(PHP 4 >= 4.3.0, PHP 5)
money_format — Formats a number as a currency string
money_format() returns a formatted version of number. This function wraps the C library function strfmon(), with the difference that this implementation converts only one number at a time.
The format specification consists of the following sequence:
a % character
optional flags
optional field width
optional left precision
optional right precision
a required conversion character
One or more of the optional flags below can be used:
The character = followed by a (single byte) character f to be used as the numeric fill character. The default fill character is space.
Disable the use of grouping characters (as defined by the current locale).
Specify the formatting style for positive and negative numbers. If + is used, the locale's equivalent for + and - will be used. If ( is used, negative amounts are enclosed in parenthesis. If no specification is given, the default is +.
Suppress the currency symbol from the output string.
If present, it will make all fields left-justified (padded to the right), as opposed to the default which is for the fields to be right-justified (padded to the left).
A decimal digit string specifying a minimum field width. Field will be right-justified unless the flag - is used. Default value is 0 (zero).
The maximum number of digits (n) expected to the left of the decimal character (e.g. the decimal point). It is used usually to keep formatted output aligned in the same columns, using the fill character if the number of digits is less than n. If the number of actual digits is bigger than n, then this specification is ignored.
If grouping has not been suppressed using the ^ flag, grouping separators will be inserted before the fill characters (if any) are added. Grouping separators will not be applied to fill characters, even if the fill character is a digit.
To ensure alignment, any characters appearing before or after the number in the formatted output such as currency or sign symbols are padded as necessary with space characters to make their positive and negative formats an equal length.
A period followed by the number of digits (p) after the decimal character. If the value of p is 0 (zero), the decimal character and the digits to its right will be omitted. If no right precision is included, the default will dictated by the current local in use. The amount being formatted is rounded to the specified number of digits prior to formatting.
The number is formatted according to the locale's international currency format (e.g. for the USA locale: USD 1,234.56).
The number is formatted according to the locale's national currency format (e.g. for the de_DE locale: EU1.234,56).
Returns the % character.
The number to be formatted.
Returns the formatted string. Characters before and after the formatting string will be returned unchanged. Non-numeric number causes returning NULL and emitting E_WARNING.
Hinweis:
The function money_format() is only defined if the system has strfmon capabilities. For example, Windows does not, so money_format() is undefined in Windows.
Hinweis:
The LC_MONETARY category of the locale settings, affects the behavior of this function. Use setlocale() to set to the appropriate default locale before using this function.
Beispiel #1 money_format() Example
We will use different locales and format specifications to illustrate the use of this function.
<?php
$number = 1234.56;
// let's print the international format for the en_US locale
setlocale(LC_MONETARY, 'en_US');
echo money_format('%i', $number) . "\n";
// USD 1,234.56
// Italian national format with 2 decimals`
setlocale(LC_MONETARY, 'it_IT');
echo money_format('%.2n', $number) . "\n";
// Eu 1.234,56
// Using a negative number
$number = -1234.5672;
// US national format, using () for negative numbers
// and 10 digits for left precision
setlocale(LC_MONETARY, 'en_US');
echo money_format('%(#10n', $number) . "\n";
// ($ 1,234.57)
// Similar format as above, adding the use of 2 digits of right
// precision and '*' as a fill character
echo money_format('%=*(#10.2n', $number) . "\n";
// ($********1,234.57)
// Let's justify to the left, with 14 positions of width, 8 digits of
// left precision, 2 of right precision, withouth grouping character
// and using the international format for the de_DE locale.
setlocale(LC_MONETARY, 'de_DE');
echo money_format('%=*^-14#8.2i', 1234.56) . "\n";
// Eu 1234,56****
// Let's add some blurb before and after the conversion specification
setlocale(LC_MONETARY, 'en_GB');
$fmt = 'The final value is %i (after a 10%% discount)';
echo money_format($fmt, 1234.56) . "\n";
// The final value is GBP 1,234.56 (after a 10% discount)
?>
This function divides integer value by commas. F.e.
