Converting Float to Dollars and Cents
First of all, I have tried this post (among others): Currency formatting in Python. It has no affect on my variable. My best guess is that it is because I am using Python 3 and that was code for Python 2. (Unless I overlooked something, because I am new to Python).
I want to convert a float, such as 1234.5, to a String, such as "$1,234.50". How would I go about doing this?
And just in case, here is my code which compiled, but did not affect my variable:
money = float(1234.5)
locale.setlocale(locale.LC_ALL, '')
locale.currency(money, grouping=True)
Also unsuccessful:
money = float(1234.5)
print(money) #output is 1234.5
'${:,.2f}'.format(money)
print(money) #output is 1234.5
In Python 3.x and 2.7, you can simply do this:
>>> '${:,.2f}'.format(1234.5)
'$1,234.50'
The :,
adds a comma as a thousands separator, and the .2f
limits the string to two decimal places (or adds enough zeroes to get to 2 decimal places, as the case may be) at the end.
Building on @JustinBarber's example and noting @eric.frederich's comment, if you want to format negative values like -$1,000.00
rather than $-1,000.00
and don't want to use locale
:
def as_currency(amount):
if amount >= 0:
return '${:,.2f}'.format(amount)
else:
return '-${:,.2f}'.format(-amount)
In python 3, you can use:
import locale
locale.setlocale( locale.LC_ALL, 'English_United States.1252' )
locale.currency( 1234.50, grouping = True )
Output
'$1,234.50'
Personally, I like this much better (which, granted, is just a different way of writing the currently selected "best answer"):
money = float(1234.5)
print('$' + format(money, ',.2f'))
Or, if you REALLY don't like "adding" multiple strings to combine them, you could do this instead:
money = float(1234.5)
print('${0}'.format(format(money, ',.2f')))
I just think both of these styles are a bit easier to read. :-)
(of course, you can still incorporate an If-Else to handle negative values as Eric suggests too)