Class Money::Formatter
In: lib/money/money/formatter.rb
Parent: Object

Methods

Constants

DEFAULTS = { thousands_separator: '', decimal_mark: '.'

Attributes

currency  [R] 
money  [R] 
rules  [R] 

Public Class methods

Creates a formatted price string according to several rules.

@param [Hash] rules The options used to format the string.

@return [String]

@option rules [Boolean, String] :display_free (false) Whether a zero

 amount of money should be formatted of "free" or as the supplied string.

@example

  Money.us_dollar(0).format(display_free: true)     #=> "free"
  Money.us_dollar(0).format(display_free: "gratis") #=> "gratis"
  Money.us_dollar(0).format                            #=> "$0.00"

@option rules [Boolean] :with_currency (false) Whether the currency name

 should be appended to the result string.

@example

  Money.ca_dollar(100).format #=> "$1.00"
  Money.ca_dollar(100).format(with_currency: true) #=> "$1.00 CAD"
  Money.us_dollar(85).format(with_currency: true)  #=> "$0.85 USD"

@option rules [Boolean] :rounded_infinite_precision (false) Whether the

 amount of money should be rounded when using {infinite_precision}

@example

  Money.us_dollar(100.1).format #=> "$1.001"
  Money.us_dollar(100.1).format(rounded_infinite_precision: true) #=> "$1"
  Money.us_dollar(100.9).format(rounded_infinite_precision: true) #=> "$1.01"

@option rules [Boolean] :no_cents (false) Whether cents should be omitted.

@example

  Money.ca_dollar(100).format(no_cents: true) #=> "$1"
  Money.ca_dollar(599).format(no_cents: true) #=> "$5"

@option rules [Boolean] :no_cents_if_whole (false) Whether cents should be

 omitted if the cent value is zero

@example

  Money.ca_dollar(10000).format(no_cents_if_whole: true) #=> "$100"
  Money.ca_dollar(10034).format(no_cents_if_whole: true) #=> "$100.34"

@option rules [Boolean, String, nil] :symbol (true) Whether a money symbol

 should be prepended to the result string. The default is true. This method
 attempts to pick a symbol that's suitable for the given currency.

@example

  Money.new(100, "USD") #=> "$1.00"
  Money.new(100, "GBP") #=> "£1.00"
  Money.new(100, "EUR") #=> "€1.00"

  # Same thing.
  Money.new(100, "USD").format(symbol: true) #=> "$1.00"
  Money.new(100, "GBP").format(symbol: true) #=> "£1.00"
  Money.new(100, "EUR").format(symbol: true) #=> "€1.00"

  # You can specify a false expression or an empty string to disable
  # prepending a money symbol.§
  Money.new(100, "USD").format(symbol: false) #=> "1.00"
  Money.new(100, "GBP").format(symbol: nil)   #=> "1.00"
  Money.new(100, "EUR").format(symbol: "")    #=> "1.00"

  # If the symbol for the given currency isn't known, then it will default
  # to "¤" as symbol.
  Money.new(100, "AWG").format(symbol: true) #=> "¤1.00"

  # You can specify a string as value to enforce using a particular symbol.
  Money.new(100, "AWG").format(symbol: "ƒ") #=> "ƒ1.00"

  # You can specify a indian currency format
  Money.new(10000000, "INR").format(south_asian_number_formatting: true) #=> "1,00,000.00"
  Money.new(10000000).format(south_asian_number_formatting: true) #=> "$1,00,000.00"

@option rules [Boolean, nil] :symbol_before_without_space (true) Whether

  a space between the money symbol and the amount should be inserted when
  +:symbol_position+ is +:before+. The default is true (meaning no space). Ignored
  if +:symbol+ is false or +:symbol_position+ is not +:before+.

@example

  # Default is to not insert a space.
  Money.new(100, "USD").format #=> "$1.00"

  # Same thing.
  Money.new(100, "USD").format(symbol_before_without_space: true) #=> "$1.00"

  # If set to false, will insert a space.
  Money.new(100, "USD").format(symbol_before_without_space: false) #=> "$ 1.00"

@option rules [Boolean, nil] :symbol_after_without_space (false) Whether

  a space between the amount and the money symbol should be inserted when
  +:symbol_position+ is +:after+. The default is false (meaning space). Ignored
  if +:symbol+ is false or +:symbol_position+ is not +:after+.

@example

  # Default is to insert a space.
  Money.new(100, "USD").format(symbol_position: :after) #=> "1.00 $"

  # If set to true, will not insert a space.
  Money.new(100, "USD").format(symbol_position: :after, symbol_after_without_space: true) #=> "1.00$"

@option rules [Boolean, String, nil] :decimal_mark (true) Whether the

 currency should be separated by the specified character or '.'