<?php
echo formatMoney(1050); # 1,050
echo formatMoney(1321435.4, true); # 1,321,435.40
echo formatMoney(10059240.42941, true); # 10,059,240.43
echo formatMoney(13245); # 13,245
function formatMoney($number, $fractional=false) {
if ($fractional) {
$number = sprintf('%.2f', $number);
}
while (true) {
$replaced = preg_replace('/(-?\d+)(\d\d\d)/', '$1,$2', $number);
if ($replaced != $number) {
$number = $replaced;
} else {
break;
}
}
return $number;
}
?>
This is a some function posted before, however various bugs were corrected.
Thank you to Stuart Roe by reporting the bug on printing signals.
<?php
/*
That it is an implementation of the function money_format for the
platforms that do not it bear.
The function accepts to same string of format accepts for the
original function of the PHP.
(Sorry. my writing in English is very bad)
The function is tested using PHP 5.1.4 in Windows XP
and Apache WebServer.
*/
function money_format($format, $number)
{
$regex = '/%((?:[\^!\-]|\+|\(|\=.)*)([0-9]+)?'.
'(?:#([0-9]+))?(?:\.([0-9]+))?([in%])/';
if (setlocale(LC_MONETARY, 0) == 'C') {
setlocale(LC_MONETARY, '');
}
$locale = localeconv();
preg_match_all($regex, $format, $matches, PREG_SET_ORDER);
foreach ($matches as $fmatch) {
$value = floatval($number);
$flags = array(
'fillchar' => preg_match('/\=(.)/', $fmatch[1], $match) ?
$match[1] : ' ',
'nogroup' => preg_match('/\^/', $fmatch[1]) > 0,
'usesignal' => preg_match('/\+|\(/', $fmatch[1], $match) ?
$match[0] : '+',
'nosimbol' => preg_match('/\!/', $fmatch[1]) > 0,
'isleft' => preg_match('/\-/', $fmatch[1]) > 0
);
$width = trim($fmatch[2]) ? (int)$fmatch[2] : 0;
$left = trim($fmatch[3]) ? (int)$fmatch[3] : 0;
$right = trim($fmatch[4]) ? (int)$fmatch[4] : $locale['int_frac_digits'];
$conversion = $fmatch[5];
$positive = true;
if ($value < 0) {
$positive = false;
$value *= -1;
}
$letter = $positive ? 'p' : 'n';
$prefix = $suffix = $cprefix = $csuffix = $signal = '';
$signal = $positive ? $locale['positive_sign'] : $locale['negative_sign'];
switch (true) {
case $locale["{$letter}_sign_posn"] == 1 && $flags['usesignal'] == '+':
$prefix = $signal;
break;
case $locale["{$letter}_sign_posn"] == 2 && $flags['usesignal'] == '+':
$suffix = $signal;
break;
case $locale["{$letter}_sign_posn"] == 3 && $flags['usesignal'] == '+':
$cprefix = $signal;
break;
case $locale["{$letter}_sign_posn"] == 4 && $flags['usesignal'] == '+':
$csuffix = $signal;
break;
case $flags['usesignal'] == '(':
case $locale["{$letter}_sign_posn"] == 0:
$prefix = '(';
$suffix = ')';
break;
}
if (!$flags['nosimbol']) {
$currency = $cprefix .
($conversion == 'i' ? $locale['int_curr_symbol'] : $locale['currency_symbol']) .
