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module ActionView
module Helpers #:nodoc:
# Provides methods for converting a numbers into formatted strings.
# Methods are provided for phone numbers, currency, percentage,
# precision, positional notation, and file size.
module NumberHelper
# Formats a +number+ into a US phone number. You can customize the format
# in the +options+ hash.
# * <tt>:area_code</tt> - Adds parentheses around the area code.
# * <tt>:delimiter</tt> - Specifies the delimiter to use, defaults to "-".
# * <tt>:extension</tt> - Specifies an extension to add to the end of the
# generated number
# * <tt>:country_code</tt> - Sets the country code for the phone number.
#
# number_to_phone(1235551234) => 123-555-1234
# number_to_phone(1235551234, :area_code => true) => (123) 555-1234
# number_to_phone(1235551234, :delimiter => " ") => 123 555 1234
# number_to_phone(1235551234, :area_code => true, :extension => 555) => (123) 555-1234 x 555
# number_to_phone(1235551234, :country_code => 1)
def number_to_phone(number, options = {})
number = number.to_s.strip unless number.nil?
options = options.stringify_keys
area_code = options["area_code"] || nil
delimiter = options["delimiter"] || "-"
extension = options["extension"].to_s.strip || nil
country_code = options["country_code"] || nil
begin
str = ""
str << "+#{country_code}#{delimiter}" unless country_code.blank?
str << if area_code
number.gsub!(/([0-9]{1,3})([0-9]{3})([0-9]{4}$)/,"(\\1) \\2#{delimiter}\\3")
else
number.gsub!(/([0-9]{1,3})([0-9]{3})([0-9]{4})$/,"\\1#{delimiter}\\2#{delimiter}\\3")
end
str << " x #{extension}" unless extension.blank?
str
rescue
number
end
end
# Formats a +number+ into a currency string. You can customize the format
# in the +options+ hash.
# * <tt>:precision</tt> - Sets the level of precision, defaults to 2
# * <tt>:unit</tt> - Sets the denomination of the currency, defaults to "$"
# * <tt>:separator</tt> - Sets the separator between the units, defaults to "."
# * <tt>:delimiter</tt> - Sets the thousands delimiter, defaults to ","
#
# number_to_currency(1234567890.50) => $1,234,567,890.50
# number_to_currency(1234567890.506) => $1,234,567,890.51
# number_to_currency(1234567890.506, :precision => 3) => $1,234,567,890.506
# number_to_currency(1234567890.50, :unit => "£", :separator => ",", :delimiter => "")
# => £1234567890,50
def number_to_currency(number, options = {})
options = options.stringify_keys
precision = options["precision"] || 2
unit = options["unit"] || "$"
separator = precision > 0 ? options["separator"] || "." : ""
delimiter = options["delimiter"] || ","
begin
parts = number_with_precision(number, precision).split('.')
unit + number_with_delimiter(parts[0], delimiter) + separator + parts[1].to_s
rescue
number
end
end
# Formats a +number+ as a percentage string. You can customize the
# format in the +options+ hash.
# * <tt>:precision</tt> - Sets the level of precision, defaults to 3
# * <tt>:separator</tt> - Sets the separator between the units, defaults to "."
#
# number_to_percentage(100) => 100.000%
# number_to_percentage(100, {:precision => 0}) => 100%
# number_to_percentage(302.0574, {:precision => 2}) => 302.06%
def number_to_percentage(number, options = {})
options = options.stringify_keys
precision = options["precision"] || 3
separator = options["separator"] || "."
begin
number = number_with_precision(number, precision)
parts = number.split('.')
if parts.at(1).nil?
parts[0] + "%"
else
parts[0] + separator + parts[1].to_s + "%"
end
rescue
number
end
end
# Formats a +number+ with grouped thousands using +delimiter+. You
# can customize the format using optional <em>delimiter</em> and <em>separator</em> parameters.
# * <tt>delimiter</tt> - Sets the thousands delimiter, defaults to ","
# * <tt>separator</tt> - Sets the separator between the units, defaults to "."
#
# number_with_delimiter(12345678) => 12,345,678
# number_with_delimiter(12345678.05) => 12,345,678.05
# number_with_delimiter(12345678, ".") => 12.345.678
def number_with_delimiter(number, delimiter=",", separator=".")
begin
parts = number.to_s.split('.')
parts[0].gsub!(/(\d)(?=(\d\d\d)+(?!\d))/, "\\1#{delimiter}")
parts.join separator
rescue
number
end
end
# Formats a +number+ with the specified level of +precision+. The default
# level of precision is 3.
#
# number_with_precision(111.2345) => 111.235
# number_with_precision(111.2345, 2) => 111.24
def number_with_precision(number, precision=3)
"%01.#{precision}f" % number
rescue
number
end
# Formats the bytes in +size+ into a more understandable representation.
# Useful for reporting file sizes to users. This method returns nil if
# +size+ cannot be converted into a number. You can change the default
# precision of 1 in +precision+.
#
# number_to_human_size(123) => 123 Bytes
# number_to_human_size(1234) => 1.2 KB
# number_to_human_size(12345) => 12.1 KB
# number_to_human_size(1234567) => 1.2 MB
# number_to_human_size(1234567890) => 1.1 GB
# number_to_human_size(1234567890123) => 1.1 TB
# number_to_human_size(1234567, 2) => 1.18 MB
def number_to_human_size(size, precision=1)
size = Kernel.Float(size)
case
when size == 1 : "1 Byte"
when size < 1.kilobyte: "%d Bytes" % size
when size < 1.megabyte: "%.#{precision}f KB" % (size / 1.0.kilobyte)
when size < 1.gigabyte: "%.#{precision}f MB" % (size / 1.0.megabyte)
when size < 1.terabyte: "%.#{precision}f GB" % (size / 1.0.gigabyte)
else "%.#{precision}f TB" % (size / 1.0.terabyte)
end.sub('.0', '')
rescue
nil
end
alias_method :human_size, :number_to_human_size # deprecated alias
deprecate :human_size => :number_to_human_size
end
end
end
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