How do I round an integer up to <nearest large number> in Ruby?
Say I h开发者_运维技巧ave any of the following numbers:
230957 or 83487 or 4785
What is a way in Ruby I could return them as 300000 or 90000 or 5000, respectively?
def round_up(number)
divisor = 10**Math.log10(number).floor
i = number / divisor
remainder = number % divisor
if remainder == 0
i * divisor
else
(i + 1) * divisor
end
end
With your examples:
irb(main):022:0> round_up(4785)
=> 5000
irb(main):023:0> round_up(83487)
=> 90000
irb(main):024:0> round_up(230957)
=> 300000
def round_to_significant_digit(i, significant_digits = 1)
exp = Math.log10(i).floor - (significant_digits - 1)
(i / 10.0 ** exp).round * 10 ** exp
end
>> [230957, 83487, 4785].collect{|i|round_to_significant_digit(i)}
=> [200000, 80000, 5000]
And for extra credit:
>> [230957, 83487, 4785].collect{|i|round_to_significant_digit(i, 2)}
=> [230000, 83000, 4800]
>> [230957, 83487, 4785].collect{|i|round_to_significant_digit(i, 3)}
=> [231000, 83500, 4790]
Math.round accepts negative numbers. If you are only looking for the nearest 10, you can do (my_num).round(-1)
.
The only drawback being that there's no way to incorporate ceil here, so it doesn't always round up -- 4.round(-1)
will return 0.
In Rails, you may also like the "number_to_human" helper, which automatically chooses a good dimension to round to.
http://api.rubyonrails.org/classes/ActionView/Helpers/NumberHelper.html#method-i-number_to_human
I haven't actually done any coding in Ruby, but you would be able to do that with a standard rounding function if you pushed it over to the digit you wanted first.
Example:
230957 / 100000(the resolution you want) = 2.30957
Round 2.30957 = 2
, or Round to Ceiling/Round value + 0.5
to get it to go to the upper value rather than the lower.
2 or 3 * 100000(the resolution you want) = 200000 or 300000 respectively.
Hope this helps!
It looks a little ugly, but as a first shot (rounds up everytime) ...
>> (("230957".split("").first.to_i + 1).to_s + \
("0" * ("230957".size - 1))).to_i
=> 300000
Better (rounds correct):
>> (230957 / 10 ** Math.log10(230957).floor) * \
10 ** Math.log10(230957).floor
=> 200000
Here is my version:
def round(num, nearest = nil, pivot = nil)
negative = num < 0
num = -num if negative
precision = Math.log10(num).to_i rescue 1
nearest ||= precision == 0 ? 10 : 10**precision
pivot ||= nearest
result = (num + pivot) / nearest * nearest
negative ? -result : result
end
This method is very bloted and looks so ugly... BUT... it handles a few edge cases that the others dont such as:
- 0
- values under 10
- negative numbers
- The pivot point can be changed
Here are some examples of usage:
round(0) # 0
round(1) # 10
round(9) # 10
round(10) # 20
round(-10) # -20
round(100) # 1000
round(1, 1000) # 1000
round(499, 1000, 500) # 0
round(500, 1000, 500) # 1000
A simple suggestion:
def nearest_large_number value
str = value.to_s.gsub(/^([0-9])/) { "#{$1}." }
multiplicator = ("1" + "0" * str.split('.')[1].length).to_i
str.to_f.ceil * multiplicator
end
To use it:
nearest_large_number 230957
=> 300000
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