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- moneysafe
- moneysafe/src/index.js
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Readme
Money$afe
Convenient, safe money calculations in JS.
Status - Developer Preview
Money$afe has not yet been tested in production at scale.
What is it?
Writing software that deals with money is a bit of a pain in JavaScript. Money-safe calculations are harder than they should be.
Why? Because JavaScript Numbers are IEEE 754 64-bit floating point. The result is that we can't safely add money because the decimal will get skewered by floating point rounding errors.
.2 + .1 === .3; // falseHowever, this problem effectively goes away if you perform the same calculations in arbitrary precision units. Money$afe converts your dollar values into BigNumbers and then exposes arithmetic operations like add, multiply, and divide.
With Money$afe:
add($(.1), $(.2)).toNumber() === $(.3).toNumber();Even better, there's a convenient ledger form for common calculations like shopping carts:
$$(
$(40),
$(60),
// subtract discount
subtractPercent(20),
// add tax
addPercent(10)
).toNumber(); // 88Known Issues
This code was written in ES6, and no attempt has been made to compile it for older browsers. This should not be a problem in any modern evergreen browser, but it will likely throw errors in old IE and old versions of Safari. You have been warned. If you want to run the code in other browsers, you'll need to compile to ES5 yourself.
Values are stored in arbitrary precision using BigNumber, so you can perform accurate calculations for cryptocurrencies such as Bitcoin or Ethereum which have 8 and 18 decimal precision, respectively. By way of contrast, JavaScript's native number type is IEEE 754 with 16 digits of decimal precision.
To recap:
- By default, all math operations automatically use arbitrary precision big numbers internally.
- You can get the value in a number type using
.toNumber().
Getting Started
Install moneysafe:
npm install --save moneysafeImport the functions you need:
import { $ } from 'moneysafe';
import { $$, subtractPercent, addPercent } from 'moneysafe/ledger';OR:
const { $ } = require('moneysafe');
const { $$, subtractPercent, addPercent } = require('moneysafe/ledger');Enjoy:
$$(
$(40),
$(60),
// subtract discount
subtractPercent(20),
// add tax
addPercent(10)
).toNumber(); // 88How does Money$afe work?
It works by converting currency amounts into BigNumbers and delegating arithmetic operations to it, which guarantees precision to the number of decimals specified for the currency you are working with.
Two currencies are provided out-of-the-box, dollars (precise to 2 decimal places, exposed via the $ utility) and Ethereum (precise to 18 decimal places, exposed via the ethereum utility), but you can create your own via the createCurrency factory:
import { createCurrency } from 'moneysafe';
const bitcoin = createCurrency({ decimals: 8 });$(dollars) => Money
The $() factory takes a value in dollars and lifts it into the money object type.
$(dollars: n) => MoneyExample:
$(20).toFixed(); // '20.00'Once a value is represented as money, you can still operate on it using normal JavaScript operators - however, doing so will be subject to JavaScript Number coercion and its inherent rounding problems. You should use the arithmetic functions provided to guarantee precision instead:
// using JavaScript operators
$(0.1) + $(0.2); // 0.30000000000000004
// using Money arithmetic functions
$(0.1).plus(0.2).valueOf(); // 0.3Migrating from version 1
In version 1, Money$afe would lift dollar amounts into cents, which would allow you to use normal JavaScript operators for arithmetic and then convert the value back into dollars (rounded to the nearest cent) using a in$ utility.
Since Money$afe no longer lifts amounts into cents (in order to support more currencies), the in$ utility has been removed.
Since version 2, we recommend using only the provided arithmetic functions (instead of normal JavaScript operators) when working with Money types, and there is no need to convert a lifted Money type back into a dollar amount.
If you want to round a Money value to its nearest supported significant digit, you can use money.toFixed(), combined with JavaScript Number coercion if necessary:
// v2 example
import { $ } from 'moneysafe';
const string = $(-45).div(99).toFixed(); // '-0.45'
const number = +string; // -0.45For sake of comparison, here's an example of what this might have looked like using Money$afe v1:
// v1 example - this no longer works!
import { in$, $ } from 'moneysafe';
const number = in$($(-45) / 99); // -0.45$ Static Props
$.of()
Takes a value and lifts it into the Money object type. Not rounded.
