❗ Attention, this project is not maintained anymore! Please use the original version from the TheBigBrainsCompany.
Changes:
- Values with the FormType "SimpleMoney" can be passed as string instead of an array construct (usually
array('tbbc_amount' => '10.00')
) - Two new Twig filters: get_digits and get_decimals.
- If values in a money formatted column got saved as float, convert it to an integer when value gets fetched from database.
- Added custom JMS serializer for money type
This bundle is used to integrate the Money library from mathiasverraes into a Symfony project.
This library is based on Fowler's Money pattern
- This bundle is tested and is stable with Symfony 2.8 and Symfony 3.1
use Money\Money;
use Tbbc\MoneyBundle\Form\Type\MoneyType;
// the money library
$fiveEur = Money::EUR(500);
$tenEur = $fiveEur->add($fiveEur);
list($part1, $part2, $part3) = $tenEur->allocate(array(1, 1, 1));
assert($part1->equals(Money::EUR(334)));
assert($part2->equals(Money::EUR(333)));
assert($part3->equals(Money::EUR(333)));
// a service that stores conversion ratios
$pairManager = $this->get('tbbc_money.pair_manager');
$usd = $pairManager->convert($tenEur, 'USD');
// a form integration
$formBuilder->add('price', MoneyType::class);
- Integrates money library from mathiasverraes
- Twig filters and PHP helpers for helping with money and currencies in templates
- A storage system for currency ratios
- A ratioProvider system for fetching ratio from externals api
- Symfony form integration
- Console commands for different operations
- A configuration parser for specifying website used currencies
- Access to the history of currency ratio fetched
- Money formatter i18n
Use Composer and install with
$ composer require tbbc/money-bundle
Then add the bundle in AppKernel :
public function registerBundles()
{
$bundles = array(
// ...
new Tbbc\MoneyBundle\TbbcMoneyBundle(),
);
}
In your config.yml, add the currencies you want to use and the reference currency.
tbbc_money:
currencies: ["USD", "EUR"]
reference_currency: "EUR"
decimals: 2
In your config.yml, add the form fields presentations
twig:
form:
resources:
- 'TbbcMoneyBundle:Form:fields.html.twig'
use Money\Money;
$fiveEur = Money::EUR(500);
$tenEur = $fiveEur->add($fiveEur);
list($part1, $part2, $part3) = $tenEur->allocate(array(1, 1, 1));
assert($part1->equals(Money::EUR(334)));
assert($part2->equals(Money::EUR(333)));
assert($part3->equals(Money::EUR(333)));
$pair = new CurrencyPair(new Currency('EUR'), new Currency('USD'), 1.2500);
$usd = $pair->convert($tenEur);
$this->assertEquals(Money::USD(1250), $usd);
You have 3 new form types (under Tbbc\MoneyBundle\Form\Type namespace):
- CurrencyType : asks for a currency among currencies defined in config.yml
- MoneyType : asks for an amount and a currency
- SimpleMoneyType : asks for an amount and sets the currency to the reference currency set in config.yml
Example :
use Symfony\Component\Form\Extension\Core\Type\TextType;
use Symfony\Component\Form\Extension\Core\Type\SubmitType;
// I create my form
$form = $this->createFormBuilder()
->add('name', TextType::class)
->add('price', MoneyType::class, [
'data' => Money::EUR(1000), //EUR 10
])
->add('save', SubmitType::class)
->getForm();
Note that there are 2 columns in the DB table : $priceAmount and $priceCurrency and only one getter/setter : getPrice and setPrice.
The get/setPrice methods are dealing with these two columns transparently.
- Advantage : your DB is clean and you can do sql sum, group by, sort,... with the amount and the currency in two different columns in your db
- Disadvantage : it is ugly in the entity.
