Delete digits after two decimal points, without rounding the value

try with number_format:

echo number_format('2.50000050', 2); // 2.50

TL;DR:

The PHP native function bcdiv seems to do precisely what is required, and properly.

To simply "truncate" a number, bcdiv($var, 1, 2); where 2 is the number of decimals to preserve (and 1 is the denomenator - dividing the number by 1 allows you to simply truncate the original number to the desired decimal places)

Full Answer (for history)

This turns out to be more elusive than one might think.

After this answer was (incorrectly) upvoted quite a bit, it has come to my attention that even sprintf will round.

Rather than delete this answer, I'm turning it into a more robust explanation / discussion of each proposed solution.

number_format - Incorrect. (rounds)
Try using number format:

$var = number_format($var, 2, '.', '');  // Last two parameters are optional
echo $var;
// Outputs 2.50

If you want it to be a number, then simply type-cast to a float:

$var = (float)number_format($var, 2, '.', '');

Note: as has been pointed out in the comments, this does in fact round the number.

sprintf - incorrect. (sprintf also rounds)
If not rounding the number is important, then per the answer below, use sprintf:

$var = sprintf("%01.2f", $var);

floor - not quite! (floor rounds negative numbers)

floor, with some math, will come close to doing what you want:

floor(2.56789 * 100) / 100; // 2.56

Where 100 represents the precision you want. If you wanted it to three digits, then:

floor(2.56789 * 1000) / 1000; // 2.567

However, this has a problem with negative numbers. Negative numbers still get rounded, rather than truncated:

floor(-2.56789 * 100) / 100; // -2.57

"Old" Correct answer: function utilizing floor

So a fully robust solution requires a function:

function truncate_number( $number, $precision = 2) {
    // Zero causes issues, and no need to truncate
    if ( 0 == (int)$number ) {
        return $number;
    }
    // Are we negative?
    $negative = $number / abs($number);
    // Cast the number to a positive to solve rounding
    $number = abs($number);
    // Calculate precision number for dividing / multiplying
    $precision = pow(10, $precision);
    // Run the math, re-applying the negative value to ensure returns correctly negative / positive
    return floor( $number * $precision ) / $precision * $negative;
}

Results from the above function:

echo truncate_number(2.56789, 1); // 2.5
echo truncate_number(2.56789);    // 2.56
echo truncate_number(2.56789, 3); // 2.567

echo truncate_number(-2.56789, 1); // -2.5
echo truncate_number(-2.56789);    // -2.56
echo truncate_number(-2.56789, 3); // -2.567

New Correct Answer

Use the PHP native function bcdiv

echo bcdiv(2.56789, 1, 1);  // 2.5
echo bcdiv(2.56789, 1, 2);  // 2.56
echo bcdiv(2.56789, 1, 3);  // 2.567
echo bcdiv(-2.56789, 1, 1); // -2.5
echo bcdiv(-2.56789, 1, 2); // -2.56
echo bcdiv(-2.56789, 1, 3); // -2.567

floor(2.500000550 * 100) / 100;

This should do your task...


You're requesting a function that returns "2.50" and not 2.5, so you aren't talking about arithmetic here but string manipulation. Then preg_replace is your friend:

$truncatedVar = preg_replace('/\.(\d{2}).*/', '.$1', $var);

// "2.500000050" -> "2.50", "2.509" -> "2.50", "-2.509" -> "2.50", "2.5" -> "2.5"

If you want to do it with arithmetic, simply use:

$truncatedVar = round($var * 100) / 100);

// "2.500000050" -> "2.5", "2.599" -> "2.59", "-2.599" -> "2.59"