How do you format a float in C++ to output to two decimal places rounded up? I\'m having no luck with setw
and setprecision
as my compiler just tel
This is a little dirty...
template <typename T>
string sFormat(const char *f, T value)
{
char buffer[64];
snprintf(buffer, sizeof(buffer), f, value);
return string(buffer);
}
And do things like this :
cout << "Result :" << sFormat(" %5.2f", 3.14) << sFormat(" %5d", 2300) << endl;
To also include the trailing zero, it isn't sufficient to set the precision. You also have to change the floating point format to fixed format, which uses the number of digits as told by setprecision
as the number of digits after the decimal point:
std::cout << std::fixed << std::setprecision(2) << v;
Working online example code
You need to include <iomanip>
and provide namespace scope to setw and setprecision
#include <iomanip>
std::setw(2)
std::setprecision(5)
try:
cout.precision(5);
cout << "Total : " << setw(4) << floor(total*100)/100 << endl;
or
cout << "Total : " << setw(4) << ceil(total*10)/10 << endl;
iostream provides precision function, but to use setw, you may need to include extra header file.
Use cout << fixed
or cout.setf(ios::fixed)
, and std::cout.precision(<# of decimal digits>)
as in the following (using the Clang-503.0.40 compiler included with OSX Mavericks):
#include <iostream>
int main()
{
using namespace std;
float loge = 2.718;
double fake = 1234567.818;
cout << fixed;
cout.precision(2);
cout << "loge(2) = " << loge << endl;
cout << "fake(2) = " << fake << endl;
cout.precision(3);
cout << "loge(3) = " << loge << endl;
cout << "fake(3) = " << fake << endl;
}
The output from this is (note the rounding):
loge(2) = 2.72
fake(2) = 1234567.82
loge(3) = 2.718
fake(3) = 1234567.818
This is the simple version. In lieu of using cout << fixed;
, you can use cout.setf(ios::fixed);
(for displaying scientific notation, replace fixed with scientific; both will set the number of digits to the right of the decimal point). Note the cout.precision() is also used to set the number of digits displayed in total on either side of the decimal point if the format flags do not include fixed or scientific. There are tutorials for this on the Internet.
If you want the trailing zero from rounding, you can use the C function printf
.
#include <iostream>
#include <cstdio>
int main() {
float v = 12.3961;
std::printf("%.2f",v); //prints 12.40
}
Compared to:
#include <iostream>
#include <iomanip>
int main() {
float v = 12.3961;
std::cout << std::setprecision(4) << v; //prints 12.4
}