Monday, August 27, 2018

Custom locale configuration for float conversion

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I need to convert a string in the format "1.234.345,00" to the float value 1234345.00.

One way is to use repeated str.replace:

x = "1.234.345,00" res = float(x.replace('.', '').replace(',', '.'))  print(res, type(res)) 1234345.0 <class 'float'> 

However, this appears manual and non-generalised. This heavily upvoted answer suggests using the locale library. But my default locale doesn't have the same conventions as my input string. I then discovered a way to extract the characters used in local conventions as a dictionary:

import locale  print(locale.localeconv())  {'int_curr_symbol': '', 'currency_symbol': '', 'mon_decimal_point': '',  ..., 'decimal_point': '.', 'thousands_sep': '', 'grouping': []} 

Is there a way to update this dictionary, save as a custom locale and then be able to call this custom locale going forwards. Something like:

mylocale = locale.create_new_locale()  # "blank" conventions or copied from default mylocale.localeconv()['thousands_sep'] = '.' mylocale.localeconv()['decimal_point'] = ','  setlocale(LC_NUMERIC, mylocale) atof('123.456,78')  # 123456.78 

If this isn't possible, how do we get a list of all available locale and their conventions? Seems anti-pattern to "deduce" the correct configuration from the conventions (not to mention inefficient / manual), so I was hoping for a generic solution such as above pseudo-code.


Edit: Here's my attempt at finding all locales where thousands_sep == '.' and decimal_point == ','. In fact, more generally, to group locales by combinations of these parameters:

import locale from collections import defaultdict  d = defaultdict(list)  for alias in locale.locale_alias:     locale.setlocale(locale.LC_ALL, alias)     env = locale.localeconv()     d[(env['thousands_sep'], env['decimal_point'])].append(alias) 

Result:

--------------------------------------------------------------------------- Error                                     Traceback (most recent call last) <ipython-input-164-f8f6a6db7637> in <module>()       5        6 for alias in locale.locale_alias: ----> 7     locale.setlocale(locale.LC_ALL, alias)       8     env = locale.localeconv()       9     d[(env['thousands_sep'], env['decimal_point'])].append(alias)  C:\Program Files\Anaconda3\lib\locale.py in setlocale(category, locale)     596         # convert to string     597         locale = normalize(_build_localename(locale)) --> 598     return _setlocale(category, locale)     599      600 def resetlocale(category=LC_ALL):  Error: unsupported locale setting 

3 Answers

Answers 1

If you pop open the source code for locale, you can see that there is a variable called _override_localeconv (which seems to be for testing purposes).

# With this dict, you can override some items of localeconv's return value. # This is useful for testing purposes. _override_localeconv = {} 

Trying the following does seem to override the dictionary without changing the entire locale, though it probably has some unintended consequences, especially since changing locales isn't threadsafe. Be careful!

import locale  locale._override_localeconv["thousands_sep"] = "." locale._override_localeconv["decimal_point"] = ","  print locale.atof('123.456,78') 

Try it online!

Answers 2

Here's something, using Babel, that works for me.

First you feed it some test data, with your expectations and it builds a dictionary of separator to locale alias that fits.

Then you can convert from that point on.

import string from decimal import Decimal from babel.numbers import parse_decimal, NumberFormatError from babel.core import UnknownLocaleError import locale  traindata = [     ("1.234.345,00", Decimal("1234345.00")),     ("1,234,345.00", Decimal("1234345.00")),     ("345", Decimal("345.00")), ]  data = traindata + [     ("345,00", Decimal("345.00")),     ("345.00", Decimal("345.00")),     ("746", Decimal("746.00")), ]  def findseps(input_):     #you need to have no separator      #or at least a decimal separator for this to work...      seps = [c for c in input_ if not c in string.digits]     if not seps:         return ""      sep = seps[-1]     #if the decimal is something then thousand will be the other...     seps = "." + sep if sep == "," else "," + sep     return seps    def setup(input_, exp, lookup):       key = findseps(input_)      if key in lookup:         return      for alias in locale.locale_alias:         #print(alias)          try:             got = parse_decimal(input_, locale=alias)         except (NumberFormatError,UnknownLocaleError, ValueError) as e:             continue         except (Exception,) as e:             raise         if exp == got:             lookup[key] = alias             return   def convert(input_, lookup):     seps = findseps(input_)     try:         locale_ = lookup[seps]         convert.locale_ = locale_     except (KeyError,) as e:         convert.locale_ = None         return "unexpected seps:%s" % seps      try:         return parse_decimal(input_, locale=locale_)     except (Exception,) as e:         return e   lookup = {}  #train your data for input_, exp in traindata:     setup(input_, exp, lookup)  #once it's trained you know which locales to use print(data)   for input_, exp in data:     got = convert(input_, lookup)      # print (input_)     msg = "%s => %s with local:%s:" % (input_, got, convert.locale_)     if exp == got:         print("\n  success : " + msg)     else:         print("\n  failure : " + msg)  print(lookup) 

output:

