An up to date human friendly and flexible approach for development with any kind of monetary amounts
Project description
stockholm
— Money
for Python 3
Library for formatting and performing arithmetic and comparison operations on monetary amounts. Also with support for currency handling, exchange and network transport structure generation as well as parsing.
An up to date human friendly and flexible approach for development with any kind of monetary amounts.
At its bone a Money
class for Python 3.x. This is a library to be used by backend and frontend API coders of fintech companies, web merchants and subscription services. A simple, yet powerful way of coding with money.
from stockholm import Money
The stockholm.Money
object has full arithmetic support together with int
, float
, Decimal
, other Money
objects as well as string
. The stockholm.Money
object also supports complex string formatting functionality for easy debugging and a clean coding pattern.
from stockholm import Currency
Currencies to monetary amounts can be specified using either currencies built with the stockholm.Currency
metaclasses or simply by specifying the currency ticker as a string (for example "SEK"
or "EUR"
) when creating a new Money
object.
Currencies using the stockholm.Currency
metaclasses can hold additional options, such as default number of decimals in string output. Note that the amounts are usually never behind the scenes and uses the same precision and backend as Decimal
values and can as well be interchangable with such values.
Installation with pip
Like you would install any other Python package, use pip
, poetry
, pipenv
or your weapon of choice.
$ pip install stockholm
Examples
Arithmetics - fully supported
Full arithmetic support with different types, backed by Decimal
for dealing with rounding errors, while also keeping the monetary amount fully currency aware.
from stockholm import Money
money = Money("4711.50", currency="SEK")
print(money)
# 4711.50 SEK
output = (money + 100) * 3 + Money(50)
print(output)
# 14484.50 SEK
print(output / 5)
# 2896.90 SEK
print(round(output / 3, 4))
# 4828.1667 SEK
print(round(output / 3, 1))
# 4828.20 SEK
Formatting / Advanced string formatting
Advanced string formatting functionality.
from stockholm import Money
jpy_money = Money(1352953, "JPY")
exchange_rate = Money("0.08861326")
sek_money = Money(jpy_money * exchange_rate, "SEK")
print(f"I have {jpy_money:,.0m} which equals around {sek_money:,.2m}")
print(f"The exchange rate is {exchange_rate} ({jpy_money:c} -> {sek_money:c})")
# I have 1,352,953 JPY which equals around 119,889.58 SEK
# The exchange rate is 0.08861326 (JPY -> SEK)
# Standard string format uses default min decimals up to 9 decimals
print(f"{sek_money}") # 119889.57595678 SEK
# Format type "f" works the same way as formatting a float or Decimal
print(f"{jpy_money:.0f}") # 1352953
print(f"{sek_money:.2f}") # 119889.58
print(f"{sek_money:.1f}") # 119889.6
print(f"{sek_money:.0f}") # 119890
# Format type "m" works as "f" but includes the currency in string output
print(f"{sek_money:.2m}") # 119889.57 SEK
print(f"{sek_money:.4m}") # 119889.5760 SEK
print(f"{sek_money:+,.4m}") # +119,889.5760 SEK
# An uppercase "M" puts the currency ticker in front of the amount
print(f"{sek_money:.4M}") # SEK 119889.5760
# Format type "c" will just output the currency used in the monetary amount
print(f"{sek_money:c}") # SEK
Use stockholm.Currency
types for proper defaults of minimum number of decimal digits to output in strings, etc. All ISO 4217 currency codes implemented, see https://github.com/kalaspuff/stockholm/blob/master/stockholm/currency.py for the full list.
from stockholm import Currency, Money, get_currency
from stockholm.currency import JPY, SEK, EUR, IQD, USDCoin, Bitcoin
# Most currencies has a minimum default digits set to 2 in strings
print(Money(4711, SEK)) # 4711.00 SEK
print(Money(4711, EUR)) # 4711.00 EUR
# The stockholm.currency.JPY has a minimum default digits set to 0
print(Money(4711, JPY)) # 4711 JPY
# Some currencies even has a minimum default of 3 or 4 digits
print(Money(4711, IQD)) # 4711.000 IQD
# Some complex non ISO 4217 currencies, assets or tokens may define
# their own ticker, for example a "USD Coin" uses the ticker "USDC"
print(Money(4711, USDCoin)) # 4711.00 USDC
print(Money(4711, Bitcoin)) # 4711.00 BTC
# You can also use the shorthand stockholm.Currency object which
# holds all ISO 4217 three character codes as objects.
print(Money(1338, Currency.JPY)) # 1338 JPY
# or call the get_currency function
print(Money(1338, get_currency("JPY"))) # 1338 JPY
Input data types in flexible variants
Flexible ways for assigning values to a monetary amount using many different input data types and methods.
from decimal import Decimal
from stockholm import Money
Money(100, currency="EUR")
# <stockholm.Money: "100.00 EUR">
Money("1338 USD")
# <stockholm.Money: "1338.00 USD">
Money("0.5")
# <stockholm.Money: "0.50">
amount = Decimal(5000) / 3
Money(amount, currency="XDR")
# <stockholm.Money: "1666.666666667">
money = Money("0.30285471")
Money(money, currency="BTC")
# <stockholm.Money: "0.30285471 BTC">
cents_as_str = "471100"
money = Money(cents_as_str, currency="USD", from_sub_units=True)
# <stockholm.Money: "4711.00 USD">
money.sub_units
# Decimal(471100)
List arithmetics - summary of monetary amounts in list
Adding several monetary amounts from a list.
from stockholm import Money
amounts = [
Money(1),
Money("1.50"),
Money("1000"),
]
# Use Money.sum to deal with complex values of different data types
Money.sum(amounts)
# <stockholm.Money: "1002.50">
# Built-in sum may also be used (if only working with monetary amounts)
sum(amounts)
# <stockholm.Money: "1002.50">
Conversion for other transport medium (for example Protocol Buffers)
Easily splittable into units
and nanos
for transport in network medium, for example using the google.type.Money
protobuf definition when using Protocol Buffers.
from stockholm import Money
money = Money("22583.75382", "SEK")
money.units, money.nanos, money.currency_code
# (22583, 753820000, 'SEK')
# or vice versa
Money(units=22583, nanos=753820000, currency="SEK")
# <stockholm.Money: "22583.75382 SEK">
Acknowledgements
Built with inspiration from https://github.com/carlospalol/money and https://github.com/vimeo/py-money
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