This library aids one in handling money and different currencies. Features:
- Provides a Money class which encapsulates all information about an certain amount of money, such as its value and its currency.
- Represents monetary values as integers, in cents. This avoids floating point rounding errors.
- Provides APIs for exchanging money from one currency to another.
- Has the ability to parse a money string into a Money object.
Note on Patches/Pull Requests
- Fork the project.
- Make your feature addition or bug fix.
- Add tests for it. This is important so I don't break it in a future version unintentionally.
- Commit, do not mess with rakefile, version, or history. (if you want to have your own version, that is fine but bump version in a commit by itself I can ignore when I pull)
- Send me a pull request. Bonus points for topic branches.
Usage
Synopsis
require 'money'
# 10.00 USD
money = Money.new(1000, "USD")
money.cents # => 1000
money.currency # => "USD"
Money.new(1000, "USD") == Money.new(1000, "USD") # => true
Money.new(1000, "USD") == Money.new(100, "USD") # => false
Money.new(1000, "USD") == Money.new(1000, "EUR") # => false
Currency Exchange
Exchanging money is performed through an exchange bank object. The default exchange bank object requires one to manually specify the exchange rate. Here’s an example of how it works:
Money.add_rate("USD", "CAD", 1.24515)
Money.add_rate("CAD", "USD", 0.803115)
Money.new(100, "USD").exchange_to("CAD") # => Money.new(124, "CAD")
Money.new(100, "CAD").exchange_to("USD") # => Money.new(80, "USD")
Comparison and arithmetic operations work as expected:
Money.new(1000, "USD") <=> Money.new(900, "USD") # => 1; 9.00 USD is smaller
Money.new(1000, "EUR") + Money.new(10, "EUR") == Money.new(1010, "EUR")
Money.add_rate("USD", "EUR", 0.5)
Money.new(1000, "EUR") + Money.new(1000, "USD") == Money.new(1500, "EUR")
There is nothing stopping you from creating bank objects which scrapes www.xe.com for the current rates or just returns rand(2):
Money.default_bank = ExchangeBankWhichScrapesXeDotCom.new
Ruby on Rails
Use the compose_of helper to let Active Record deal with embedding the money object in your models. The following example requires a cents and a currency field.
class ProductUnit < ActiveRecord::Base
belongs_to :product
composed_of :price, :class_name => "Money", :mapping => [%w(cents cents), %w(currency currency)]
private
validate :cents_not_zero
def cents_not_zero
errors.add("cents", "cannot be zero or less") unless cents > 0
end
validates_presence_of :sku, :currency
validates_uniqueness_of :sku
end
Default Currency
By default Money defaults to USD as its currency. This can be overwritten using
Money.default_currency = "CAD"
If you use Rails, then initializer is a very good place to put this.
Credits & License
Highly based on:
This library inherits license of FooBarWidget-money.