[('1.234.345,00', Decimal('1234345.00')), ('1,234,345.00', Decimal('1234345.00')), ('345', Decimal('345.00')), ('345,00', Decimal('345.00')), ('345.00', Decimal('345.00')), ('746', Decimal('746.00'))]    success : 1.234.345,00 => 1234345.00 with local:is_is:    success : 1,234,345.00 => 1234345.00 with local:ko_kr.euc:    success : 345 => 345 with local:ko_kr.euc:    success : 345,00 => 345.00 with local:is_is:    success : 345.00 => 345.00 with local:ko_kr.euc:    success : 746 => 746 with local:ko_kr.euc: {',.': 'ko_kr.euc', '': 'ko_kr.euc', '.,': 'is_is'} 

Answers 3

There are two parts in your question:

  1. How can I parse '1.234.345,00' in a generic way?
  2. How can I easily find the locale associated to '1.234.345,00'?

You can use the amazing Babel library for both.

How can I parse '1.234.345,00' in a generic way?

One locale associated with a . thousands separator and a , decimal separator is ger_de, for German.

To parse it, simply use

>>> from babel.numbers import parse_decimal >>> parse_decimal('1.234.345,00', locale='ger_de') Decimal('1234345.00') 

How can I easily find the locale associated to '1.234.345,00'?

Use this routine which checks the string to parse against the expected value for all locales, and returns the ones that are compatible:

import locale from babel.numbers import parse_decimal from decimal import Decimal  def get_compatible_locales(string_to_parse, expected_decimal):     compatible_aliases = []     for alias in locale.locale_alias:         try:             parsed_decimal = parse_decimal(string_to_parse, locale=alias)             if parsed_decimal == expected_decimal:                 compatible_aliases.append(alias)         except Exception:             continue     return compatible_aliases 

For your example:

>>> print(get_compatible_locales('1.234.345,00', Decimal('1234345'))) ['ar_dz', 'ar_lb', 'ar_ly', 'ar_ma', 'ar_tn', 'ast_es', 'az', 'az_az', 'az_az.iso88599e', 'bs', 'bs_ba', 'ca', 'ca_ad', 'ca_es', 'ca_es@valencia', 'ca_fr', 'ca_it', 'da', 'da_dk', 'de', 'de_at', 'de_be', 'de_de', 'de_lu', 'el', 'el_cy', 'el_gr', 'el_gr@euro', 'en_be', 'en_dk', 'es', 'es_ar', 'es_bo', 'es_cl', 'es_co', 'es_ec', 'es_es', 'es_py', 'es_uy', 'es_ve', 'eu', 'eu_es', 'fo', 'fo_fo', 'fr_lu', 'fy_nl', 'ger_de', 'gl', 'gl_es', 'hr', 'hr_hr', 'hsb_de', 'id', 'id_id', 'in', 'in_id', 'is', 'is_is', 'it', 'it_it', 'kl', 'kl_gl', 'km_kh', 'lb_lu', 'lo', 'lo_la', 'lo_la.cp1133', 'lo_la.ibmcp1133', 'lo_la.mulelao1', 'mk', 'mk_mk', 'nl', 'nl_aw', 'nl_be', 'nl_nl', 'ps_af', 'pt', 'pt_br', 'ro', 'ro_ro', 'rw', 'rw_rw', 'sl', 'sl_si', 'sr', 'sr@cyrillic', 'sr@latn', 'sr_cs', 'sr_cs.iso88592@latn', 'sr_cs@latn', 'sr_me', 'sr_rs', 'sr_rs@latn', 'sr_yu', 'sr_yu.cp1251@cyrillic', 'sr_yu.iso88592', 'sr_yu.iso88595', 'sr_yu.iso88595@cyrillic', 'sr_yu.microsoftcp1251@cyrillic', 'sr_yu.utf8', 'sr_yu.utf8@cyrillic', 'sr_yu@cyrillic', 'tr', 'tr_cy', 'tr_tr', 'vi', 'vi_vn', 'vi_vn.tcvn', 'vi_vn.tcvn5712', 'vi_vn.viscii', 'vi_vn.viscii111', 'wo_sn'] 

Bonus: How can I have a human-readable version of these locales?

Use the following routine, where my_locale should be your own locale:

from babel import Locale  def get_display_name(alias, my_locale='en_US'):     l = Locale.parse(alias)     return l.get_display_name(my_locale) 

You can then use it this way:

