25

I noticed that there is a pipe called CurrencyPipe in Angular 2, which will filter some decimals from a number. This also adds the ISO currency indicator, ie 'USD' or any other local currency.

My problem is that the output is displayed like this:

USD123

Without space between USD and 123, is this really the preferred behavior? Do I have to write my own pipe for this or is there something that I can do to add a space?

Here is some code:

<span>{{ product.price | currency:'USD' }}</span>
4

12 Answers 12

17

You may solve this problem using a bit of clever CSS using the first-letter pseudo element, add a class to your span:

<span class="price">{{ product.price | currency:'USD':true }}</span>

and in your css add:

.price {
  display: inline-block;
}

.price::first-letter {
  padding-right: 0.3em;
}

The first rule makes sure your price in a block container box (::first-letter does work on inline display blocks), and the second rule adds a bit of extra padding after the currency symbol.

You can tweak this to your liking ...

2
  • its only for symbol not for whole word like USD Dec 24, 2018 at 13:41
  • 1
    Users of this asnwer should be wary of any currency which is not normally displayed with a symbol. For example, CHF would look like C HF given the above style. Mar 16, 2021 at 21:59
10

Do you really need to use currency pipe? You can always separate the currency from the amount :

<span class="price">{{ product.currency }} {{ product.price|number:'1.2-2'}}</span>

or in your case :

<span class="price">USD {{ product.price|number:'1.2-2'}}</span>

1
  • 1
    This only works if you don't change languages. In german the currency comes after the number. Jun 28, 2017 at 14:37
9

This isn't possible since the CurrencyPipe relies on Intl.NumberFormat and there is no options for this.

That said you can switch to display $ instead of USD with the symbolDisplay parameter set to true:

<span>{{ product.price | currency:'USD':true }}</span>

This will display: $123 which is a bit better ;-) If this doesn't suit you, you need to implement a custom pipe to format your number...

See these links for more details:

1
  • I see. Is there anyone that find this pipe useful then? I can not see that one might want to display the currency without a space... I'll have to find another solution I guess.
    – rablentain
    Feb 25, 2016 at 19:45
8

Make your own custom currency pipe.

import { Pipe, PipeTransform } from '@angular/core';
import { CurrencyPipe } from '@angular/common';

@Pipe({ name: 'myCurrency' })
export class MyCurrencyPipe implements PipeTransform {
    transform(num: any, currencyCode: string, showSymbol: boolean, digits: string): any {
        let value = new CurrencyPipe(navigator.language).transform(num, currencyCode, showSymbol, digits);
        let firstDigit = value.match(/\d/);
        let symbol = value.slice(0, firstDigit.index);
        let amount = value.slice(firstDigit.index);   
        return symbol + " " + amount;
    }
}

and use it in HTML like

{{amount | myCurrency: currencyCode :true:'1.0-2'}}
2
  • Nice. But what about cultures that are used to have the amount first and the currency symbol at the end?
    – Mike
    Oct 5, 2018 at 9:44
  • 1
    This should be the answer - you can easily adjust this function if your only worry is putting the symbol at the end or front.
    – clintgh
    Oct 25, 2018 at 5:20
8

You can override the pipe as follows. Make sure you include this in the module

import {Pipe, PipeTransform} from "@angular/core";
import {CurrencyPipe} from "@angular/common";


@Pipe({name: 'currency'})
export class MyCurrencyPipe extends CurrencyPipe implements PipeTransform {
  transform(value: any, currencyCode: string, symbolDisplay: boolean, digits: string): string {
    const currencyFormat = super.transform(value, currencyCode, symbolDisplay, digits);
    const firstDigit = currencyFormat.search(/\d/);
    return currencyFormat.substring(0, firstDigit) + ' ' + currencyFormat.substr(firstDigit);
  }
}
5

Changes for Angular v5 and up


The DISPLAY parameter is changed from boolean to string

display string | boolean

The format for the currency indicator. One of the following:

  • code: Show the code (such as USD).
  • symbol(default): Show the symbol (such as $).
  • symbol-narrow: Use the narrow symbol for locales that have two symbols for their currency. For example, the Canadian dollar CAD has the symbol CA$ and the symbol-narrow $. If the locale has no narrow symbol, uses the standard symbol for the locale.
  • String: Use the given string value instead of a code or a symbol. For example, an empty string will suppress the currency & symbol.
  • Boolean (marked deprecated in v5): true for symbol and false for code.

    Optional. Default is 'symbol'.

Docs: https://angular.io/api/common/CurrencyPipe


No custom pipes needed

You can overwrite the currency & symbol with the string format.

String: Use the given string value instead of a code or a symbol. For example, an empty string will suppress the currency & symbol.

<span>{{ product.price | currency:'USD ' }}</span>
1
  • 2
    Add a space at the end of the currency string doesn't work. It will add space but it literally prints the currency. May 28, 2020 at 10:53
3

Create a new pipe that receive the currency as input.

import { Pipe, PipeTransform } from '@angular/core';

@Pipe({
    name: 'space'
})
export class SpacePipe implements PipeTransform {
   transform(value: any, args?: any): any {
       console.log(value.substring(0, 1) + ' ' + value.substring( 1));
       return value.substring(0, 1) + ' ' + value.substring( 1);
   }
}

After that you can call them like this

{{discount | currency: 'EUR' | space}}

Dont forget to include it in @NgModule -> declarations

0
3

Just concatenate the space as shown in the code below. It works`s for me. I am using Angular 6 by the way.

<span>{{ product.price | currency:'USD' + ' ' }}</span>
1

There are some pretty complex solutions here when we can solve this problem with a simple workaround using angular pipes. Let's assume I want to display USD 123. The way we can do it is:

<div>
  {{0 | currency:'USD':'code' | slice:0:3}} {{<actualAmount> | number:'1.2-2'}}
</div>

What I am doing here is setting amount to 0 and then slicing off the currency code from it and then we can add the actual amount as a normal number. Similarly for using symbol $ 123, we can do something like this:

<div>
  {{0 | currency:'USD':'symbol' | slice:0:1}} {{<actualAmount> | number:'1.2-2'}}
</div>
0

{{data|currency:'GBP'}} you can use instead to {{data|currency:'GBP':}}

0

You can supply the display option with a custom string. Passing in a string currency code with the space added to the end instead of 'code' is working for me. Angular 13 though...

-1

Adding a space in the symbol section will also work. See below.

<strong class="d-inline-block">{{ amount | currency:"USD":"USD " }}</strong>
1
  • This doesn't show the correct symbol, just the string in the last part Apr 4, 2022 at 13:45

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