number_format()
, as stated by the PHP manual, converts a float into a string with the thousands groups with commas.
$number = '1562798794365432135246';
var_dump($number); // string(22) "1562798794365432135246"
var_dump(number_format($number)); // string(29) "1,562,798,794,365,432,233,984"
If you're trying to cast a string to an integer, you can do so like this:
$number = (int) $number;
However, be careful, since the largest possible integer value in PHP is 2147483647
on a 32-bit system and 9223372036854775807
on a 64-bit system. If you try to cast a string like the one above to int on a 32-bit system, you'll assign $number
to 2147483647
rather than the value you intend!
The number_format()
function takes a float as an argument, which has similar issues. When you pass a string as an argument to number_format()
, it is internally converted to a float. Floats are a little more complicated than integers. Instead of having a hard upper bound like an integer value, floats progressively lose precision in the least significant digits, making those last few places incorrect.
So, unfortunately, if you need to format long strings like this you'll probably need to write your own function. If you only need to add commas in the thousands places, this should be easy - just use strlen and substr to get every set of three characters from the end of string and create a new string with commas in between.
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