Format floats as decimals with expected rounding
This module formats floats to a given number of decimals with expected rounding, fixing some surprises with native Javascript method toFixed. It seeks to do this with minimal overhead.
While the module works, the modern recommendation is to use the built-in Intl.NumberFormat module, which implements expected rounding with similar performance and many more options. See Comparisons below.
npm install --save decifloat
Formats num
to at least minDecimals
and at most maxDecimals
decimal digits after the decimal point.
import {toFixed} from 'decifloat';
console.log(toFixed(1.005, 0, 2)); // Outputs 1.01
console.log(toFixed(1.005, 0, 5)); // Outputs 1.005
console.log(toFixed(1.005, 5, 5)); // Outputs 1.00500
console.log(toFixed(1.005, 0, 1)); // Outputs 1
Floats in Javascript (as in most modern languages) are represented using powers of 2, which means that most decimal fractions are not represented precisely. For example, 1.005 is not representable precisely in Javascript, and is represented by a slightly smaller number.
The native methods of Number
such as toString()
and toExponential()
do a good job of formatting this slightly smaller number back as "1.005"
for output.
However, because Javascript's 1.005 is actually a slightly smaller than the mathematical 1.005, rounding to two
decimal digits, as done by (1.005).toFixed(2)
, produces "1.00"
, which looks wrong. For the
same reason, 1.005 * 100
produces 100.49999999999999
.
This module solves this issue by scaling "1.005"
to "100.5"
as a string before rounding. Because
it doesn't lose precision in scaling by powers of 10, decifloat.toFixed(1.005, 2, 2)
can
correctly produce "1.01"
.
Beyond that, it aims to be fast. In many cases (at least on node 10) it's actually faster than
the native toFixed()
method.
The times below were measured on a MacBook Pro. To produce them yourself, run npm run bench-node
for node timings, or run npm run bench-browser
and open test/fixtures/bench.html
in a browser for browser timings.
Library / Code | Result 1 | Result 2 | Result 3 |
---|---|---|---|
decifloat.toFixed(val, 1, 8) | 1.00000001 | -123456.79 | 0.00000062 |
val.toFixed(8) | -123456.79000000 | 0.00000062 | |
numeral(val).format(fmt) | 1.00000001 | -123456.79 | |
numberFormat.format(val) | 1.00000001 | -123456.79 | 0.00000062 |
Library / Code | Time in Node 10 (ms) | Time in Firefox | Time in Chrome | Time in Safari |
---|---|---|---|---|
decifloat.toFixed(val, 1, 8) | 0.52 us | 0.66 us | 0.60 us | 1.37 us |
val.toFixed(8) | 0.35 us | 0.22 us | 0.42 us | 0.13 us |
numeral(val).format(fmt) | 2.68 us | 3.32 us | 5.19 us | 3.66 us |
numberFormat.format(val) | 0.78 us | 0.49 us | 0.75 us | 0.66 us |
Above, for numeral
, the format fmt
is "0.0[0000000]"
. In the line with numberFormat
, it is set to:
const numberFormat = new Intl.NumberFormat('en-US', { minimumFractionDigits: 1, maximumFractionDigits: 8, useGrouping: false});
Note that this last approach is well-supported, and similarly efficient. It may be a simpler approach, at least if you are sure that you have support for a suitable locale.