human_format 1.1.0

Rust Port of human-format from node, formatting numbers for us, while the machines are still at bay.
Documentation
# human-format-rs


[![Crates.io](https://img.shields.io/crates/v/human_format.svg)](https://crates.io/crates/human_format) [![Documentation](https://img.shields.io/badge/docs-rs-red.svg)](https://docs.rs/human_format)

Rust Port of human-format from node, formatting numbers for us, while the machines are still at bay.

| Master                                                                                                                                                                            |                                                                                       Develop                                                                                       |
| :-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | :---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------: |
| [![Master]https://github.com/BobGneu/human-format-rs/actions/workflows/rust.yml/badge.svg?branch=master]https://github.com/BobGneu/human-format-rs/actions/workflows/rust.yml | [![Develop]https://github.com/BobGneu/human-format-rs/actions/workflows/rust.yml/badge.svg?branch=develop]https://github.com/BobGneu/human-format-rs/actions/workflows/rust.yml |

## What is human_format?


The primary purpose for this crate is to format numbers in a customizable fashion based around magnitudes. It is inspired by the [human-format](https://www.npmjs.com/package/human-format) package and the hope is to ultimately provide an idiomatic rust port.

## Usage


1. Add this package as a dependency

```toml
[dependencies]
human_format = "1.0"
```

2. Print some human readable strings

## Examples


```rust
// 1.00 k
Formatter::new()
    .format(1000 as f64));

// 1.34 k
Formatter::new()
    .with_decimals(2)
    .format(1337 as f64);

// 1.3 k
Formatter::new()
    .with_decimals(1)
    .format(1337 as f64);

// 1.3B
Formatter::new()
    .with_decimals(1)
    .with_separator("")
    .format(1337000000 as f64);

// 1.00 - k
Formatter::new()
    .with_separator(" - ")
    .format(1000 as f64);


// Define your own scales as you see fit
let mut custom_binary_scales = Scales::new();

custom_binary_scales
    .with_base(1000)
    .with_suffixes(["".to_owned(),"k".to_owned(), "M".to_owned(), "G".to_owned(), "T".to_owned(), "P".to_owned(), "E".to_owned(), "Z".to_owned(), "Y".to_owned()].to_vec());

// 1.00 kB
Formatter::new()
    .with_scales(custom_binary_scales)
    .with_units("B")
    .format(1000 as f64);

// 1.00 kiB
Formatter::new()
    .with_scales(Scales::Binary())
    .with_units("B")
    .format(1000 as f64);
```

For more examples please consult [tests/demo.rs](https://github.com/BobGneu/human-format-rs/blob/master/tests/demo.rs)