<?php
namespace App\AdministratorBundle\Entity;
use Doctrine\ORM\Mapping as ORM;
use Money\Currency;
use Money\Money;
/**
* TestMoney
*
* @ORM\Table("test_money")
* @ORM\Entity
*/
class TestMoney
{
/**
* @var integer
*
* @ORM\Column(type="integer")
* @ORM\Id
* @ORM\GeneratedValue(strategy="AUTO")
*/
private $id;
/**
* @var integer
*
* @ORM\Column(name="price_amount", type="integer")
*/
private $priceAmount;
/**
* @var string
*
* @ORM\Column(name="price_currency", type="string", length=64)
*/
private $priceCurrency;
/**
* Get id
*
* @return integer
*/
public function getId()
{
return $this->id;
}
/**
* get Money
*
* @return Money
*/
public function getPrice()
{
if (!$this->priceCurrency) {
return null;
}
if (!$this->priceAmount) {
return new Money(0, new Currency($this->priceCurrency));
}
return new Money($this->priceAmount, new Currency($this->priceCurrency));
}
/**
* Set price
*
* @param Money $price
* @return TestMoney
*/
public function setPrice(Money $price)
{
$this->priceAmount = $price->getAmount();
$this->priceCurrency = $price->getCurrency()->getName();
return $this;
}
}
There is only one string column in your DB table. The money object is manually serialized by the new Doctrine type.
1.25€ is serialized in your DB by 'EUR 125'. This format is stable. It won't change in future releases..
The new Doctrine type name is "money".
- Advantage : The entity is easy to create and use
- Disadvantage : it is more difficult to directly request the db in SQL.
<?php
namespace App\AdministratorBundle\Entity;
use Doctrine\ORM\Mapping as ORM;
use Money\Money;
/**
* TestMoney
*
* @ORM\Table("test_money")
* @ORM\Entity
*/
class TestMoney
{
/**
* @var integer
*
* @ORM\Column(type="integer")
* @ORM\Id
* @ORM\GeneratedValue(strategy="AUTO")
*/
private $id;
/**
* @var Money
*
* @ORM\Column(name="price", type="money")
*/
private $price;
/**
* Get id
*
* @return integer
*/
public function getId()
{
return $this->id;
}
/**
* get Money
*
* @return Money
*/
public function getPrice()
{
return $this->price;
}
/**
* Set price
*
* @param Money $price
* @return TestMoney
*/
public function setPrice(Money $price)
{
$this->price = $price;
return $this;
}
}
Convert an amount into another currency
$pairManager = $this->get("tbbc_money.pair_manager");
$usd = $pairManager->convert($amount, 'USD');
Save a conversion value in a DB
use Money\Money;
$pairManager = $this->get("tbbc_money.pair_manager");
$pairManager->saveRatio('USD', 1.25); // save in ratio file in CSV
$eur = Money::EUR(100);
$usd = $pairManager->convert($amount, 'USD');
$this->assertEquals(Money::USD(125), $usd);
<?php
namespace My\Controller\IndexController;
use Money\Money;
use Money\Currency;
class IndexController extends Controller
{
public function myAction()
{
$moneyFormatter = $this->get('tbbc_money.formatter.money_formatter');
$price = new Money(123456789, new Currency('EUR'));
// best method (added in 2.2+ version)
\Locale::setDefault('fr_FR');
$formatedPrice = $moneyFormatter->localizedFormatMoney($price);
// 1 234 567,89 €
$formatedPrice = $moneyFormatter->localizedFormatMoney($price, 'en');
// €1,234,567.89
// old method (before v2.2)
$formattedPrice = $moneyFormatter->formatMoney($price);
// 1 234 567,89
$formattedCurrency = $moneyFormatter->formatCurrency($price);
// €
}
}
{{ $amount | money_localized_format('fr') }} => 1 234 567,89 €
{{ $amount | money_localized_format('en_US') }} => €1,234,567.89
{{ $amount | money_localized_format }} => depends on your default locale
{{ $amount | money_format }}
{{ $amount | money_as_float }}
{{ $amount | money_get_currency | currency_symbol }}
{{ $amount | money_get_currency | currency_name }}
{{ $amount | money_convert("USD") | money_format }}
{{ $amount | money_format_currency }}
<span class="price"><?php echo $view['tbbc_money']->format($price) ?></span>
<span class="money"><?php echo $view['tbbc_money_currency']->formatCurrencyAsSymbol($price->getCurrency()) ?></span>
# save a ratio in the storage
./bin/console tbbc:money:ratio-save USD 1.25
# display ratio list
./bin/console tbbc:money:ratio-list
# fetch all the ratio for all defined currencies from an external API
./bin/console tbbc:money:ratio-fetch
The ratio provider by default is base on the service 'tbbc_money.ratio_provider.yahoo_finance'
This bundles contains three ratio providers :
- tbbc_money.ratio_provider.yahoo_finance based on the Yahoo finance APIs https://developer.yahoo.com/
- tbbc_money.ratio_provider.google based on the https://www.google.com/finance/converter service
- tbbc_money.ratio_provider.ecb based on the data provided here https://www.ecb.europa.eu/stats/eurofxref/eurofxref-daily.xml
You can change the service to use in the config.yml file :
tbbc_money:
[...]
ratio_provider: tbbc_money.ratio_provider.google
A ratio provider is a service that implements the Tbbc\MoneyBundle\Pair\RatioProviderInterface
.
