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How can I format a String number to have commas and round?

You might want to look at the DecimalFormat class; it supports different locales (eg: in some countries that would get formatted as 1.000.500.000,57 instead).

You also need to convert that string into a number, this can be done with:

double amount = Double.parseDouble(number);

Code sample:

String number = "1000500000.574";
double amount = Double.parseDouble(number);
DecimalFormat formatter = new DecimalFormat("#,###.00");

System.out.println(formatter.format(amount));

This can also be accomplished using String.format(), which may be easier and/or more flexible if you are formatting multiple numbers in one string.

    String number = "1000500000.574";
    Double numParsed = Double.parseDouble(number);

    System.out.println(String.format("The input number is: %,.2f", numParsed));
    // Or
    String numString = String.format("%,.2f", numParsed);

For the format string "%,.2f" - "," means separate digit groups with commas, and ".2" means round to two places after the decimal.

For reference on other formatting options, see https://docs.oracle.com/javase/tutorial/java/data/numberformat.html


Once you've converted your String to a number, you can use

// format the number for the default locale
NumberFormat.getInstance().format(num)

or

// format the number for a particular locale
NumberFormat.getInstance(locale).format(num)

Given this is the number one Google result for format number commas java, here's an answer that works for people who are working with whole numbers and don't care about decimals.

String.format("%,d", 2000000)

outputs:

2,000,000

I've created my own formatting utility. Which is extremely fast at processing the formatting along with giving you many features :)

It supports:

  • Comma Formatting E.g. 1234567 becomes 1,234,567.
  • Prefixing with "Thousand(K),Million(M),Billion(B),Trillion(T)".
  • Precision of 0 through 15.
  • Precision re-sizing (Means if you want 6 digit precision, but only have 3 available digits it forces it to 3).
  • Prefix lowering (Means if the prefix you choose is too large it lowers it to a more suitable prefix).

The code can be found here. You call it like this:

public static void main(String[])
{
   int settings = ValueFormat.COMMAS | ValueFormat.PRECISION(2) | ValueFormat.MILLIONS;
   String formatted = ValueFormat.format(1234567, settings);
}

I should also point out this doesn't handle decimal support, but is very useful for integer values. The above example would show "1.23M" as the output. I could probably add decimal support maybe, but didn't see too much use for it since then I might as well merge this into a BigInteger type of class that handles compressed char[] arrays for math computations.


public void convert(int s)
{
    System.out.println(NumberFormat.getNumberInstance(Locale.US).format(s));
}

public static void main(String args[])
{
    LocalEx n=new LocalEx();
    n.convert(10000);
}

you can also use the below solution

public static String getRoundOffValue(double value){
    DecimalFormat df = new DecimalFormat("##,##,##,##,##,##,##0.00");
    return df.format(value);
}