Module:StripToNumbers/doc
This is the documentation page for Module:StripToNumbers
This module is rated as beta, and is ready for widespread use. It is still new and should be used with some caution to ensure the results are as expected. |
Usage
mali niŋThis module extracts very basic numeric data from the input, namely the first match for a contiguous simple number, which may include the negative sign and a decimal, but not (yet) any further complexity, such as exponents, variables, etc.
Its primary function is accepting data like:
70%
margin-left: 20px;
75.485 Khz
and return the numeric portion of it so that it can be operated on arithmetically.
Results for each string, respectively:
- 70
- 20
- 75.485
Use cases
mali niŋ- Converting layout table cell dimensions given in
em
,px
, or%
to the bare-number proportions used by CSS'sflex-grow
declaration (only works if the units on all the cells are the same; can't handle a mixture, e.g. of a fixed-width sidebar and relative-width main content area). - Converting sloppy template input generally (e.g. measurements with units attached when only the measurement is wanted, or to remove unwanted
"
and;
characters and the like). - Auto-generating halved values, e.g. to aid in conversion from old-school HTML 4
cellspacing=...
to modern CSStd {padding: ...;}
on all sides.
Limitations (serious ones)
mali niŋ- When imput may contain a
..=..
character, use|1=
when calling the template. This never does any harm.
- So: when input is
a=70%
use{{#invoke:StripToNumbers|main|1=a=70%}}
→ - 70
- So: when input is
- Otherwise, The input cannot contain the
=
character unless it is escaped as{{=}}
or&equal;
.- There may be other characters than
=
that must be escaped.
- There may be other characters than
- At present, the module only does three things:
- It finds the first contiguous number in the input string, which may be preceded by
-
(the keyboard hyphen-minus character, not the formal unicode minus−
, and may contain a decimal; it throws away everything else. - It checks that the result is a valid number (i.e. not something like
1.2.3
or1-2-3
, nor null; this test may well be redundant code at this point, but better safe than sorry. - It optionally divides the number by two (in a separate function).
- It finds the first contiguous number in the input string, which may be preceded by
- Feel free to expand it to do more things (and to do what it does more robustly if you find a way to break it). Please report problems on the talk page and ping regular editors of the module. It is safest in most cases to expand by adding functions rather than adding features to the
main
function.
- It will drop trailing zeros from the end of decimal. It may be useful to add a feature to stop that behavior, so that it won't mess with currency formatting (this cannot reliably be done by removing the "is it really a number?" test, since invocation of the halving function will operate on the string as, and convert it to, a number not a string, and thus result in the truncation of mathematically redundant zeroes.
- It cannot handle
=
-style character entities that are numeric (nor their hex equivalents), for obvious reasons, only named ones like&equal;nbsp;
This can be addressed in future upgrade, surely, but should be done in a separate function, as stripping such input down to the ASCII character numbers may well be the desired use in a particular instance.
Invocation
mali niŋBasic usage:
{{#invoke:StripToNumbers | main | input }}
To divide the resulting value by two:
{{#invoke:StripToNumbers | halve | input }}
Same as main but returns null if no numbers in string, rather than error (can be used as contains numeric function):
{{#invoke:StripToNumbers | mainnull | input }}
See also
mali niŋ- Module:ConvertNumeric - convert numbers to English words, and between number formats (e.g. decimal to hex)