Converting BigDecimal to Integer Converting BigDecimal to Integer java java

Converting BigDecimal to Integer


You would call myBigDecimal.intValueExact() (or just intValue()) and it will even throw an exception if you would lose information. That returns an int but autoboxing takes care of that.


Can you guarantee that the BigDecimal will never contain a value larger than Integer.MAX_VALUE?

If yes, then here's your code calling intValue:

Integer.valueOf(bdValue.intValue())


TL;DR

Use one of these for universal conversion needs

//Java 7 or belowbigDecimal.setScale(0, RoundingMode.DOWN).intValueExact()//Java 8    bigDecimal.toBigInteger().intValueExact()

Reasoning

The answer depends on what the requirements are and how you answer these question.

  • Will the BigDecimal potentially have a non-zero fractional part?
  • Will the BigDecimal potentially not fit into the Integer range?
  • Would you like non-zero fractional parts rounded or truncated?
  • How would you like non-zero fractional parts rounded?

If you answered no to the first 2 questions, you could just use BigDecimal.intValueExact() as others have suggested and let it blow up when something unexpected happens.

If you are not absolutely 100% confident about question number 2, then intValue() is always the wrong answer.

Making it better

Let's use the following assumptions based on the other answers.

  • We are okay with losing precision and truncating the value because that's what intValueExact() and auto-boxing do
  • We want an exception thrown when the BigDecimal is larger than the Integer range because anything else would be crazy unless you have a very specific need for the wrap around that happens when you drop the high-order bits.

Given those params, intValueExact() throws an exception when we don't want it to if our fractional part is non-zero. On the other hand, intValue() doesn't throw an exception when it should if our BigDecimal is too large.

To get the best of both worlds, round off the BigDecimal first, then convert. This also has the benefit of giving you more control over the rounding process.

Spock Groovy Test

void 'test BigDecimal rounding'() {    given:    BigDecimal decimal = new BigDecimal(Integer.MAX_VALUE - 1.99)    BigDecimal hugeDecimal = new BigDecimal(Integer.MAX_VALUE + 1.99)    BigDecimal reallyHuge = new BigDecimal("10000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000")    String decimalAsBigIntString = decimal.toBigInteger().toString()    String hugeDecimalAsBigIntString = hugeDecimal.toBigInteger().toString()    String reallyHugeAsBigIntString = reallyHuge.toBigInteger().toString()    expect: 'decimals that can be truncated within Integer range to do so without exception'    //GOOD: Truncates without exception    '' + decimal.intValue() == decimalAsBigIntString    //BAD: Throws ArithmeticException 'Non-zero decimal digits' because we lose information    // decimal.intValueExact() == decimalAsBigIntString    //GOOD: Truncates without exception    '' + decimal.setScale(0, RoundingMode.DOWN).intValueExact() == decimalAsBigIntString    and: 'truncated decimal that cannot be truncated within Integer range throw conversionOverflow exception'    //BAD: hugeDecimal.intValue() is -2147483648 instead of 2147483648    //'' + hugeDecimal.intValue() == hugeDecimalAsBigIntString    //BAD: Throws ArithmeticException 'Non-zero decimal digits' because we lose information    //'' + hugeDecimal.intValueExact() == hugeDecimalAsBigIntString    //GOOD: Throws conversionOverflow ArithmeticException because to large    //'' + hugeDecimal.setScale(0, RoundingMode.DOWN).intValueExact() == hugeDecimalAsBigIntString    and: 'truncated decimal that cannot be truncated within Integer range throw conversionOverflow exception'    //BAD: hugeDecimal.intValue() is 0    //'' + reallyHuge.intValue() == reallyHugeAsBigIntString    //GOOD: Throws conversionOverflow ArithmeticException because to large    //'' + reallyHuge.intValueExact() == reallyHugeAsBigIntString    //GOOD: Throws conversionOverflow ArithmeticException because to large    //'' + reallyHuge.setScale(0, RoundingMode.DOWN).intValueExact() == reallyHugeAsBigIntString    and: 'if using Java 8, BigInteger has intValueExact() just like BigDecimal'    //decimal.toBigInteger().intValueExact() == decimal.setScale(0, RoundingMode.DOWN).intValueExact()}