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unit-formatter.md

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.unitFormatter( unit [, options] ) ➜ function( value )

Returns a function that formats a unit according to the given unit, options, and the default/instance locale.

The returned function is invoked with one argument: the number value to be formatted.

Parameters

unit

String value indicating the unit to be formatted. eg. "day", "week", "month", etc. Could also be a compound unit, eg. "mile-per-hour" or "mile/hour"

options.form

Optional. String, e.g., "long" (default), "short" or "narrow".

options.numberFormatter

Optional. A number formatter function. Defaults to Globalize.numberFormatter() for the current locale using the default options.

value

The number to be formatted.

Example

Prior to using any unit methods, you must load cldr/main/{locale}/units.json and the CLDR content required by the plural module. Read CLDR content if you need more information.

You can use the static method Globalize.unitFormatter(), which uses the default locale.

var customNumberFormatter, formatter;

Globalize.locale( "en" );
formatter = Globalize.unitFormatter( "month", { form: "long" } );

formatter( 1 );
// > "1 month"

formatter( 3 );
// > "3 months"

formatter( 3000 );
// > "3,000 months"

You can pass a custom number formatter to format the number of units.

var customNumberFormatter, formatter;

Globalize.locale( "en" );
customNumberFormatter = Globalize.numberFormatter({ useGrouping = false })
formatter = Globalize.unitFormatter( "mile-per-hour", {
	form: "narrow", numberFormatter: customNumberFormatter
} );

formatter(5000)
// > "5000mph"

You can use the instance method .unitFormatter(), which uses the instance locale.

var globalize = new Globalize( "en" ),
	formatter = globalize.unitFormatter( "mile-per-hour", { form: "narrow" } );

formatter( 10 );
// > "10mph"