Home

Awesome

Monetize

Gem Version Ruby Maintainability Test Coverage License

A library for converting various objects into Money objects.

Installation

Run:

bundle add monetize

Or install it yourself as:

$ gem install monetize

Usage

Monetize.parse("USD 100") == Money.new(100_00, "USD")
Monetize.parse("EUR 100") == Money.new(100_00, "EUR")
Monetize.parse("GBP 100") == Money.new(100_00, "GBP")

"100".to_money == Money.new(100_00, "USD")

Optionally, enable the ability to assume the currency from a passed symbol. Otherwise, currency symbols will be ignored, and USD used as the default currency:

Monetize.parse("£100") == Money.new(100_00, "USD")

Monetize.assume_from_symbol = true

Monetize.parse("£100") == Money.new(100_00, "GBP")
"€100".to_money == Money.new(100_00, "EUR")

Parsing can be improved where the input is not expected to contain fractional subunits. To do this, set Monetize.expect_whole_subunits = true

Monetize.parse('EUR 10,000') == Money.new(100_00, "EUR")

Monetize.expect_whole_subunits = true
Monetize.parse('EUR 10,000') == Money.new(10_000_00, "EUR")

Why does this work? If we expect fractional subunits then the parser will treat a single delimiter as a decimal marker if it matches the currency's decimal marker. But often this is not the case - a European site will show $10.000 because that's the local format. As a human, if this was a stock ticker we might expect fractional cents. If it's a retail price we know it's actually an incorrect thousands separator.

Monetize can also parse a list of values, returning an array-like object (Monetize::Collection):

Monetize.parse_collection("€80/$100") == [Money.new(80_00, "EUR"), Money.new(100_00, "USD")]
Monetize.parse_collection("€80, $100") == [Money.new(80_00, "EUR"), Money.new(100_00, "USD")]

# The #range? method detects the presence of a hyphen
Monetize.parse_collection("€80-$100").range? == true

Contributing

See CONTRIBUTING.md for details.