Ejemplo n.º 1
0
// ParseQuantity turns str into a Quantity, or returns an error.
func ParseQuantity(str string) (*Quantity, error) {
	parts := splitRE.FindStringSubmatch(strings.TrimSpace(str))
	// regexp returns are entire match, followed by an entry for each () section.
	if len(parts) != 3 {
		return nil, ErrFormatWrong
	}

	amount := new(inf.Dec)
	if _, ok := amount.SetString(parts[1]); !ok {
		return nil, ErrNumeric
	}

	base, exponent, format, ok := quantitySuffixer.interpret(suffix(parts[2]))
	if !ok {
		return nil, ErrSuffix
	}

	// So that no one but us has to think about suffixes, remove it.
	if base == 10 {
		amount.SetScale(amount.Scale() + inf.Scale(-exponent))
	} else if base == 2 {
		// numericSuffix = 2 ** exponent
		numericSuffix := big.NewInt(1).Lsh(bigOne, uint(exponent))
		ub := amount.UnscaledBig()
		amount.SetUnscaledBig(ub.Mul(ub, numericSuffix))
	}

	// Cap at min/max bounds.
	sign := amount.Sign()
	if sign == -1 {
		amount.Neg(amount)
	}
	// This rounds non-zero values up to the minimum representable
	// value, under the theory that if you want some resources, you
	// should get some resources, even if you asked for way too small
	// of an amount.
	// Arguably, this should be inf.RoundHalfUp (normal rounding), but
	// that would have the side effect of rounding values < .5m to zero.
	if v, ok := amount.Unscaled(); v != int64(0) || !ok {
		amount.Round(amount, 3, inf.RoundUp)
	}

	// The max is just a simple cap.
	if amount.Cmp(maxAllowed) > 0 {
		amount.Set(maxAllowed)
	}
	if format == BinarySI && amount.Cmp(decOne) < 0 && amount.Cmp(decZero) > 0 {
		// This avoids rounding and hopefully confusion, too.
		format = DecimalSI
	}
	if sign == -1 {
		amount.Neg(amount)
	}

	return &Quantity{amount, format}, nil
}