java.util.Locale and java.text.NumberFormat : Number Format « I18N « Java

Home
Java
1.2D Graphics GUI
2.3D
3.Advanced Graphics
4.Ant
5.Apache Common
6.Chart
7.Class
8.Collections Data Structure
9.Data Type
10.Database SQL JDBC
11.Design Pattern
12.Development Class
13.EJB3
14.Email
15.Event
16.File Input Output
17.Game
18.Generics
19.GWT
20.Hibernate
21.I18N
22.J2EE
23.J2ME
24.JavaFX
25.JDK 6
26.JDK 7
27.JNDI LDAP
28.JPA
29.JSP
30.JSTL
31.Language Basics
32.Network Protocol
33.PDF RTF
34.Reflection
35.Regular Expressions
36.Scripting
37.Security
38.Servlets
39.Spring
40.Swing Components
41.Swing JFC
42.SWT JFace Eclipse
43.Threads
44.Tiny Application
45.Velocity
46.Web Services SOA
47.XML
Java » I18N » Number Format 




java.util.Locale and java.text.NumberFormat
java.util.Locale and java.text.NumberFormat

import java.text.*;
import java.util.*;

/** JDK1.1 introduced a series of Formatting classes that
 * format various items in locale-appropriate ways
 * (10000 becomes 10,000 or 10.000 or whatever, as needed
 * in various locales.
 *
 * This program shows some simple ways of using it; for more,
 * see JavaDoc on java.util.Locale and java.text.NumberFormat.
 */
public class NumFormat {
  public static void main(String[] av) {
    int data[] 1001000100001000000 };
    NumberFormat nf = NumberFormat.getInstance(Locale.US);
    for (int i = 0; i < data.length; ++i) {
      System.out.println(data[i"\t" + nf.format(data[i]));
    }
  }
}
      

           
       














Related examples in the same category
1.Java I18N: Format : Number FormatJava I18N: Format : Number Format
2.Displaying Formatted Numbers for Alternate LocalesDisplaying Formatted Numbers for Alternate Locales
java2s.com  | Contact Us | Privacy Policy
Copyright 2009 - 12 Demo Source and Support. All rights reserved.
All other trademarks are property of their respective owners.