NAME
Locale::Currency::Format - Perl functions for formatting monetary values
SYNOPSIS
use Locale::Currency::Format;
$amnt = currency_format('usd', 1000); # => 1,000.00 USD
$amnt = currency_format('eur', 1000, FMT_COMMON); # => EUR1.000,00
$amnt = currency_format('usd', 1000, FMT_SYMBOL); # => $1,000.00
$sym = currency_symbol('usd'); # => $
$sym = currency_symbol('gbp', SYM_HTML); # => £
The following example illustrates how to use Locale::Currency::Format
with Mason. Skip it if you are not interested in Mason. A simple Mason
component might look like this:
Total: <% 123456789, 'eur' |c %>
<%init>
use Locale::Currency::Format;
$m->interp->set_escape(c => \&escape_currency);
sub escape_currency {
my ($amnt, $code) = ${$_[0]} =~ /(.*?)([A-Za-z]{3})/;
${$_[0]} = currency_format($code, $amnt, FMT_HTML);
}
</%init>
DESCRIPTION
Locale::Currency::Format is a light-weight Perl module that allows one to display monetary values in the formats recognized internationally or locally depending on his wish.
currency_format(CODE, AMOUNT [, FORMAT])
-
currency_format takes two mandatory parameters, namely currency code and amount respectively, and optionally a third parameter indicating which format is desired. Upon failure, it returns undef and an error message is stored in $Locale::Currency::Format::error.
CODE - A 3-letter currency code as specified in ISO 4217. Note that old code such as GBP, FRF and so on can also be valid. AMOUNT - A numeric value. FORMAT - There are five different format options FMT_STANDARD, FMT_COMMON, FMT_SYMBOL, FMT_HTML and FMT_NAME. If it is omitted, the default format is FMT_STANDARD. FMT_STANDARD Ex: 1,000.00 USD FMT_SYMBOL Ex: $1,000.00 FMT_COMMON Ex: 1.000 Dong (Vietnam), BEF 1.000 (Belgium) FMT_HTML Ex: £1,000.00 (pound-sign HTML escape) FMT_NAME Ex: 1,000.00 US Dollar By default the trailing zeros after the decimal point will be added. To turn it off, do a bitwise B<or> of FMT_NOZEROS with one of the five options above. Ex: FMT_STANDARD | FMT_NOZEROS will give 1,000 USD
currency_symbol(CODE [, TYPE])
-
For conveniences, the function currency_symbol is provided for symbol lookup given a 3-letter currency code. Optionally, one can specify which format the symbol should be returned - Unicode-based character or HTML escape. Default is a Unicode-based character. Upon failure, it returns undef and an error message is stored in $Locale::Currency::Format::error.
CODE - A 3-letter currency code as specified in ISO 4217 TYPE - There are two available types SYM_UTF and SYM_HTML SYM_UTF returns the symbol (if exists) as an Unicode character SYM_HTML returns the symbol (if exists) as a HTML escape
A WORD OF CAUTION
Please be aware that some currencies might have missing common format. In that case, currency_format will fall back to FMT_STANDARD format.
Also, be aware that some currencies do not have monetary symbol.
As countries merge together or split into smaller ones, currencies can be added or removed by the ISO. Please help keep the list up to date by sending your feedback to the email address at the bottom.
To see the error, examine $Locale::Currency::Format::error use Locale::Currency::Format; my $value = currency_format('US', 1000); print $value ? $value : $Locale::Currency::Format::error or use Locale::Currency::Format qw(:DEFAULT $error); my $value = currency_format('US', 1000); print $value ? $value : $error
Lastly, please refer to perluniintro and perlunicode for displaying Unicode characters if you intend to use FMT_SYMBOL and currency_symbol. Otherwise, it reads "No worries, mate!"
SEE ALSO
Locale::Currency, Math::Currency, Number::Format, perluniintro, perlunicode
BUGS
If you find any inaccurate or missing information, please send your comments to tnguyen@cpan.org. Your effort is certainly appreciated!
1 POD Error
The following errors were encountered while parsing the POD:
- Around line 489:
You forgot a '=back' before '=head2'