CurrencyEditText


Source link: https://github.com/BlacKCaT27/CurrencyEditText

CurrencyEditText

CurrencyEditText is an extension of Android's EditText view object. It is a module designed to provide ease-of-use when using an EditText field for gathering currency information from a user.

CurrencyEditText is designed to work with all ISO-3166 compliant locales (which should include all locales Android ships will).

If you find that a certain locale is causing issues, please open an Issue in the Issue Tracker.

Getting Started

Getting started is easy. Just add the library as a dependency in your projects build.gradle file. Be sure you've listed mavenCentral as a repository:

repositories {

  mavenCentral() 
}

 dependencies{

  compile 'com.github.blackcat27:library:2.0.2-SNAPSHOT' 
}

Alternatively, if you're having issues with mavenCentral, try JitPack:

repositories{

  maven {
 url "https://jitpack.io" 
}
 
}

 dependencies {

  compile 'com.github.BlacKCaT27:CurrencyEditText:2.0.2' 
}

Note: Users of the latest Android Studio Gradle plugin should migrate their build.gradle files to use 'implementation' instead of 'compile'.

Using The Module

Using the module is not much different from using any other EditText view. Simply define the view in your XML layout:

<com.blackcat.currencyedittext.CurrencyEditText
  android:layout_width="match_parent"
  android:layout_height="wrap_content"
  />

You're done! The CurrencyEditText module handles all the string manipulation and input monitoring required to allow for a clean, easy-to-use currency entry system.

In Action

In its default state, CurrencyEditText view appears as an EditText box with the hint set to the users local currency symbol.

As a user enters additional values, they will appear starting with the right-most digit, pushing older digit entries left as they type.

Depending on the users Locale and Language settings, the displayed text will automatically be formatted to the users local standard. For example, when the users selects "German", the Euro symbol appears on the right, as seen below.

Hints

By default, CurrencyEditText provides a 'hint' value for the text box. This default value is the Currency Code symbol for the users given Locale setting. This is useful for debugging purposes, as well as provides clean and easy to understand guidance to the user.

If you'd prefer to set your own hint text, simply set the hint the same way you would for any other EditText field. You can do this either in your XML layout or in code. To remove the hint entirely, set the hint to an empty string ("").

Attributes

By default, CurrencyEditText does not allow negative number input. This is due to the fact that by far the most common use-case for currency input involves transaction information, where the absolute value of the transaction is entered separately from declaring a deposit or withdrawl.

However, if you do need to support negative number input, you can enable it by setting the allow_negative_values attribute.

In xml:

<com.blackcat.currencyedittext.CurrencyEditText

android:layout_width="match_parent"

android:layout_height="wrap_content"

app:allow_negative_values="true"
  />

In java:

CurrencyEditText tb = (CurrencyEditText) findViewById(R.id.test);
 tb.setAllowNegativeValues(true);

You can also set the decimal digits position (see below) via xml or java

In xml:

<com.blackcat.currencyedittext.CurrencyEditText

android:layout_width="match_parent"

android:layout_height="wrap_content"

app:decimal_digits="0"
  />

In java:

CurrencyEditText tb = (CurrencyEditText) findViewById(R.id.test);
 tb.setDecimalDigits(0);

Retrieving and Handling Input

As CurrencyEditText is an extension of the EditText class, it contains all the same getters and setters that EditText provides.

To retrieve the fully formatted String value as shown to the user, simply call your CurrencyEditText objects getText() method.

However, you'll likely need to actually do something useful with the users input. To help developers more easily retrieve this information, CurrencyEditText provides the getRawValue() method. This method provides back the raw numeric values as they were input by the user, and should be treated as if it were a whole value of the users local currency. For example, if the text of the field is $13.37, this method will return a Long with a value of 1337, as penny is the lowest denomination for USD.

It is the responsibility of the calling application to handle this value appropriately. Keep in mind that dividing this number to convert it to some other denomination could possibly result in floating point rounding errors, and should be done with great caution.

To assist with needing to perform work on locale-specific values after retrieval, CurrencyEditText provides the getLocale() method which returns the locale currently being used by that instance for its formatting.

Locales

CurrencyEditText relies on a Locale object to properly format the given value. There are two Locale variables that are exposed via getters and setters on a given CurrencyEditText object: locale and defaultLocale.

locale is the users default locale setting based upon their Android configuration settings. This value is editable by the user in Android settings, as well as via the CurrencyEditText API. Note that this value, when retrieved from the end-users device, is not always compatible with ISO-3166. This is used as the "happy path" variable, but due to the potential lack of ISO-3166 compliance, CurrencyEditText will fall back to defaultLocale in the event of an error.

defaultLocale is a separate value which is treated as a fallback in the event that the provided locale value fails. This may occur due to the locale value not being part of the ISO-3166 standard. See Java.util.Locale.getISOCountries() for a list of supported values. Note that the list of supported values is hard-coded into each version of Java, therefore over time, the list of supported ISO's may change.

The default value for defaultLocale is Locale.US. Both this, and the locale value, can be overwritten using setters found on the CurrencyEditText object. Be very careful to ensure that should you override defaultLocale's value, you only use values supported by ISO-3166, or an IllegalArgumentException will be thrown by the formatter.