@example

  # If a string is specified, it's value is used.
  Money.new(100, "USD").format(decimal_mark: ",") #=> "$1,00"

  # If the decimal_mark for a given currency isn't known, then it will default
  # to "." as decimal_mark.
  Money.new(100, "FOO").format #=> "$1.00"

@option rules [Boolean, String, nil] :thousands_separator (true) Whether

 the currency should be delimited by the specified character or ','

@example

  # If false is specified, no thousands_separator is used.
  Money.new(100000, "USD").format(thousands_separator: false) #=> "1000.00"
  Money.new(100000, "USD").format(thousands_separator: nil)   #=> "1000.00"
  Money.new(100000, "USD").format(thousands_separator: "")    #=> "1000.00"

  # If a string is specified, it's value is used.
  Money.new(100000, "USD").format(thousands_separator: ".") #=> "$1.000.00"

  # If the thousands_separator for a given currency isn't known, then it will
  # default to "," as thousands_separator.
  Money.new(100000, "FOO").format #=> "$1,000.00"

@option rules [Boolean] :html (false) Whether the currency should be

 HTML-formatted. Only useful in combination with +:with_currency+.

@example

  Money.ca_dollar(570).format(html: true, with_currency: true)
  #=> "$5.70 <span class=\"currency\">CAD</span>"

@option rules [Boolean] :html_wrap (false) Whether all currency parts should be HTML-formatted.

@example

  Money.ca_dollar(570).format(html_wrap: true, with_currency: true)
  #=> "<span class=\"money-currency-symbol\">$</span><span class=\"money-whole\">5</span><span class=\"money-decimal-mark\">.</span><span class=\"money-decimal\">70</span> <span class=\"money-currency\">CAD</span>"

@option rules [Boolean] :sign_before_symbol (false) Whether the sign should be

 before the currency symbol.

@example

  # You can specify to display the sign before the symbol for negative numbers
  Money.new(-100, "GBP").format(sign_before_symbol: true)  #=> "-£1.00"
  Money.new(-100, "GBP").format(sign_before_symbol: false) #=> "£-1.00"
  Money.new(-100, "GBP").format                               #=> "£-1.00"

@option rules [Boolean] :sign_positive (false) Whether positive numbers should be

 signed, too.

@example

  # You can specify to display the sign with positive numbers
  Money.new(100, "GBP").format(sign_positive: true,  sign_before_symbol: true)  #=> "+£1.00"
  Money.new(100, "GBP").format(sign_positive: true,  sign_before_symbol: false) #=> "£+1.00"
  Money.new(100, "GBP").format(sign_positive: false, sign_before_symbol: true)  #=> "£1.00"
  Money.new(100, "GBP").format(sign_positive: false, sign_before_symbol: false) #=> "£1.00"
  Money.new(100, "GBP").format                               #=> "£+1.00"

@option rules [Boolean] :disambiguate (false) Prevents the result from being ambiguous

 due to equal symbols for different currencies. Uses the `disambiguate_symbol`.

@example

  Money.new(10000, "USD").format(disambiguate: false)   #=> "$100.00"
  Money.new(10000, "CAD").format(disambiguate: false)   #=> "$100.00"
  Money.new(10000, "USD").format(disambiguate: true)    #=> "$100.00"
  Money.new(10000, "CAD").format(disambiguate: true)    #=> "C$100.00"

@option rules [Boolean] :html_wrap_symbol (false) Wraps the currency symbol

 in a html <span> tag.

@example

  Money.new(10000, "USD").format(disambiguate: false)
  #=> "<span class=\"currency_symbol\">$100.00</span>

@option rules [Symbol] :symbol_position (:before) `:before` if the currency

  symbol goes before the amount, `:after` if it goes after.

@example

  Money.new(10000, "USD").format(symbol_position: :before) #=> "$100.00"
  Money.new(10000, "USD").format(symbol_position: :after)  #=> "100.00 $"

@option rules [Boolean] :translate (true) `true` Checks for custom

  symbol definitions using I18n.

@example

  # With the following entry in the translation files:
  # en:
  #   number:
  #     currency:
  #       symbol:
  #         CAD: "CAD$"
  Money.new(10000, "CAD").format(translate: true) #=> "CAD$100.00"

@option rules [Boolean] :drop_trailing_zeros (false) Ignore trailing zeros after

  the decimal mark

@example

  Money.new(89000, :btc).format(drop_trailing_zeros: true) #=> B⃦0.00089
  Money.new(110, :usd).format(drop_trailing_zeros: true)   #=> $1.1

@option rules [String] :format (nil) Provide a template for formatting. `%u` will be replaced with the symbol (if present) and `%n` will be replaced with the number.

@example

  Money.new(10000, "USD").format(format: '%u %n') #=> "$ 100.00"
  Money.new(10000, "USD").format(format: '<span>%u%n</span>')  #=> "<span>$100.00</span>"

Note that the default rules can be defined through {Money.default_formatting_rules} hash.

@see Money.default_formatting_rules Money.default_formatting_rules for more information.

Public Instance methods

delimiter()
separator()

Alias for decimal_mark

[Validate]