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<?php | |
// Converts a number into a short version, eg: 1000 -> 1k | |
// Based on: http://stackoverflow.com/a/4371114 | |
function number_format_short( $n, $precision = 1 ) { | |
if ($n < 900) { | |
// 0 - 900 | |
$n_format = number_format($n, $precision); | |
$suffix = ''; | |
} else if ($n < 900000) { | |
// 0.9k-850k | |
$n_format = number_format($n / 1000, $precision); | |
$suffix = 'K'; | |
} else if ($n < 900000000) { | |
// 0.9m-850m | |
$n_format = number_format($n / 1000000, $precision); | |
$suffix = 'M'; | |
} else if ($n < 900000000000) { | |
// 0.9b-850b | |
$n_format = number_format($n / 1000000000, $precision); | |
$suffix = 'B'; | |
} else { | |
// 0.9t+ | |
$n_format = number_format($n / 1000000000000, $precision); | |
$suffix = 'T'; | |
} | |
// Remove unecessary zeroes after decimal. "1.0" -> "1"; "1.00" -> "1" | |
// Intentionally does not affect partials, eg "1.50" -> "1.50" | |
if ( $precision > 0 ) { | |
$dotzero = '.' . str_repeat( '0', $precision ); | |
$n_format = str_replace( $dotzero, '', $n_format ); | |
} | |
return $n_format . $suffix; | |
} | |
/* | |
Example Usage: | |
number_format_short(7201); // Output: 7.2k | |
Demo: | |
echo '<table>'; | |
for($d = 0; $d < 16; $d++ ) { | |
$n = intval("09" . str_repeat( "0", $d )); | |
$n = $n / 10; | |
echo number_format_short($n) .'<br>'; // 0.9 | |
$n = intval("1" . str_repeat( "0", $d )); | |
echo number_format_short($n) .'<br>'; // 1.0 | |
$n = intval("11" . str_repeat( "0", $d ));; | |
$n = $n / 10; | |
echo number_format_short($n) .'<br>'; // 1.1 | |
} | |
echo '</table>'; | |
Demo Output: | |
0.9 | |
1 | |
1.1 | |
9 | |
10 | |
11 | |
90 | |
100 | |
110 | |
0.9K | |
1K | |
1.1K | |
9K | |
10K | |
11K | |
90K | |
100K | |
110K | |
0.9M | |
1M | |
1.1M | |
9M | |
10M | |
11M | |
90M | |
100M | |
110M | |
0.9B | |
1B | |
1.1B | |
9B | |
10B | |
11B | |
90B | |
100B | |
110B | |
0.9T | |
1T | |
1.1T | |
9T | |
10T | |
11T | |
90T | |
100T | |
110T | |
900T | |
1,000T | |
1,100T | |
*/ |
@hassanamirkhan in your snippet
if ($n > 0 && $n < 1000) {
should beif ($n >= 0 && $n < 1000) {
to include the case when$n = 0
.So:
/** * @param $n * @return string * Use to convert large positive numbers in to short form like 1K+, 100K+, 199K+, 1M+, 10M+, 1B+ etc */ function number_format_short( $n ) { if ($n >= 0 && $n < 1000) { // 1 - 999 $n_format = floor($n); $suffix = ''; } else if ($n >= 1000 && $n < 1000000) { // 1k-999k $n_format = floor($n / 1000); $suffix = 'K+'; } else if ($n >= 1000000 && $n < 1000000000) { // 1m-999m $n_format = floor($n / 1000000); $suffix = 'M+'; } else if ($n >= 1000000000 && $n < 1000000000000) { // 1b-999b $n_format = floor($n / 1000000000); $suffix = 'B+'; } else if ($n >= 1000000000000) { // 1t+ $n_format = floor($n / 1000000000000); $suffix = 'T+'; } return !empty($n_format . $suffix) ? $n_format . $suffix : 0; }
@sandervanhooft yep we can add $n >= 0.
But if you check ternary condition in return statement it is already handling $n=0 case.
love this function thanks
I made an approach to use as a realtime facade in Laravel, but I've adapted it to be used in any project. Feel free to take a look here: https://gist.github.com/maurobaptista/1c7ec5e71bac9bd20137cd01d390bdaa
just use (new NumberFormatter('en_US', NumberFormatter::PADDING_POSITION))->format($count)
Division is more costly than multiplication, https://stackoverflow.com/questions/4125033/floating-point-division-vs-floating-point-multiplication#answer-4125074
For better performance use multiplication where its possible.
// Converts a number into a short version, eg: 1000 -> 1k
// Based on: http://stackoverflow.com/a/4371114
function number_format_short($n, $precision = 1) {
if ($n < 900) {
// 0 - 900
$n_format = number_format($n, $precision);
$suffix = '';
} elseif ($n < 900000) {
// 0.9k-850k
$n_format = number_format($n * 0.001, $precision);
$suffix = 'K';
} elseif ($n < 900000000) {
// 0.9m-850m
$n_format = number_format($n * 0.000001, $precision);
$suffix = 'M';
} elseif ($n < 900000000000) {
// 0.9b-850b
$n_format = number_format($n * 0.000000001, $precision);
$suffix = 'B';
} else {
// 0.9t+
$n_format = number_format($n * 0.000000000001, $precision);
$suffix = 'T';
}
// Remove unecessary zeroes after decimal. "1.0" -> "1"; "1.00" -> "1"
// Intentionally does not affect partials, eg "1.50" -> "1.50"
if ($precision > 0) {
$dotzero = '.' . str_repeat('0', $precision);
$n_format = str_replace($dotzero, '', $n_format);
}
return $n_format . $suffix;
}
I created a gist after reviewing the original method and included a Laravel Helper Class.
The match expression introduced in PHP 8.0 evaluates the respective result of the first arm whose condition evaluates to true. The default keyword is used to cover any remaining cases if needed. Here, the match expression replaced the if and else if conditions, making the function easier to read and more optimised. It also eliminates the need to call number_format multiple times with different parameters.
https://gist.github.com/DerekBuntin/f78de4eb1ad90bc3c33dcc61bd02d5b5
@DerekBuntin thanks 🍻! Your link is linked incorrectly and 404s - copy and pasting the URL works though!
https://gist.github.com/DerekBuntin/f78de4eb1ad90bc3c33dcc61bd02d5b5
@kingsloi strange, I just clicked the link and it took me through to the page? Glad you got there though :-)
@havutcuoglu, @hayjay and @sandervanhooft you're most welcome guys!