    }
    func toRoundedString(toPlaces places:Int) -> String {
        let amount = self.rounded(toPlaces: places)
        let str_mount = String(amount)
        
        let sub_amountStrings = str_mount.split(separator: ".")
        
        if sub_amountStrings.count == 1
        {
          var re_str = "\(sub_amountStrings[0])."
            for _ in 0..<places
            {
                re_str += "0"
            }
            return re_str
         
        }
        else if sub_amountStrings.count > 1, "\(sub_amountStrings[1])".count < places
        {
            var re_str = "\(sub_amountStrings[0]).\(sub_amountStrings[1])"
            let tem_places = (places -  "\(sub_amountStrings[1])".count)
              for _ in 0..<tem_places
              {
                  re_str += "0"
              }
            return re_str
        }
        
        return str_mount
    }
}
-2

if you give it 234.545332233 it will give you 234.54

let textData = Double(myTextField.text!)!
let text = String(format: "%.2f", arguments: [textData])
mylabel.text = text
-6

Just single line of code:

 let obj = self.arrayResult[indexPath.row]
 let str = String(format: "%.2f", arguments: [Double((obj.mainWeight)!)!])

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