$.of(amount) => MoneyExample:
$.of(20.2).valueOf(); // 20.2
$.of(1.635).valueOf(); // 1.635
$.of(.1 + .2).valueOf(); // 0.30000000000000004The Money Type
The Money type is a function object returned by the createCurrency factory. The type itself is a function that takes an amount in number or string format and returns a new Money object.
money(amount) => MoneyExample:
const a = $(20);
const b = $(10);
const c = a(b);
console.log(+c); // 30The result is that standard function composition acts like addition. The following are equivalent:
import pipe from 'lodash.flow';
import { $ } from 'moneysafe';
{
const a = $(20);
const b = $(10);
const c = a(b);
console.log(+c); // 30
}
{
const c = pipe(
$(20),
$(10)
)($(0));
console.log(+c);
}This is what makes the handy ledger syntax possible. $$ is just a thin wrapper around a standard function composition:
import { $$, subtractPercent, addPercent } from 'moneysafe/ledger';
+$$(
$(40),
$(60),
// subtract discount
subtractPercent(20),
// add tax
addPercent(10)
) // 88money.add()
Takes an amount and returns a money instance with the sum of the stored value and the amount.
money.add(amount: Money) => MoneyExample:
$(10).add($(5)).toNumber() // 15money.minus()
Takes an amount and returns a money instance with the difference between the stored value and the amount.
money.minus(amount: Money) => MoneyExample:
$(10).minus($(5)).toNumber() // 5
$(10).minus(500).toNumber() // 5
$(0).minus($(5)).toNumber() // -5money.toNumber(), money.valueOf()
Convert a Money object to JavaScript Number format (IEEE 754 floating point). Note: JavaScript number precision is limited to 16 decimal digits.
money.toNumber() => NumberExample:
$(2000).toNumber(); // 2000money.abs()
Returns a Money object which contains the absolute value.
money.abs() => MoneyExample:
$('-8').abs().toString() === $('8').toString(); // truemoney.toString()
Convert a Money object to a String. Warning: This isn't a properly localized currency string suitable for display to users. Please use a good i18n library and/or exchange rate API to convert to localized currency.
money.toString() => StringExample:
$(2000).toString(); // "2000"money.map()
Apply a function of type BigNumber => BigNumber in the context of the Money object.
This allows you to implement arbitrary operations for Money objects, which you
can apply by mapping them. Note: money.map() obeys the functor laws.
money.map(f: BigNumber => BigNumber) => MoneyExample:
const pow = exp => m => Array.from(
{ length: exp }, x => m
).reduce((a, b) => a.times(b));
+$(2).map(pow(2)); // 4Utility functions
add()
Take any number of money objects and return the sum.
add(...Money) => MoneyExample:
add($('0.1'), $('0.2')).toString() === '0.30'; // truemultiply()
Take any number of money objects and return the product.
multiply(...Money) => MoneyExample:
multiply($(2), $(4)).toString() === '8.00'; // trueDivide
Take a dividend and divisor and return the quotient.
divide(dividend: Money, divisor: Money) => MoneyExample:
divide($(8), $(2)).toString() === '4.00'; // trueLess Than
Take a base and a comparand and return whether the comparand is less than the base.
lt(base: Money, comparand: Money) => booleanExample:
lt($(7), $(7.009)) === true; // true
lt($(7), $(7)) === false; // false
lt($(7), $(6.991)) === false; // falseGreater Than
Take a base and a comparand and return whether the comparand is greater than the base.
gt(base: Money, comparand: Money) => booleanExample:
gt($(7), $(7.009)) === false; // false
gt($(7), $(7)) === false; // false
gt($(7), $(6.991)) === true; // trueLess Than or Equal to
Take a base and a comparand and return whether the comparand is less than or equal the base.
lte(base: Money, comparand: Money) => booleanExample:
lte($(7), $(7.009)) === true; // true
lte($(7), $(7)) === true; // true
lte($(7), $(6.991)) === false; // falseGreater Than or Equal to
Take a base and a comparand and return whether the comparand is greater than or equal the base.
gte(base: Money, comparand: Money) => booleanExample:
gte($(7), $(7.009)) === false; // false
gte($(7), $(7)) === true; // true
gte($(7), $(6.991)) === true; // true$$ Ledger
Takes any number of money objects (or functions of type Money => Money) and returns a money object containing the sum.
$$(...Money) => MoneyExample:
import { $ } from 'moneysafe';
import { $$ } from 'moneysafe/ledger';
$$(
$(40),
$(60),
$(-5)
).toNumber(); // 95addPercent()
Takes a percent x as a number and the current value in cents (curried), and returns a new money object representing the sum of the current value and x% of the current value.
addPercent(percent: n) => (amount: Money) => MoneyExample:
import { $ } from 'moneysafe';
import { $$, addPercent } from 'moneysafe/ledger';
const total = $$(
$(40),
$(60),
addPercent(10)
);
console.log(
total.toNumber() // 110
);subtractPercent()
Takes a percent x as a number and the current value in cents (curried), and returns a new money object representing the difference between the current value and x% of the current value.
subtractPercent(percent: n) => (Money) => MoneyExample:
import { $ } from 'moneysafe';
import { $$, subtractPercent } from 'moneysafe/ledger';
const total = $$(
$(40),
$(60),
subtractPercent(10)
);
console.log(
total.toNumber() // 90
);