PHP float with 2 decimal places: .00

0.00 is actually 0. If you need to have the 0.00 when you echo, simply use number_format this way:

number_format($number, 2);

A float doesn't have 0 or 0.00 : those are different string representations of the internal (IEEE754) binary format but the float is the same.

If you want to express your float as "0.00", you need to format it in a string, using number_format :

$numberAsString = number_format($numberAsFloat, 2);

You can show float numbers

  • with a certain number of decimals
  • with a certain format (localised)

i.e.

$myNonFormatedFloat = 5678.9

$myGermanNumber = number_format($myNonFormatedFloat, 2, ',', '.'); // -> 5.678,90

$myAngloSaxonianNumber = number_format($myNonFormatedFloat, 2, '.', ','); // -> 5,678.90 

Note that, the

1st argument is the float number you would like to format

2nd argument is the number of decimals

3rd argument is the character used to visually separate the decimals

4th argument is the character used to visually separate thousands


As far as i know there is no solution for PHP to fix this. All other (above and below) answers given in this thread are nonsense.

The number_format function returns a string as result as written in PHP.net's own specification.

Functions like floatval/doubleval do return integers if you give as value 3.00 .

If you do typejuggling then you will get an integer as result.

If you use round() then you will get an integer as result.

The only possible solution that i can think of is using your database for type conversion to float. MySQL for example:

SELECT CAST('3.00' AS DECIMAL) AS realFloatValue;

Execute this using an abstraction layer which returns floats instead of strings and there you go.


JSON output modification

If you are looking for a solution to fix your JSON output to hold 2 decimals then you can probably use post-formatting like in the code below:

// PHP AJAX Controller

// some code here

// transform to json and then convert string to float with 2 decimals
$output = array('x' => 'y', 'price' => '0.00');
$json = json_encode($output);
$json = str_replace('"price":"'.$output['price'].'"', '"price":'.$output['price'].'', $json);

// output to browser / client
print $json;
exit();

Returns to client/browser:

{"x":"y","price":0.00}

Tags:

Php