Java float 123.129456 to 123.12 without rounding
When you use DecimalFormat
be aware to the fact that many languages uses "," instead of "." for float. So while you will format your float to "0.00" it will become "0,00" in certain locales (such as German and Polish). This will cause a NullPointerException
while you will use this new formatted float in android applications. So what I did in order to cut and not round is to cast it to int after multiply it with 100 then recast it back to float and divide it to 100
This is the line:
myFloat = (float)((int)( myFloat *100f))/100f;
You can try it with log:
float myFloat = 12.349;
myFloat = (float)((int)( myFloat *100f ))/100f;
Log.d(TAG, " myFloat = "+ myFloat); //you will get myFloat = 12.34
This will cut myFloat two places after the decimal point to format of ("0.00")
it will not round it like this line (myFloat = Math.round(myFloat *100.0)/100.0;
) it will just cut it.
Do keep in mind that float are floating point values. So there might not even be an exact two decimal representation for a certain number.
Having said that, you might try something like:
float f = -8.022222f;
BigDecimal bd = new BigDecimal(f);
BigDecimal res = bd.setScale(2, RoundingMode.HALF_UP);
f = res.floatValue();
System.out.println(f);
You might need to use a different RoundingMode
though. Depends on what you want.
First of all, there is no guarantee that just because a float can represent a.bcde
exactly, it is guaranteed to be able to represent a.bc
exactly.
So if you're after just the printing part, how about doing it with some string-manipulation? Find the decimal point using indexOf
and extract the part with two decimals, using substring
.