localizing currencies in iphone app - iphone

I am testing my app. All is working fine except when I change locales to Germany.
Basically you input 2 values in your local currency, a calculation happens and the user gets info back.
Users numeric inputs are handled well. That is, on "Editing Did End" a method executes that converts the number to its local currency equivalent. So if US users enters 10000 they will be returned $10,000.00. Here's the code:
- (NSMutableString *) formatTextValueToCurrency: (NSMutableString *) numberString {
NSNumber *aDouble = [NSNumber numberWithFloat: [numberString floatValue]];
NSMutableString *aString = [NSMutableString stringWithCapacity: 20];
NSLocale *theLocale;
NSNumberFormatter *currencyStyle = [[NSNumberFormatter alloc] init];
[currencyStyle setFormatterBehavior:NSNumberFormatterBehavior10_4];
[currencyStyle setNumberStyle:NSNumberFormatterCurrencyStyle];
theLocale = [NSLocale currentLocale];
[currencyStyle setLocale: theLocale];
[aString appendString: [currencyStyle stringFromNumber:aDouble]];
[currencyStyle release];
return aString;
}
However a problem occurs when I want to process the above currency values to get the user his/her info. That is, the app will now needs to get 10000 from $10,000.00 (or whatever currency) to send into the calculation method. Here's the code:
- (float) getValueFromCurrency: (id) sender {
NSNumber *aDouble = [NSNumber numberWithFloat: 0.0];
UITextField *textField = (UITextField *) sender;
NSMutableString *aString= [NSMutableString stringWithCapacity: 20];
NSLocale *theLocale;
float result;
NSNumberFormatter *currencyStyle = [[NSNumberFormatter alloc] init];
[currencyStyle setFormatterBehavior:NSNumberFormatterBehavior10_4];
[currencyStyle setNumberStyle:NSNumberFormatterCurrencyStyle];
theLocale = [NSLocale currentLocale];
[currencyStyle setLocale: theLocale];
NSLog(#"The locale is %#", currencyStyle.locale.localeIdentifier);
//Above NSLog looks good because it returns de_DE
[aString appendString: textField.text];
//The append from text field to string is good also
aDouble = [currencyStyle numberFromString: aString];
//For some reason, nil is returned
result = [aDouble floatValue];
[currencyStyle release];
return result;
}
For some reason the US, UK, Japanese and Irish locales are fine.
Continental European countries are not working.
Any advice on how to fix this would be great.

Given the code works for the US, UK, Japan and Ireland but not mainland Europe (Germany) I would check how you are handling the thousands and the decimal seperator.
That is, in the countries which work for your code the thousands seperator is the comma and the decimal is the point (full stop). So 10000 dollars and 50 cents would be 10,000.50.
In mainland Europe (Germany etc) the thousands seperator is the point (full stop) and the decimal seperator is the comma. So the above value in Germany would be 10.000,50
NSNumberFormatter has two methods you might want to look at:-
(NSString *)currencyDecimalSeparator
(NSString *)currencyGroupingSeparator
You can find a list of countries in WIKI (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Decimal_separator) for each of the formats and test to see if your problem is for one group only or not.
I hope that helps.
Cheers,
Kevin

