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Parse a decimal number with i18n format support (localized decimal points and thousands separators)

About

OK, let’s fix international numbers parsing and validation once and forever. I got the inspiration for this in a UI project because somehow the libraries we used didn’t do a great job, so I wrote my own parser, and this is a more polished version of it.

These are the design goals:

In it’s simplest form, you just use it as a parseFloat replacement.

Install

Install with npm

npm i parse-decimal-number --save

Usage

parseDecimalNumber = require('parse-decimal-number');
console.log(parseDecimalNumber('12,345,678.90'));
// -> 12345678.90

console.log(parseDecimalNumber('12.345.678,90','.,'));
// -> 12345678.90

parseDecimalNumber(string [,options])

Returns a float representation of string or NaN if string is not a parseable number. Use the optional options parameter to specify the thousands and decimal point characters.

Parameters

string A String that is supposed to contain a number.

options optional A string, array or hash with thousands and decimal separators.

enforceGroupSize A boolean indicating whether to support that individual groups between the thousands character are exactly 3 digits

Examples

console.log(parseDecimalNumber('12.345.678,90'));
// -> 12345678.90
String options
console.log(parseDecimalNumber('12.345.678,90','.,'));
// -> 12345678.90
Array options
console.log(parseDecimalNumber('12.345.678,90',['.',',']));
// -> 12345678.90
Hash options
var customSeparators = {thousands:'.',decimal:','};
console.log(parseDecimalNumber('12.345.678,90',customSeparators));
// -> 12345678.90

parseDecimalNumber.withOptions(options)

Returns a function that will take a string as an argument and return a float or NaN, just like parseDecimalNumber.

Example

  const cldr = require('cldr');

  const locale = 'de_DE';
  const options = cldr.extractNumberSymbols(locale);

  const parse = parseDecimalNumber.withOptions(options);

  parse('123.456.789,0123'); // -> 123456789.0123

Setting and Resetting Default Options

parseDecimalNumber.setOptions

Set the default thousands and decimal characters that are used when no options are passed to parseDecimalNumber.

var defaultSeparators = {thousands:'.',decimal:','};
parseDecimalNumber.setOptions(defaultSeparators);

console.log(parseDecimalNumber('12.345.678,90'));
// -> 12345678.90
parseDecimalNumber.factorySettings

has the same effect as parseDecimalNumber.setOptions({thousands:',',decimal:'.'};)

Using with cldr

You can easily apply CLDR data using the cldr package:

  const cldr = require('cldr');

  parseDecimalNumber(
    '12.345.678,90',
    cldr.extractNumberSymbols('de_DE')
  );

Using with Numeral.js

Numeral.js is good at formatting numbers and comes with an extensive set of locale data that you can use with parse-decimal-number.

If you use numeral in your project, you can use their locale data as follows:

parseDecimalNumber('12.345.678,90', numeral.localeData('de').delimiters);
// -> 12345678.9

You can of course use the same data to set the default values for parse-decimal-number:

parseDecimalNumber.setOptions(numeral.localeData('de').delimiters);
parseDecimalNumber('12.345.678,90');
// -> 12345678.9

Done :relaxed:

Related Projects

To keep this project as small and modular as possible, the locale data itself has been left out of this library. If you need locale date, other projects might be helpful:

Running tests

{%= include("tests") %}

Contributing

In lieu of a formal styleguide, take care to maintain the existing coding style. Add unit tests for any new or changed functionality, and please re-build the documentation with gulp-verb before submitting a pull request.

Author

Andreas Pizsa (http://github.com/AndreasPizsa)

License

Copyright (c) 2017 Andreas Pizsa (http://github.com/AndreasPizsa), contributors.

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