In Java, I am trying to get DecimalFormat to enforce the sign on an exponent sign. When it is positive I need a plus sign to appear. From what I have read this seems like a no brainer, but for myself it always throws up an error. I appreciate that there may be other methods to achieve my goal, but I would like to understand why in this specific method the error is occurring.
Double result = 123.456;
String sresult;
//This works
NumberFormat formatter = new DecimalFormat("0.00000E00");
sresult = formatter.format(result);
System.out.println(sresult); //1.23456E02
//This doesn't work
formatter = new DecimalFormat("0.00000E+00"); //Want to enforce the sign to appear
sresult = formatter.format(result);
System.out.println(sresult); //Expected 1.23456E+02 but error occurs
The error which is thrown up:
Exception in thread "main" java.lang.IllegalArgumentException:
Malformed exponential pattern "0.00000E+00"
at java.text.DecimalFormat.applyPattern(Unknown Source)
at java.text.DecimalFormat.(Unknown Source)
at deccheck.main(deccheck.java:13)
I appreciate any insight. Thanks, Mark
I would like to extend the solution by j flemm. The "E" and "-" are no constants, they can be set as DecimalFormatSymbols. Therefore the substitutions must respect this:
public static String hoola(final String s, final DecimalFormatSymbols symbols) {
String result;
final String expo = symbols.getExponentSeparator();
final char minus = symbols.getMinusSign();
if (!s.contains(expo + minus)) { // don't blast a negative sign
result = s.replace(expo, expo + '+');
} else {result=s;}
return result;
}
/**
* @param args
*/
public static void main(final String[] args) {
final DecimalFormat decForm = (DecimalFormat) NumberFormat
.getInstance(Locale.GERMAN);
final DecimalFormatSymbols newSymbols = new DecimalFormatSymbols(
Locale.GERMAN);
newSymbols.setExponentSeparator("*10^");
newSymbols.setMinusSign('\u2212');
decForm.setDecimalFormatSymbols(newSymbols);
decForm.applyPattern("0.00000E00");
System.out.println(hoola(decForm.format(1234.567), decForm
.getDecimalFormatSymbols()));
System.out.println(hoola(decForm.format(000.00567), decForm
.getDecimalFormatSymbols()));
}
Result is:
Easy way:
formatter = new DecimalFormat("0.00000E00"); // Want to enforce the sign to appear
sresult = formatter.format(result);
if (!sresult.contains("E-")) { //don't blast a negative sign
sresult = sresult.replace("E", "E+");
}
System.out.println(sresult);
Outputs 1.23456E+02 for your example.
But I don't believe there's a way to do it from inside the DecimalFormat pattern. Or at least the javadoc doesn't indicate there is one.
Edit: trashgod brings up a good point. You'd probably want to get positive and negative signs from DecimalFormatSymbols if you plan on localizing this to different regions.
Edit 2: Andrei pointed out that E is also a localization variable. Shows what I know about localization.
If you love us? You can donate to us via Paypal or buy me a coffee so we can maintain and grow! Thank you!
Donate Us With