'use strict'; var string = require('../../utils/string'); function factory (type, config, load, typed) { /** * Format a value of any type into a string. * * Syntax: * * math.format(value) * math.format(value, options) * math.format(value, precision) * math.format(value, callback) * * Where: * * - `value: *` * The value to be formatted * - `options: Object` * An object with formatting options. Available options: * - `notation: string` * Number notation. Choose from: * - 'fixed' * Always use regular number notation. * For example '123.40' and '14000000' * - 'exponential' * Always use exponential notation. * For example '1.234e+2' and '1.4e+7' * - 'engineering' * Always use engineering notation. * For example '123.4e+0' and '14.0e+6' * - 'auto' (default) * Regular number notation for numbers having an absolute value between * `lower` and `upper` bounds, and uses exponential notation elsewhere. * Lower bound is included, upper bound is excluded. * For example '123.4' and '1.4e7'. * - `precision: number` * A number between 0 and 16 to round the digits of the number. In case * of notations 'exponential' and 'auto', `precision` defines the total * number of significant digits returned and is undefined by default. * In case of notation 'fixed', `precision` defines the number of * significant digits after the decimal point, and is 0 by default. * - `exponential: Object` * An object containing two parameters, {number} lower and {number} upper, * used by notation 'auto' to determine when to return exponential * notation. Default values are `lower=1e-3` and `upper=1e5`. Only * applicable for notation `auto`. * - `fraction: string`. Available values: 'ratio' (default) or 'decimal'. * For example `format(fraction(1, 3))` will output '1/3' when 'ratio' is * configured, and will output `0.(3)` when 'decimal' is configured. * - `callback: function` * A custom formatting function, invoked for all numeric elements in `value`, * for example all elements of a matrix, or the real and imaginary * parts of a complex number. This callback can be used to override the * built-in numeric notation with any type of formatting. Function `callback` * is called with `value` as parameter and must return a string. * * When `value` is an Object: * * - When the object contains a property `format` being a function, this function * is invoked as `value.format(options)` and the result is returned. * - When the object has its own `toString` method, this method is invoked * and the result is returned. * - In other cases the function will loop over all object properties and * return JSON object notation like '{"a": 2, "b": 3}'. * * When value is a function: * * - When the function has a property `syntax`, it returns this * syntax description. * - In other cases, a string `'function'` is returned. * * Examples: * * math.format(6.4); // returns '6.4' * math.format(1240000); // returns '1.24e6' * math.format(1/3); // returns '0.3333333333333333' * math.format(1/3, 3); // returns '0.333' * math.format(21385, 2); // returns '21000' * math.format(12.071, {notation: 'fixed'}); // returns '12' * math.format(2.3, {notation: 'fixed', precision: 2}); // returns '2.30' * math.format(52.8, {notation: 'exponential'}); // returns '5.28e+1' * math.format(12400, {notation: 'engineering'}); // returns '12.400e+3' * * function formatCurrency(value) { * // return currency notation with two digits: * return '$' + value.toFixed(2); * * // you could also use math.format inside the callback: * // return '$' + math.format(value, {notation: 'fixed', precision: 2}); * } * math.format([2.1, 3, 0.016], formatCurrency}; // returns '[$2.10, $3.00, $0.02]' * * See also: * * print * * @param {*} value Value to be stringified * @param {Object | Function | number} [options] Formatting options * @return {string} The formatted value */ var format = typed('format', { 'any': string.format, 'any, Object | function | number': string.format }); format.toTex = undefined; // use default template return format; } exports.name = 'format'; exports.factory = factory;