Skip to content

davidnotplay/my-numbers

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

17 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

My Numbers

Parse and stringify numbers using the format that you want.

Install

$ npm --save install my-numbers

or you can use externally

<script src="dist/my-numbers.js">

Usage

import MyNumbers from 'MyNumbers'

// use the 1.1,00 format
const mnumbers = MyNumbers('1.1,00')

mnumbers.parse('1.323,32') // 1323.32
mnumbers.stringify(1323.32) // '1.323,32'

Formats

Complete format:

#+?1,1.0000?#
  • # It Indicate if the numbers can have prefixes. See prefixes and suffixes section for more info.
  • +? It Indicate if the numbers can have + or - symbols. The character ? indicate if that symbols are optionals in the stringify function.
  • 1,1 integer part. the character , is the thousands separator. you can use any character here. Also you can use only the character 1 If you don't want thousands separator.
  • .0000? Decimal part. The character . is the decimal separator, and the number of zeros is the number of decimals will have the decimal part. The character ? indicate that the decimal numbers will optional in the stringify function.
  • # Indicate if the number can have suffixes. See prefixes and suffixes section for more info.

Format examples

1

Only integer numbers

parse stringify
'33' => 33 123 => '123'
'33.32' => false 123.3 => false
1,0

Parse decimals, using the , as decimal character, and one round in one decimal.

parse stringify
'33' => 33 123 => '123,0'
'33,39' => 33.4 123.38 => '123,4'
'33.39' => false ( the decimal characters isn't , ) 0.73 => '0,7'
1_000

Now the decimal characters is _ and the number of decimal is 3.

parse stringify
'33' => 33 123 => '123_000'
'33_32' => 33.32 123.3 => '123_300'
'33_3248' => 33.325 8.34328 => '8_343'
1,000?

Decimal character is ,. 3 decimals, and the character ? indicate the 3 decimals are optionals in the stringify function.

parse stringify
'33' => 33 123 => '123'
'33,32' => 33.32 123.3 => '123,3'
'33,3248' => 33.325 8.34328 => '8,343'
1.1,00

The integer part has as thousands separator the character . . And the decimal separator is ,.

parse stringify
'88' => 88 328 => '328,3'
'1.732,23' => 1732.23 10839 => '10.839,00'
'33.324.883,23' => 33324883.23 834328.323 => '834.328,32'
'333.32,33' => false (incorrect format number)
+1_1'00

Now you can add the + and the - sign in the numbers, and the numbers string always have that symbols. The thousands separator is _ and the decimal separator is '

parse stringify
'88' => 88 328 => '+328,3'
"-1_732'23" => -1732.23 -10839 => "-10_839'00"
"33_324_883'23" => 33324883.23 834328.323 => "+834_328'32"
"333_32'33" => false (incorrect format number)
+?1 00

Parse numbers with sign and the + and - symbols are optional in the stringify function. And the decimal separator is <space>

parse stringify
'99 32' => 99.32 132.489 => '132 49'
'-99 32' => -99.32 -132.489 => '-132 49'
,000

Only decimals. The decimal separator is ,

parse stringify
',323' => 0.323 0.442 => ',442'
'3,323' => false (number has integer part) 0.8 => ',800'

This only are some examples of formats. You can combine the before formats for makes others.

MyNumber Object

MyNumbers(string|array format[, object prefixes[, object suffixes ] ])

  • See the formats section for more info about format parameter.
  • See the prefixes and suffixes section for more info about prefixes and suffixes parameters

Parse function

MyNumbers(...).parse(float|int number)

This function transform a string number in a number depending of the format. If the string number no match with the format then return false.

// example
const mn = MyNumbers('1.1,000')

mn.parse('3.323') // 3233
mn.parse('4.323.323,1') // 4323323.1
mn.parse('4_323_323,1') // false
mn.parse('4.33,1') // false

Multiparse

You can add two or more format. Parse returns an object with the formats and his results.

// example
const mn = MyNumbers(['1.1,000', '1,1.000'])

mn.parse('3.323') // { '1.1,000': 3323, '1,1.000': 3.323}
mn.parse('3.32') // { '1.1,000': false, '1,1.000': 3.320}

Stringify function

Transform a number in a string number depending of the format. If the number isn't compatible with the format the return false.

MyNumbers(...).stringify(float|int number[, string prefix[, string suffix]])

// example
const mn = MyNumbers('1_1 000')

mn.s(3323) // '3_233 000'
mn.parse(888323.3) // '888_323 300'
mn.parse(-1) // false. The format not admit negative number.

MultiStringify

You can add two or more format. Stringify function returns an object with the formats and his results.

// example
const mn = MyNumbers(['1_1 000', '+?1,000?'])

mn.s(3323) // {'1_1 000': '3_323 000' '+?1,000?': '3323'}
mn.parse(432.3) // {'1_1 000': '432 300', '+?1,000?': '432,3'} 
mn.parse(-1) // {'1_1 000': false, '+?1,000?': '-1'}

Prefixes and suffixes

You can use prefixes and suffixes in the numbers. Firstly you must specify the prefixes and the suffixes in the number format.

const format = '#1.1,00#' // The characters # indicate you can use prefix and suffix in the numbers.

// More format examples 
'#1.00' // number with prefix.
'1.1,000#' // number with suffix
'#1.0#' // number with prefix and suffix

// you make the prefixes and the suffixes that you want
const pr = {'a': 20, 'b': 30 }
const su = {'dm': 10, 'hm': 100, 'km': 1000}
// the key is the prefix/suffix and the value is the multiplier. the number will multiply with this value when parse and divide when stringify

const mn = MyNumbers(format, pr, su)
mn.parse('3dm') // 30
mn.parse('3,3244hm') // 332.44 
mn.parse('1.100km') // 1100000
mn.parse('a32') // 640
// can use prefix and suffix
mn.parse('a32dm') // 6400

Customize the prefixes and suffixes.

You can use functions for make suffixes and prefixes

/*
  @param {int} num the number
  @param {boolean} False in the parse function, True in stringify function
  @return {int} Number modified.
*/
const kelvin = (num, inv) => !inv num + 273.15 : num - 273.15
const su = { K: kelvin }
const mn = MyNumbers('+1,00#', null, su)

mn.parse('100K') // 373.15
mn.stringify(10, null, 'K') // '-263,15K'

LICENSE

The license is MIT. See LICENSE file to more info.