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Leetsoft's Money library - Forked to fix cattr_accessor methods to be compatible with rails 3/ruby 1.9.2
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== Money This library makes it easier to deal with Money values, storing them as integers to avoid floating-point math errors. == Download Preferred method of installation is gem: gem install --source http://gems.github.com collectiveidea-money You can find the source at: http://github.com/collectiveidea/money == Rails There is a rails extension that makes it easier to store money values in the database. class Product < ActiveRecord::Base money :price validates_numericality_of :price_in_cents, :greater_than => 0 end This assumes that there is a price_in_cents (integer) column in the database, which can be changed by passing the :cents option. You can also specify the :currency option to save the currency to a field in the database. class Room < ActiveRecord::Base money :rate, :cents => :rate_cents, :currency => :rate_currency money :discount, :cents => :discount_cents end You can set the attribute to a String, Fixnum, or Float and it will call #to_money to convert it to a Money object. This makes it convenient for using money fields in forms. r = Room.new :rate => "100.00" r.rate # returns <Money:0x249ef9c @currency="USD", @cents=10000> By default, money values will be stored with a precision of 2 (cents). If you need to store different precisions, such as to the nearest tenth of a cent, you can specify the +:precision+ option: class Room < ActiveRecord::Base money :rate, :precision => 3 end r = Room.new :rate => "100" r.rate.format # returns $100.000 r.rate = "100.995" r.rate.format # returns $100.995 To use the Rails functionality, install money as a plugin, or require 'money/rails'. This version is compatible with Rails 2.2. For compatibility with previous versions of Rails, check out the rails-2.1 branch. == Class configuration Two const class variables are available to tailor Money to your needs. If you don't need currency exchange at all, just ignore those. === Default Currency By default Money defaults to USD as its currency. This can be overwritten using Money.default_currency = "CAD" If you use rails, the environment.rb is a very good place to put this. === Currency Exchange The second parameter is a bit more complex. It lets you provide your own implementation of the currency exchange service. By default Money throws an exception when trying to call .exchange_to. A second minimalist implementation is provided which lets you supply custom exchange rates: Money.bank = VariableExchangeBank.new Money.bank.add_rate("USD", "CAD", 1.24515) Money.bank.add_rate("CAD", "USD", 0.803115) Money.us_dollar(100).exchange_to("CAD") => Money.ca_dollar(124) Money.ca_dollar(100).exchange_to("USD") => Money.us_dollar(80) There is nothing stopping you from creating bank objects which scrape www.xe.com for the current rates or just return rand(2) == Code If you have any improvements please email them to tobi [at] leetsoft.com
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Leetsoft's Money library - Forked to fix cattr_accessor methods to be compatible with rails 3/ruby 1.9.2
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