Related

NSNumberFormatter's multiplier rounds down instead of showing fraction

I have configured an NSNumberFormatter to convert amounts that are stored as cents in an NSDictionary to euro's. Because they're stored as cents, I have set the formatter's multiplier to [NSNumber numberWithDouble:0.01]. However, when I try to display 304 euro cents as euro's I get € 3,00.
This leads me to believe that the multiplier is doing integer division instead of double division.
NSFormatter configuration
/**
Returns an NSNumberFormatter that can be used to display currency in euro's (as determined in The Netherlands).
*/
+ (NSNumberFormatter *)euroCurrencyFormatter
{
static NSNumberFormatter *numberFormatter = nil;
#synchronized(self) {
if (!numberFormatter) {
numberFormatter = [[NSNumberFormatter alloc] init];
[numberFormatter setNumberStyle:NSNumberFormatterCurrencyStyle];
[numberFormatter setMultiplier:[NSNumber numberWithDouble:0.01]];
NSLocale *nlLocale = [[NSLocale alloc] initWithLocaleIdentifier:#"nl_NL"];
[numberFormatter setLocale:nlLocale];
[nlLocale release];
}
}
return numberFormatter;
}
Calling the NSFormatter
cell.detailTextLabel.text = [[NSNumberFormatter euroCurrencyFormatter] stringFromNumber:[breakdown valueForKey:#"VatAmount"]]; // The VAT amount would be 304.
Result
€ 3,00
How can I stop errounous behaviour?
Try this code.
cell.detailTextLabel.text = [[NSNumberFormatter euroCurrencyFormatter] stringFromNumber:[NSNumber numberWithDouble:[[breakdown valueForKey:#"VatAmount"] doubleValue]]]; // The VAT amount would be 304.
As if you pass VAT as a integer you will get the number always in int format.
See the "Configuring Rounding Behavior" of the NSNumberFormatter reference.

Formatting float values

This is probably a stupid question but anyway.
I wan the number I set on my label to be formated nicely like this 20,000,000 .
How do I do this ?
For now I've set the number of decimal points to 0 so I just get the whole number without any places.
[NSString stringWithFormat:#"%.0f", slider.value];
you can use the following formatter:
-(void)setCurrencyFormat
{
NSNumberFormatter *CurrencyFormat = [[NSNumberFormatter alloc] init];
[CurrencyFormat setNumberStyle:NSNumberFormatterCurrencyStyle];
label.text= [CurrencyFormat stringFromNumber:[NSNumber numberWithDouble:billAmountInDouble]];
NSString *st1=[NSString stringWithFormat:#"%#",[CurrencyFormat stringFromNumber:[NSNumber numberWithDouble:individualTaxInDouble]]];
label.text=st1;
}
Check out the docs for NSNumberFormatter - you can do pretty much everything with that.

Showing formatted digits in textField iphone application

I am taking data from XMl file, the distance in xml is like
<distance>13.472987570222 km</distance>
Now i want to show just two digits after . operator. i.e i want to show in textField like 13.47 km. i have saved this distance digits in NSString *distance;
Thanks
float theDistance = [distance floatValue];
NSString *roundedDistance = [NSString stringWithFormat:#"%.2f",theDistance];
That will round to 2dp. :)
You can use very powerful class NSNumberFormatter:
NSNumberFormatter *numberFormatter = [[NSNumberFormatter alloc] init];
[numberFormatter setPositiveFormat:#"##0.## km"];
[numberFormatter setNegativeFormat:#"##0.## km"];
NSNumber *number = [NSNumber numberWithDouble:[distance doubleValue]];
NSString *formattedString = [numberFormatter stringFromNumber:number];
For more info read here
Strikes me you should really be converting the xml string into a float or some other such appropriate type and then using a format specifier when displaying the value.

