TinyFloat is a tiny decimal class for JavaScript.
It solves the main problem with the IEEE 754 floats (the notorious 0.1 + 0.2 == 0.30000000000000004
) without implementing an arbitrary-precision type that is more accurate but also heavier.
TinyFloat is just 0.5 kB
and has no dependencies, while decimal.js
is 12.3 kB
. In most cases, including working with money, the precision provided by decimal.js
is irrelevant, so TinyFloat is an excellent alternative.
The library is available as an npm package:
npm install tinyfloat --save
The library exports the TinyFloat
class, which you can use to create decimal numbers:
import { TinyFloat } from "tinyfloat";
new TinyFloat("0.1").add("0.2").toNumber();
//=> 0.3
You can also set the precision for the TinyFloat
instance:
new TinyFloat("0.123456", 2).toNumber();
//=> 0.12
new TinyFloat("0.987654321", 2).toNumber();
//=> 0.99
The TinyFloat
class has basic arithmetic methods:
add
- adds two numberssub
- subtracts two numbersmul
- multiplies two numbersdiv
- divides two numbersmod
- returns the remainder of the division
All methods accept strings, numbers, and TinyFloat instances:
new TinyFloat("0.1").add(new TinyFloat("0.2")).toNumber();
// Or pass a string:
new TinyFloat("0.1").add("0.2").toNumber();
// Or a number:
new TinyFloat(0.1).add(0.2).toNumber();
To convert a TinyFloat
instance to a number, use the toNumber
method:
new TinyFloat("0.1").add("0.2").toNumber();
//=> 0.3
To convert the TinyFloat
instance to a string, use the toString
method:
new TinyFloat("0.1").add("0.2").toString();
//=> "0.3000000000000000"
The method pads the number with zeros to the set precision (default is 16).
Both toString
and toNumber
accept custom precision, effectively rounding the number to the given number of digits after the decimal point:
const tf = new TinyFloat("1").div("1.5");
//=> 0.6666666666666667
tf.toString(2);
//=> "0.67"
tf.toNumber(0);
//=> 1
See the changelog.