Formatting Values

If you'd like to retrieve a formatted version of a raw value you previously accepted from a user, use the formatCurrency() method of CurrencyEditText. It takes one parameter: a string representing the value you'd like to have formatted. It is expected that this value will be in the same format as the returning value from the getRawValue() method. For example:

//rawVal contains "1000" CurrencyEditText cet = new CurrencyEditText();

... user inputs "$10.00"
//rawVal is 1000 Long rawVal = cet.getRawValue();
  //formattedVal accepts "1000" and returns "$10.00" String formattedVal = cet.formatCurrency(Long.toString(rawVal));
  //or  String formattedVal = cet.formatCurrency(rawVal);

Decimal Digits

By default, the CurrencyEditText text formatter will use the locale object to obtain information about the expected currency. This includes the location of the decimal separator for lower denominations (e.g. dollars vs. cents). If you would like to alter the decimal placement position, you can use the setDecimalDigits() method. This is very useful in some cases, for instance, if you only wish to show whole dollar amounts.

CurrencyEditText cet = new CurrencyEditText();

... user inputs 1000
//currentText is "$10.00" String currentText = cet.getText();
  cet.setDecimalDigits(0);
  //newText is "$1,000" String newText = cet.getText();
 

DecimalDigits can also be set in the XML layout if you don't want to obtain a java reference to the view.

Note that the valid range of DecimalDigits is 0 - 340. Any value outside of that range will throw an IllegalArgumentException.

Try it out

This repo contains the currencyedittexttester project which provides a testing application to showcase CurrencyEditText functionality. You're encouraged to pull down and run the app to get a feel for how CurrencyEditText works.

Why doesn't CurrencyEditText do <x>?

CurrencyEditText is designed to be a small, lightweight module to provide ease-of-use to developers. If there is functionality missing that you would like to see added, submit a new Issue and label it as an Enhancement, and I will take a look. I make no guarantees that I will agree to implement it.

Use at your own risk!

As called out in the Apache license (which this project falls under), by using this software you agree to use it AS-IS. I make no claims that this code is 100% bug-free or otherwise without issue. While I've done my best to ensure that rounding errors don't come into play and that all codeflows have been tested, I cannot guarantee or provide any sort of warranty that this code will work for you. The onus is on you, and you alone, to analyze this software and determine if it's featureset and quality meet your needs.

Resources

Ask

Android runtime permissions make easy.

An easy way to get image from Gallery or Camera with request runtime permission on Android M using RxJava.

A widget for selecting multiple items from a list.

REST API mocking for Android made easy.

Android SearchView based on Material Design guidelines. The MaterialSearchView will overlay a Toolbar or ActionBar as well as display a ListView for the user to show suggested or recent searches.

Generating pure tone of an specific frequency was never that easy. ZenTone does all the heavy lifting for you.

Topics


2D Engines   3D Engines   9-Patch   Action Bars   Activities   ADB   Advertisements   Analytics   Animations   ANR   AOP   API   APK   APT   Architecture   Audio   Autocomplete   Background Processing   Backward Compatibility   Badges   Bar Codes   Benchmarking   Bitmaps   Bluetooth   Blur Effects   Bread Crumbs   BRMS   Browser Extensions   Build Systems   Bundles   Buttons   Caching   Camera   Canvas   Cards   Carousels   Changelog   Checkboxes   Cloud Storages   Color Analysis   Color Pickers   Colors   Comet/Push   Compass Sensors   Conferences   Content Providers   Continuous Integration   Crash Reports   Credit Cards   Credits   CSV   Curl/Flip   Data Binding   Data Generators   Data Structures   Database   Database Browsers   Date &   Debugging   Decompilers   Deep Links   Dependency Injections   Design   Design Patterns   Dex   Dialogs   Distributed Computing   Distribution Platforms   Download Managers   Drawables   Emoji   Emulators   EPUB   Equalizers &   Event Buses   Exception Handling   Face Recognition   Feedback &   File System   File/Directory   Fingerprint   Floating Action   Fonts   Forms   Fragments   FRP   FSM   Functional Programming   Gamepads   Games   Geocaching   Gestures   GIF   Glow Pad   Gradle Plugins   Graphics   Grid Views   Highlighting   HTML   HTTP Mocking   Icons   IDE   IDE Plugins   Image Croppers   Image Loaders   Image Pickers   Image Processing   Image Views   Instrumentation   Intents   Job Schedulers   JSON   Keyboard   Kotlin   Layouts   Library Demos   List View   List Views   Localization   Location   Lock Patterns   Logcat   Logging   Mails   Maps   Markdown   Mathematics   Maven Plugins   MBaaS   Media   Menus   Messaging   MIME   Mobile Web   Native Image   Navigation   NDK   Networking   NFC   NoSQL   Number Pickers   OAuth   Object Mocking   OCR Engines   OpenGL   ORM   Other Pickers   Parallax List   Parcelables   Particle Systems   Password Inputs   PDF   Permissions   Physics Engines   Platforms   Plugin Frameworks   Preferences   Progress Indicators   ProGuard   Properties   Protocol Buffer   Pull To   Purchases   Push/Pull   QR Codes   Quick Return   Radio Buttons   Range Bars   Ratings   Recycler Views   Resources   REST   Ripple Effects   RSS   Screenshots   Scripting   Scroll Views   SDK   Search Inputs   Security   Sensors   Services   Showcase Views   Signatures   Sliding Panels   Snackbars   SOAP   Social Networks   Spannable   Spinners   Splash Screens   SSH   Static Analysis   Status Bars   Styling   SVG   System   Tags   Task Managers   TDD &   Template Engines   Testing   Testing Tools   Text Formatting   Text Views   Text Watchers   Text-to   Toasts   Toolkits For   Tools   Tooltips   Trainings   TV   Twitter   Updaters   USB   User Stories   Utils   Validation   Video   View Adapters   View Pagers   Views   Watch Face   Wearable Data   Wearables   Weather   Web Tools   Web Views   WebRTC   WebSockets   Wheel Widgets   Wi-Fi   Widgets   Windows   Wizards   XML   XMPP   YAML   ZIP Codes