I have a UITextField that receives numeric input from the user in my application. The values from this textfield then get converted into currency format using NSNumberFormatter within my shouldChangeCharactersInRange delegate method. When I enter the number "12345678", the number gets correctly converted to $123456.78 (the numbers are entered one digit at a time, and up to this point, everything works smoothly). However, when I enter another digit after this (e.g. 9), rather than displaying "1234567.89", the number "1234567.88" is displayed. If I enter another number after that, a totally different numbers after this (I'm using the number key pad in the application to enter the numbers. Here is the code that I have:
NSNumberFormatter *formatter = [[NSNumberFormatter alloc] init];
[formatter setNumberStyle:NSNumberFormatterCurrencyStyle];
modifiedValue = [formatter stringFromNumber:[NSNumber numberWithFloat:[modifiedValue floatValue]]];
textField.text = modifiedValue;
The line that causes this unusual conversion is this one:
modifiedValue = [formatter stringFromNumber:[NSNumber numberWithFloat:[modifiedValue floatValue]]];
Can anyone see why this is?
It's likely to be a rounding error when doing the string->float conversion. You shouldn't use floats when dealing with currency. You could use a
NSDecimalNumber
instead.You may also consider making the number formatter lenient - often helps with user entered data.
When I'm running number conversions to currency, I usually run this code:
The link explaining this is Re-Apply currency formatting to a UITextField on a change event
Hope this works!