jQuery/JS Common - Object Structures - format
This property accepts three types of values:
String
A predefined format or custom format string.Function
Applies a custom format to a value and returns this value as a string. A shortcut for the formatter property.Object
Allows you to configure the format. Can have one of the following structures:// Uses a predefined format format: { type: String, // one of the predefined formats precision: Number, // the precision of values currency: String // a specific 3-letter code for the "currency" format }
or
// Specifies a custom format format: { formatter: Function, // a custom formatting function parser: Function // a parsing function for string values }
You can specify the Intl NumberFormat's and DateTimeFormat's
options
parameter fields:format: { year: "2-digit", month: "narrow", day: "2-digit" } === or === format: { style: "currency", currency: "EUR", useGrouping: true }
If you use Globalize, you can use the fields the numberFormatter, currencyFormatter, and dateFormatter accept instead of the fields described in this section. For example, you can use skeletons to format dates. Note that this approach can require additional CLDR modules not shipped with the DevExtreme package.
format: { skeleton: 'GyMMMd' }
formatter
If none of the predefined formats meet your requirements, use this function to specify a custom format. If formatter is the only field that you need to specify in the format object, assign the function straight to the format property as shown below.
format: function (value) { // ... return formattedValue; }
See Also
- format.parser
parser
Parses string values into numeric or date-time values. Can be used with formatter or one of the predefined formats.
A UI component calls this function internally, for example, when a user enters a value. The following code gives an example of the formatter and parser functions which turns dates into strings, and parses strings back into dates, respectively.
formatter: function (date) { var month = date.getMonth() + 1, day = date.getDate(), year = date.getFullYear(); return year + "." + month + "." + day; }, parser: function (e) { var parts = e.split("."), day = Number(parts[2]), month = Number(parts[1] - 1), year = Number(parts[0]); return new Date(year, month, day); }
type
Specifies a predefined format. Does not apply if you have specified the formatter function.
You can choose one of the predefined formats, depending on the values you need to format, from the following groups:
Numeric Formats
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- uses "thousands", "millions", "billions", "trillions"* format depending on the actual value
Currency Formats
- "currency" - "$3.95"*
- to define any other currency, use currency
Date-Time Formats
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The "fixedPoint", "decimal" or "currency" format can be paired with the "largeNumber", "thousands", "millions", "billions" or "trillions" format using a space separator, e.g., "fixedPoint thousands".
If the type is the only field you need to specify in the format object, assign the value of this field straight to the format property as shown below.
format: "shortDate"
When using a UI component as an ASP.NET MVC 5 Control or a DevExtreme-Based ASP.NET Core Control, you can specify this property using the Format
enum. This enum accepts the same values, but they start with an upper-case letter, for example, "fixedPoint" becomes FixedPoint
.