You might be thinking of https://github.com/JuliaLang/julia/issues/10610
On Thursday, 18 June 2015 15:30:05 UTC+1, Tom Breloff wrote: > > Scott: I remember there being another discussion but I can't seem to find > it. How did you try to get in touch? Do you want to start a github issue > and I'll comment there? > > On Thursday, June 18, 2015 at 10:20:08 AM UTC-4, Scott Jones wrote: >> >> This was already discussed recently, here on julia-users, I'm trying to >> get in touch with Dahua Lin (author of Formatting.jl) >> to see about adding a simpler `sfmt` that would help with this). >> >> On Thursday, June 18, 2015 at 10:13:46 AM UTC-4, Tom Breloff wrote: >>> >>> I wonder if what we really need is just some extra additions to >>> Formatting.jl (since I think this is the best place to keep standard >>> formatting calls). We could add fmt2, fmt3, etc which would be meant for >>> formatting floats to that precision. I suspect that's the most common use >>> of formatting. Additionally, just a shorter name than "generate_formatter" >>> might help adoption for non-standard formatting. If this makes sense to >>> people, I'll start an issue on github, and perhaps a PR as well. >>> >>> >>> julia> using Formatting >>> >>> julia> fmt2 = generate_formatter("%1.2f") >>> sprintf_JTEuMmY! (generic function with 1 method) >>> >>> julia> fmt3 = generate_formatter("%1.3f") >>> sprintf_JTEuM2Y! (generic function with 1 method) >>> >>> julia> @time fmt2(31231.345435245) >>> 55.763 milliseconds (33974 allocations: 1444 KB) >>> "31231.35" >>> >>> julia> @time fmt2(31231.345435245) >>> 13.573 microseconds (15 allocations: 608 bytes) >>> "31231.35" >>> >>> julia> @time fmt3(31231.345435245) >>> 11.193 milliseconds (5882 allocations: 254 KB) >>> "31231.345" >>> >>> julia> @time fmt3(31231.345435245) >>> 16.231 microseconds (15 allocations: 608 bytes) >>> "31231.345" >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> On Thursday, June 18, 2015 at 3:55:01 AM UTC-4, cormu...@mac.com wrote: >>>> >>>> You could use a type: >>>> >>>> julia> type Out >>>> n::Float64 >>>> end >>>> >>>> julia> function Base.show(io::IO, n::Out) >>>> print(io, "$(round(n.n, 2))") >>>> end >>>> show (generic function with 83 methods) >>>> >>>> then you can just use Out(x) whenever you want x rounded to 2 d.p. >>>> >>>> julia> for i in 0.7454539:1.5:5 >>>> println("i is $i and displayed as $(Out(i))") >>>> end >>>> i is 0.7454539 and displayed as 0.75 >>>> i is 2.2454539000000002 and displayed as 2.25 >>>> i is 3.7454539000000002 and displayed as 3.75 >>>> >>>>