This library can be used for doing math with Money. Key features:
- Uses the Ecmascript bigint type.
- Written in Typescript.
- Loosely follows Martin Fowler's Money Type from "Patterns of Enterprise Application Architecture".
- Faster than Money packages that use non-native bigdecimal libraries.
- All rounding is done via the "Bankers Rounding" (a.k.a. "round half to even") by default, but different rounding strategies can be specified.
- Uses 20 decimals for all calculations.
Most 'money' libraries on NPM only use 2 digits for precision, or use Javacript's "number" and will quickly overflow.
The only comparible library I found was big-money. It's probably
the best alternative if your Javascript environment doesn't have support
for bigint
yet.
My simple benchmark calculates a ledger with 1 million entries.
bigint-money | big-money
ledger 816 ms | 43.201 ms
% 100 % | 5294 %
If you want to run it yourself, you can find my test script in the bench/
directory.
npm i bigint-money
Creating a money object.
import Money from 'bigint-money';
const foo = new Money('5', 'USD');
It's possible to create a new money object with a Number as well
const foo = new Money(5, 'USD');
However, if you pass it a number that's 'unsafe' such as a float, an error will be thrown:
const foo = new Money(.5, 'USD');
// UnsafeIntegerException
Once you have a Money
object, you can use toFixed()
to output
a string.
const foo = new Money('5', 'USD');
console.log(foo.toFixed(2)); // 5.00
You can use .add()
and .subtract()
on it:
const foo = new Money('5', 'USD');
const bar = foo.add('10');
All Money
objects are immutable. Calling those functions does
not change the original value:
console.log(foo.toFixed(2), bar.toFixed(2));
// 5.00 1.00
You can also pass Money
objects to subtract
and add
:
const startBalance = new Money(1000, 'USD');
const salary = new Money(2000, 'USD');
const newBalance = startBalance.add(salary);
If you try to add money from different currencies, an error will be thrown:
new Money(1000, 'USD').add( new Money( 50000, 'YEN' ));
// IncompatibleCurencyError
Division and multiplication:
// Division
const result = new Money(10).divide(3);
// Multiplication
const result = new Money('2000').multiply('1.25');
// Powers
const result = new Money(2).pow(8);
The Money object has the following functions for comparisons:
isLesserThan
isGreaterThan
isEqual
isLesserThanOrEqual
isGreaterThanOrEqual
All of them can take a (safe) number, a string or another Money
object and
return a boolean.
There is also a compare()
function that returns -1
, 0
or -1
depending
on if the passed argument was more, equal or less than the object.
const money1 = new Money('1.00', 'EUR');
money.compare(2); // Returns -1
money.compare(1); // Returns 0
money.compare(0); // Returns 1
money.compare('0.01'); // returns -1
money.compare(new Money('1.000005', 'EUR')); // returns 1
money.compare(new Money('1', 'CAD')); // throws IncompatibleCurrencyError
The idea is that if the object is smaller than the passed one, -1
returned.
0
is returned if they're equal and 1
is returned if the passed value is
higher.
This makes it easy to sort:
const values = [
new Money('1', 'USD'),
new Money('2', 'USD')
];
values.sort( (a, b) => a.compare(b) );
When splitting money in parts, it might be possible to lose a penny.
For example, when dividing $1 between 3 people, each person gets
$ 0.33
but there's a spare $ 0.01
.
The allocate function splits a Money value in even parts, but the remainder is distributed over the parts round-robin.
const earnings = new Money(100, 'USD');
console.log(
earnings.allocate(3, 2);
);
// Results in 3 Money objects:
// 33.34
// 33.33
// 33.33
Splitting debts (negative values) also works as expected.
The second argument of the allocate function is the precision. Basically the number of digits you are interested in.
For USD and most currencies this is 2. It's required to pass this argument because the Money object can't guess the desired precision.
By default this library uses 'round half to even' aka 'bankers rounding', but a different rounding method may be specified in the constructor.
import { Money, Round } from 'bigint-money';
const m = new Money(100, 'USD', Round.HALF_AWAY_FROM_0);
Common rounding techniques round to the nearest integer, but require a
tie-breaker for the 0.5
case. These are rounding options for that case:
Round.HALF_TO_EVEN
- The defaultRound.BANKERS
- Alias of 'HALF_TO_EVEN'Round.AWAY_FROM_0
- Round away from 0. (up if positive, down if negative)Round.HALF_TOWARDS_0
- Round towards 0. (down if positive, up if negative).
These rounding options don't always go the nearest integer
Round.TOWARDS_0
- Always rounds towards 0. This effectively just drops the fraction.Round.TRUNCATE
- Alias forTOWARDS_0
.
Using floating points for money can be problematic when rounding, you don't always get what you expect.
Because of this, developers tend to multiply their currencies by a 100, so instead of 5 dollars, they might count 500 cents.
This ensures that there are no rounding problems.
However, this might start to get problematic if a lot of digits are needed. Javascript automatically converts integers to floats once they are larger than 9,007,199,254,740,991.
When counting cents instead of dollars, this still gives us a maximum of 90 trillion dollars. Some financial calculations require more more precision than cents though.
For example, there are cryptocurrencies such as Monero that count up 12 digits. This means if we want to precisely count monero, this gives us a maxium of 9007 monero, which currently is around $390,000 USD.
Even in traditional accounting and finance, it might be required to have more significant digits.
Traditionally this is solved in Javascript by using one of the 'bigint' or bignumber' libraries. Some examples:
The way these libraries work is that they use strings for numbers, split the number up somehow and do arthimetic sometimes 1 digit at a time.
This is fairly complex, and not very fast.
Future versions of Ecmascript will have support for a bigint type. This type is a new type of 'number', but unlike the 'Number' type it doesn't automatically convert to floating point numbers and can be extremely large.
The way you might see a bigint in a source file is like this:
const foo = 10n + 5n;
The n
prefix tells the javascript engine this is no Number
,
but a Bigint
.
There's a lot more info on the Google Blog.