$csuffix;
} else {
$currency = '';
}
$space = $locale["{$letter}_sep_by_space"] ? ' ' : '';
$value = number_format($value, $right, $locale['mon_decimal_point'],
$flags['nogroup'] ? '' : $locale['mon_thousands_sep']);
$value = @explode($locale['mon_decimal_point'], $value);
$n = strlen($prefix) + strlen($currency) + strlen($value[0]);
if ($left > 0 && $left > $n) {
$value[0] = str_repeat($flags['fillchar'], $left - $n) . $value[0];
}
$value = implode($locale['mon_decimal_point'], $value);
if ($locale["{$letter}_cs_precedes"]) {
$value = $prefix . $currency . $space . $value . $suffix;
} else {
$value = $prefix . $value . $space . $currency . $suffix;
}
if ($width > 0) {
$value = str_pad($value, $width, $flags['fillchar'], $flags['isleft'] ?
STR_PAD_RIGHT : STR_PAD_LEFT);
}
$format = str_replace($fmatch[0], $value, $format);
}
return $format;
}
?>
If money_format doesn't seem to be working properly, make sure you are defining a valid locale. For example, on Debian, 'en_US' is not a valid locale - you need 'en_US.UTF-8' or 'en_US.ISO-8559-1'.
This was frustrating me for a while. Debian has a list of valid locales at /usr/share/i18n/SUPPORTED; find yours there if it's not working properly.
Consider formatting currency for some South Asian countries that use ##,##,###.## money format.
The following code generates something like Rs. 4,54,234.00 and so on.
<?php
function convertcash($num, $currency){
if(strlen($num)>3){
$lastthree = substr($num, strlen($num)-3, strlen($num));
$restunits = substr($num, 0, strlen($num)-3); // extracts the last three digits
$restunits = (strlen($restunits)%2 == 1)?"0".$restunits:$restunits; // explodes the remaining digits in 2's formats, adds a zero in the beginning to maintain the 2's grouping.
$expunit = str_split($restunits, 2);
for($i=0; $i<sizeof($expunit); $i++){
$explrestunits .= (int)$expunit[$i].","; // creates each of the 2's group and adds a comma to the end
}
$thecash = $explrestunits.$lastthree;
} else {
$thecash = $convertnum;
}
return $currency.$thecash.".00"; // writes the final format where $currency is the currency symbol.
}
?>
now call the function as convertcash($row['price'], 'Rs '); // that's the price from the database I called using an Indian Rupees prefix where the price has to be a plain number format, say something like 454234.
This is a handy little bit of code I just wrote, as I was not able to find anything else suitable for my situation.
This will handle monetary values that are passed to the script by a user, to reformat any comma use so that it is not broken when it passes through an input validation system that checks for a float.
It is not foolproof, but will handle the common input as most users would input it, such as 1,234,567 (outputs 1234567) or 1,234.00 (outputs 1234.00), even handles 12,34 (outputs 12.34), I expect it would work with negative numbers, but have not tested it, as it is not used for that in my situation.
This worked when other options such as money_format() were not suitable or possible.
<?php
///////////////
// BEGIN CODE convert all price amounts into well formatted values
function converttonum($convertnum,$fieldinput){
$bits = explode(",",$convertnum); // split input value up to allow checking
$first = strlen($bits[0]); // gets part before first comma (thousands/millions)
$last = strlen($bits[1]); // gets part after first comma (thousands (or decimals if incorrectly used by user)
if ($last <3){ // checks for comma being used as decimal place
$convertnum = str_replace(",",".",$convertnum);
}
else{ // assume comma is a thousands seperator, so remove it
$convertnum = str_replace(",","",$convertnum);
}
$_POST[$fieldinput] = $convertnum; // redefine the vlaue of the variable, to be the new corrected one
}
@converttonum($_POST[inputone],"inputone");
@converttonum($_POST[inputtwo],"inputtwo");
@converttonum($_POST[inputthree],"inputthree");
// END CODE
//////////////
?>
This is suitable for the English usage, it may need tweaking to work with other types.
Double check that money_format() is defined on any version of PHP you plan your code to run on. You might be surprised.
For example, it worked on my Linux box where I code, but not on servers running BSD 4.11 variants. (This is presumably because strfmon is not defined - see note at the top of teis page). It's not just a windows/unix issue.