UIKeyboardTypeDecimalPad - change comma to dot

I use this method to show keyboard with decimal separator
myTextField.keyboardType=UIKeyboardTypeDecimalPad;
How can I change comma to dot separator?
I have a Finnish locale. With comma, decimals doesn't work on my app.
-(IBAction)calculate {
float x = ([paino.text floatValue]) / ([pituus.text floatValue]) *10000;
label.text = [[NSString alloc] initWithFormat:#"%0.02f", x];
}
OK so you edit a text field using a numeric keyboard, which is dependent on the current locale, and thus get a text representation of a number, which is dependendt on the current locale, too. After editing has finished you read it and want to transform into a number.
To convert you would use NSNumberFormatter like this:
NSNumberFormatter *nf = [[NSNumberFormatter alloc] init];
You can setup the formatter as you will, setting locale (!), limits, formatting, decimal/grouping separator, number of decimal digits etc. Then you just use it:
float number = [nf numberFromString: field.text];
And that's all! Now you have the number even if the text includes comma, provided you let both: keyboard and formatter, to have the same format, same style - i.e. probably just let current locale be used all over the place.
EDIT
this is a currency formatter, that can convert between string and number for currencies:
NSNumberFormatter *nf = [[NSNumberFormatter alloc] init];
[nf setNumberStyle: NSNumberFormatterCurrencyStyle];
[nf setRoundingMode: NSNumberFormatterRoundHalfUp];
[nf setMaximumFractionDigits: 2]
this is a percentage formatter with 4 decimal places:
NSNumberFormatter *nf = [[NSNumberFormatter alloc] init];
[nf setNumberStyle: NSNumberFormatterPercentStyle];
[nf setRoundingMode: NSNumberFormatterRoundHalfUp];
[nf setMaximumFractionDigits: 4];
both in the current locale.
As you see you can define the style, digits, rounding behaviour and much more, depending on numbers you are trying to enter. For more details (it is really a lot you can do with the NSNumberFormatter) you should read Apple docs, it would go beyond the scope of SO answer to describe it all.
In your case, provided that paino and pituus are also UITextFields:
-(IBAction)calculate {
NSNumberFormatter *nf = [[NSNumberFormatter alloc] init];
[nf setRoundingMode: NSNumberFormatterRoundHalfUp];
[nf setMaximumFractionDigits: 2];
float npaino = [[nf numberFromString: paino.text] floatValue];
float npituus = [[nf numberFromString: pituus.text] floatValue];
float x = npaino] / npituus *10000;
label.text = [nf stringFromNumber: [NSNumber numberWithFloat: x]];
[nf release];
}
Now to avoid creating the formatter in each calculation you could make it an instance variable, since you need only one for those conversions.
Easyer that way:
[[yourField text] stringByReplacingOccurrencesOfString:#"," withString:#"."]
It will work in all ways and languages.
In your code, it will be:
-(IBAction)calculate {
float fPaino = [[paino.text stringByReplacingOccurrencesOfString:#"," withString:#"."] floatValue];
float x = fPaino / ([pituus.text floatValue]) *10000;
label.text = [[NSString alloc] initWithFormat:#"%0.02f", x];
}
Something else: are you sure to need an "alloc" for the result? As the label.text contains already its retain/release, you can simply make a [NSString stringWithFormat:#"%0.02f", x]

What is wrong with this string format (different behavior on simulator and device)?

I have this block of code executed when pressing a number:
NSString *currentValue = [#"" stringByAppendingFormat:#"%.02f", [[[[[textField text] stringByReplacingOccurrencesOfString:#"." withString:#""] stringByReplacingOccurrencesOfString:#"," withString:#""] stringByReplacingOccurrencesOfString:#" " withString:#""] doubleValue]/100.0f];
//I am using this to obtain always a number with 2 decimals.
NSNumberFormatter *f = [[NSNumberFormatter alloc] init];
[f setNumberStyle:NSNumberFormatterDecimalStyle];
[f setMinimumFractionDigits:2];
[f setMaximumFractionDigits:2];
[f setGroupingSeparator:#" "];
NSNumber *currentNumberValue = [f numberFromString:currentValue];
NSLog(#"1: %#", currentValue);
NSLog(#"2: %#", [currentNumberValue stringValue]);
Now if I run this in the simulator and press 3 I get the following results:
1: 0.03
2: 0.03
If I run it on the device I have:
1: 0.03
2: 0
So basically on the device the formated number is 0.
What I have also noticed is that on the simulator I get '.' as a decimal separator and on the device I have ','.
And because of this it never gets further. Any number I press it still remains 0.
What seems to be the problem?
Your device is apparently set to a European (or wherever) locale that uses , as the decimal separator. Try adding this line after the line where you alloc and init your number formatter:
[f setDecimalSeparator:#"."];
Or use the setLocale method (or change the locale your device is set to).
Try it like this:
NSString *currentValue = [textField text];
float currentFloat = [currentValue floatValue];
NSLog(#"%.2f",currentFloat); //string representation of floatValue
NSLog(#"%#",currentValue); //string currentValue