The Python Oracle

Currency formatting in Python

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Chapters
00:00 Currency Formatting In Python
00:11 Accepted Answer Score 285
00:26 Answer 2 Score 115
00:35 Answer 3 Score 58
01:04 Answer 4 Score 55
01:36 Thank you

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Full question
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/3209...

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Content licensed under CC BY-SA
https://meta.stackexchange.com/help/lice...

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Tags
#python #formatting #currency

#avk47



ACCEPTED ANSWER

Score 285


See the locale module.

This does currency (and date) formatting.

>>> import locale
>>> locale.setlocale( locale.LC_ALL, '' )
'English_United States.1252'
>>> locale.currency( 188518982.18 )
'$188518982.18'
>>> locale.currency( 188518982.18, grouping=True )
'$188,518,982.18'



ANSWER 2

Score 115


New in 2.7

>>> '{:20,.2f}'.format(18446744073709551616.0)
'18,446,744,073,709,551,616.00'

http://docs.python.org/dev/whatsnew/2.7.html#pep-0378




ANSWER 3

Score 58


Not quite sure why it's not mentioned more online (or on this thread), but the Babel package (and Django utilities) from the Edgewall guys is awesome for currency formatting (and lots of other i18n tasks). It's nice because it doesn't suffer from the need to do everything globally like the core Python locale module.

The example the OP gave would simply be:

>>> import babel.numbers
>>> import decimal
>>> babel.numbers.format_currency( decimal.Decimal( "188518982.18" ), "GBP" )
£188,518,982.18



ANSWER 4

Score 55


This is an ancient post, but I just implemented the following solution which:

  • Doesn't require external modules
  • Doesn't require creating a new function
  • Can be done in-line
  • Handles multiple variables
  • Handles negative dollar amounts

Code:

num1 = 4153.53
num2 = -23159.398598

print 'This: ${:0,.0f} and this: ${:0,.2f}'.format(num1, num2).replace('$-','-$')

Output:

This: $4,154 and this: -$23,159.40

And for the original poster, obviously, just switch $ for £