I recommend that you read the PHP doc of the interface to understand how to implement a new ratio provider.
The new ratio provider has to be registered as a service.
To use the new ratio provider, you should set the service to use in the config.yml by giving the service name.
tbbc_money:
[...]
ratio_provider: tbbc_money.ratio_provider.google
Add to your crontab :
1 0 * * * /my_app_dir/bin/console tbbc:money:ratio-fetch > /dev/null
Create a money object from a float can be a bit tricky because of rounding issues.
<?php
$moneyManager = $this->get("tbbc_money.money_manager");
$money = $moneyManager->createMoneyFromFloat('2.5', 'USD');
$this->assertEquals("USD", $money->getCurrency()->getName());
$this->assertEquals(250, $money->getAmount());
Doctrine is required to use this feature.
In order to get the ratio history, you have to enable it in the configuration and to use Doctrine.
tbbc_money:
currencies: ["USD", "EUR"]
reference_currency: "EUR"
enable_pair_history: true
Then you can use the service :
$pairHistoryManager = $this->get("tbbc_money.pair_history_manager");
$dt = new \DateTime("2012-07-08 11:14:15.638276");
// returns ratio for at a given date
$ratio = $pairHistoryManager->getRatioAtDate('USD',$dt);
// returns the list of USD ratio (relative to the reference value)
$ratioList = $pairHistoryManager->getRatioHistory('USD',$startDate, $endDate);
Two storages for storing ratios are available : CSV File, or Doctrine By default, TbbcMoneyBundle is configured with CSV File.
If you want to switch to a Doctrine storage, edit your config.yml
tbbc_money:
storage: doctrine
Update your database schema :
./bin/console doctrine:schema:update --force
With the Doctrine storage, currency ratio will use the default entity manager and will store data inside the tbbc_money_doctrine_storage_ratios
The MoneyFormatter::localizedFormatMoney ( service 'tbbc_money.formatter.money_formatter' ) use the php NumberFormatter class ( http://www.php.net/manual/en/numberformatter.formatcurrency.php ) to format money.
You can :
- give your own \NumberFormatter instance as a parameter of MoneyFormatter::localizedFormatMoney
- subclass the MoneyFormatter and rewrite the getDefaultNumberFormater method to set a application wide NumberFormatter
You have to disable the pair history service in order to use the TbbcMoneyBundle without Doctrine.
tbbc_money:
enable_pair_history: true
Note : you can imagine to code your own PairHistoryManager for MongoDB or Propel, it is very easy to do. Don't hesitate to submit a PR with your code and your tests.
In your config.yml, you can :
- select the templating engine to use. By default, only Twig is loaded.
- define the decimals count after a unit (ex : 12.25€ : 2 decimals ; 11.5678€ : 4 decimals)
tbbc_money:
currencies: ["USD", "EUR"]
reference_currency: "EUR"
decimals: 2
enable_pair_history: true
ratio_provider: tbbc_money.ratio_provider.yahoo_finance
- Examples above use Symfony 3 syntax for the console (
./bin/console
), for version 2.8 you should use./app/console
instead. - "class" constant (e.g.
MoneyType::class
) is only supported since PHP 5.5, if you have an older version, you should use the full class name instead (e.g.Tbbc\MoneyBundle\Type\MoneyType
)
- Take a look at the list of issues.
- Fork
- Write a test (for either new feature or bug)
- Make a PR
- PHP 5.3.9+
- Symfony 2.8+
Philippe Le Van - kitpages.fr - twitter : @plv
Thomas Tourlourat - Wozbe - twitter: @armetiz
Stable
what is functional:
- integration of the money library
- configuration parser
- pairManager
- Travis CI integration
- form integration
- Twig presentation for forms
- Twig filters
- commands for ratio creation and ratio display
- automatic ratio fetch (with 2 ratio providers)
- history of currency ratio