>>> print({loc: get_display_name(loc) for loc in locales}) {'ar_dz': 'Arabic (Algeria)', 'ar_lb': 'Arabic (Lebanon)', 'ar_ly': 'Arabic (Libya)', 'ar_ma': 'Arabic (Morocco)', 'ar_tn': 'Arabic (Tunisia)', 'ast_es': 'Asturian (Spain)', 'az': 'Azerbaijani', 'az_az': 'Azerbaijani (Latin, Azerbaijan)', 'az_az.iso88599e': 'Azerbaijani (Latin, Azerbaijan)', 'bs': 'Bosnian', 'bs_ba': 'Bosnian (Latin, Bosnia & Herzegovina)', 'ca': 'Catalan', 'ca_ad': 'Catalan (Andorra)', 'ca_es': 'Catalan (Spain)', 'ca_es@valencia': 'Catalan (Spain)', 'ca_fr': 'Catalan (France)', 'ca_it': 'Catalan (Italy)', 'da': 'Danish', 'da_dk': 'Danish (Denmark)', 'de': 'German', 'de_at': 'German (Austria)', 'de_be': 'German (Belgium)', 'de_de': 'German (Germany)', 'de_lu': 'German (Luxembourg)', 'el': 'Greek', 'el_cy': 'Greek (Cyprus)', 'el_gr': 'Greek (Greece)', 'el_gr@euro': 'Greek (Greece)', 'en_be': 'English (Belgium)', 'en_dk': 'English (Denmark)', 'es': 'Spanish', 'es_ar': 'Spanish (Argentina)', 'es_bo': 'Spanish (Bolivia)', 'es_cl': 'Spanish (Chile)', 'es_co': 'Spanish (Colombia)', 'es_ec': 'Spanish (Ecuador)', 'es_es': 'Spanish (Spain)', 'es_py': 'Spanish (Paraguay)', 'es_uy': 'Spanish (Uruguay)', 'es_ve': 'Spanish (Venezuela)', 'eu': 'Basque', 'eu_es': 'Basque (Spain)', 'fo': 'Faroese', 'fo_fo': 'Faroese (Faroe Islands)', 'fr_lu': 'French (Luxembourg)', 'fy_nl': 'Western Frisian (Netherlands)', 'ger_de': 'German (Germany)', 'gl': 'Galician', 'gl_es': 'Galician (Spain)', 'hr': 'Croatian', 'hr_hr': 'Croatian (Croatia)', 'hsb_de': 'Upper Sorbian (Germany)', 'id': 'Indonesian', 'id_id': 'Indonesian (Indonesia)', 'in': 'Indonesian (Indonesia)', 'in_id': 'Indonesian (Indonesia)', 'is': 'Icelandic', 'is_is': 'Icelandic (Iceland)', 'it': 'Italian', 'it_it': 'Italian (Italy)', 'kl': 'Kalaallisut', 'kl_gl': 'Kalaallisut (Greenland)', 'km_kh': 'Khmer (Cambodia)', 'lb_lu': 'Luxembourgish (Luxembourg)', 'lo': 'Lao', 'lo_la': 'Lao (Laos)', 'lo_la.cp1133': 'Lao (Laos)', 'lo_la.ibmcp1133': 'Lao (Laos)', 'lo_la.mulelao1': 'Lao (Laos)', 'mk': 'Macedonian', 'mk_mk': 'Macedonian (Macedonia)', 'nl': 'Dutch', 'nl_aw': 'Dutch (Aruba)', 'nl_be': 'Dutch (Belgium)', 'nl_nl': 'Dutch (Netherlands)', 'ps_af': 'Pashto (Afghanistan)', 'pt': 'Portuguese', 'pt_br': 'Portuguese (Brazil)', 'ro': 'Romanian', 'ro_ro': 'Romanian (Romania)', 'rw': 'Kinyarwanda', 'rw_rw': 'Kinyarwanda (Rwanda)', 'sl': 'Slovenian', 'sl_si': 'Slovenian (Slovenia)', 'sr': 'Serbian', 'sr@cyrillic': 'Serbian', 'sr@latn': 'Serbian', 'sr_cs': 'Serbian (Cyrillic, Serbia)', 'sr_cs.iso88592@latn': 'Serbian (Cyrillic, Serbia)', 'sr_cs@latn': 'Serbian (Cyrillic, Serbia)', 'sr_me': 'Serbian (Latin, Montenegro)', 'sr_rs': 'Serbian (Cyrillic, Serbia)', 'sr_rs@latn': 'Serbian (Cyrillic, Serbia)', 'sr_yu': 'Serbian (Cyrillic, Serbia)', 'sr_yu.cp1251@cyrillic': 'Serbian (Cyrillic, Serbia)', 'sr_yu.iso88592': 'Serbian (Cyrillic, Serbia)', 'sr_yu.iso88595': 'Serbian (Cyrillic, Serbia)', 'sr_yu.iso88595@cyrillic': 'Serbian (Cyrillic, Serbia)', 'sr_yu.microsoftcp1251@cyrillic': 'Serbian (Cyrillic, Serbia)', 'sr_yu.utf8': 'Serbian (Cyrillic, Serbia)', 'sr_yu.utf8@cyrillic': 'Serbian (Cyrillic, Serbia)', 'sr_yu@cyrillic': 'Serbian (Cyrillic, Serbia)', 'tr': 'Turkish', 'tr_cy': 'Turkish (Cyprus)', 'tr_tr': 'Turkish (Turkey)', 'vi': 'Vietnamese', 'vi_vn': 'Vietnamese (Vietnam)', 'vi_vn.tcvn': 'Vietnamese (Vietnam)', 'vi_vn.tcvn5712': 'Vietnamese (Vietnam)', 'vi_vn.viscii': 'Vietnamese (Vietnam)', 'vi_vn.viscii111': 'Vietnamese (Vietnam)', 'wo_sn': 'Wolof (Senegal)'} 

Try it online!

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