Money
is a special type of quantity. Its unit type is known as Currency
.
Money differs from physical quantities mainly in two aspects:
-
Money amounts are discrete. For each currency there is a smallest fraction that can not be split further.
-
The relation between different currencies is not fixed, instead, it varies over time.
This package provides types to deal with these specifics. It is based an the package "quantities" with feature "fpdec" (aliasing "AmountT" to "Decimal").
Currency
is an enumeration of all currencies defined in ISO 4217. In
addition, for each currency there is a constant named after the 3-character
ISO 4217 code.
Currency
implements quantities::Unit
, so all operations on units can be
applied to Currency
. Especially, a Currency
instance can be multiplied
with an AmountT
to create a Money
instance.
Example:
# use moneta::{Amnt, Currency, Dec, Decimal, EUR, Money, Quantity, Unit};
let amnt = Amnt!(17.95);
let eur_amnt = amnt * EUR;
assert_eq!(eur_amnt.amount(), amnt);
assert_eq!(eur_amnt.unit(), Currency::EUR);
Money
implements trait quantities::Quantity
, so all operations on
quantities can also be applied to instances of Money
. Because there is no
fixed relation between currencies, there is no implicit conversion between
money amounts of different currencies. Resulting values are always quantized
to the smallest fraction defined with the currency.
Example:
# use moneta::{Amnt, Currency, Dec, Decimal, EUR, Money, Quantity, Unit};
let qty = Amnt!(3.2);
let price = Money::new(Amnt!(13.58), EUR);
let total = qty * price;
assert_eq!(total.to_string(), "43.46 EUR");
A conversion factor between two currencies can be defined by using the
type ExchangeRate
. It is given a unit currency (aka base currency), a unit
multiple, a term currency (aka price currency) and a term amount, i.e. the
amount in term currency equivalent to unit multiple in unit currency.
Multiplying an amount in some currency with an exchange rate with the same currency as unit currency results in the equivalent amount in term currency. Likewise, dividing an amount in some currency with an exchange rate with the same currency as term currency results in the equivalent amount in unit currency.
Examples:
# use moneta::{Dec, Decimal, ExchangeRate, EUR, HKD, USD};
let usd = Dec!(17.95) * USD;
let rate = ExchangeRate::new(USD, 1, EUR, Dec!(0.98078));
let eur = usd * rate;
assert_eq!(eur.to_string(), "17.61 EUR");
let rate = ExchangeRate::new(HKD, 10, EUR, Dec!(1.187253));
let hkd = eur / rate;
assert_eq!(hkd.to_string(), "148.33 HKD");
By default, only the feature std
is enabled.
- std - When enabled, this will cause
moneta
to use the standard library, so that conversion to string, formatting and printing are available. When disabled, the use of cratealloc
together with a system-specific allocator is needed to use that functionality.
- serde - When enabled, support for
serde
is enabled.