17
Jul
2009
Java formatting a number with leading zeroes
By Eric Downing. Filed in Java, Programming |Recently, I had a Java project that needed to encode a set of numbers and I needed a fixed number of digits used for each number. I found the DecimalFormat class a good solution for my needs.
Here is a snippet of code to show a simple way to format a number with a fixed number of digits.
import java.text.DecimalFormat;
class TestEncoder
{
public static void main(String[] args)
{
// This program expects one integer
// argument and places it in the num1
// variable. This program is not very
// robust as to watch for no arguments
// or to check if the argument is not
// an integer.
String num1 = args[0];
String output;
// This creates the Decimal Format instance
// and assigns the formatting that we want
// to use, in this case three characters .
DecimalFormat dfmt =
new DecimalFormat("000");
// This does the work of formatting the number
// passed in on the command line to be at least
// three digits.
output = dfmt.format(new Integer(num1));
// This just displays the results of the
// dfmt.format(new Integer(num1)) command.
System.out.println("Output: " + output);
}
}
The Decimal format allows for many more formatting options for numbers.
Make sure to look a the API docs for the version of Java that you are using:
http://java.sun.com/j2se/1.5.0/docs/api/java/text/DecimalFormat.html
Tags: formatting, Java