Use Math.round() :
Math.round(num * 100) / 100
Or to be more specific and to ensure things like 1.005 round correctly, use Number.EPSILON :
Math.round((num + Number.EPSILON) * 100) / 100
Answer from Brian Ustas on Stack OverflowUse Math.round() :
Math.round(num * 100) / 100
Or to be more specific and to ensure things like 1.005 round correctly, use Number.EPSILON :
Math.round((num + Number.EPSILON) * 100) / 100
If the value is a text type:
parseFloat("123.456").toFixed(2);
If the value is a number:
var numb = 123.23454;
numb = numb.toFixed(2);
There is a downside that values like 1.5 will give "1.50" as the output. A fix suggested by @minitech:
var numb = 1.5;
numb = +numb.toFixed(2);
// Note the plus sign that drops any "extra" zeroes at the end.
// It changes the result (which is a string) into a number again (think "0 + foo"),
// which means that it uses only as many digits as necessary.
It seems like Math.round is a better solution. But it is not! In some cases it will not round correctly:
Math.round(1.005 * 100)/100 // Returns 1 instead of expected 1.01!
toFixed() will also not round correctly in some cases (tested in Chrome v.55.0.2883.87)!
Examples:
parseFloat("1.555").toFixed(2); // Returns 1.55 instead of 1.56.
parseFloat("1.5550").toFixed(2); // Returns 1.55 instead of 1.56.
// However, it will return correct result if you round 1.5551.
parseFloat("1.5551").toFixed(2); // Returns 1.56 as expected.
1.3555.toFixed(3) // Returns 1.355 instead of expected 1.356.
// However, it will return correct result if you round 1.35551.
1.35551.toFixed(2); // Returns 1.36 as expected.
I guess, this is because 1.555 is actually something like float 1.55499994 behind the scenes.
Solution 1 is to use a script with required rounding algorithm, for example:
function roundNumber(num, scale) {
if(!("" + num).includes("e")) {
return +(Math.round(num + "e+" + scale) + "e-" + scale);
} else {
var arr = ("" + num).split("e");
var sig = ""
if(+arr[1] + scale > 0) {
sig = "+";
}
return +(Math.round(+arr[0] + "e" + sig + (+arr[1] + scale)) + "e-" + scale);
}
}
It is also at Plunker.
Note: This is not a universal solution for everyone. There are several different rounding algorithms. Your implementation can be different, and it depends on your requirements. See also Rounding.
Solution 2 is to avoid front end calculations and pull rounded values from the backend server.
Another possible solution, which is not a bulletproof either.
Math.round((num + Number.EPSILON) * 100) / 100
In some cases, when you round a number like 1.3549999999999998, it will return an incorrect result. It should be 1.35, but the result is 1.36.
Videos
» npm install decimal.js
Math.round(num * 10) / 10 works, and here is an example...
var number = 12.3456789
var rounded = Math.round(number * 10) / 10
// rounded is 12.3
If you want it to have one decimal place, even when that would be a 0, then add...
var fixed = rounded.toFixed(1)
// 'fixed' is always to one decimal point
// NOTE: .toFixed() returns a string!
// To convert back to number format
parseFloat(number.toFixed(2))
// 12.34
// but that will not retain any trailing zeros
// So, just make sure it is the last step before output,
// and use a number format during calculations!
Using this principle, for reference, here is a handy little round function that takes precision...
function round(value, precision) {
var multiplier = Math.pow(10, precision || 0);
return Math.round(value * multiplier) / multiplier;
}
... usage ...
round(12345.6789, 2) // 12345.68
round(12345.6789, 1) // 12345.7
... defaults to round to nearest whole number (precision 0) ...
round(12345.6789) // 12346
... and can be used to round to nearest 10 or 100, etc...
round(12345.6789, -1) // 12350
round(12345.6789, -2) // 12300
... and correct handling of negative numbers ...
round(-123.45, 1) // -123.4
round(123.45, 1) // 123.5
... and can be combined with toFixed to format consistently as string ...
round(456.7, 2).toFixed(2) // "456.70"
var number = 123.456;
console.log(number.toFixed(1)); // should round to 123.5