Question

I have this code (very basic):

#include <iostream>
#include <iomanip>

using namespace std;
int main()
{
float   a = 0.0,
        b = 0.0,
        c = 0.0;

cout<<"Input a: ";
cin>>a;
cout<<"input b: ";
cin>>b;
cout<<endl;
c = a / b;

cout<<"Result: "<<fixed<<setprecision(2)<<c<<endl;
return 0;
}

When I enter two numbers (say, a = 513 and b = 791) I get 0.65. Calculator shows that the correct answer is 0.648. I understand that my code rounds up the last decimal number but this is not what I want.

How can I get it to where it just stays as 0.64 and not 0.65?

Was it helpful?

Solution

If you would like to truncate the value to two decimal places, you can multiply it by 100, truncate to integer, and then divide by 100, like this:

c = a / b;
c = floor(100 * c) / 100;
cout<<"Result: "<<fixed<<setprecision(2)<<c<<endl;

Demo on ideone.

OTHER TIPS

You can use trunc to truncate to a certain number of digits:

c = a / b;

// truncate past two decimals:
c = trunc(c * 100) / 100;

cout<<"Result: "<<fixed<<setprecision(2)<<c<<endl;

of for a generic function:

int trunc(double val, int digits)
{
    double pow10 = pow(10,digits);
    return trunc(val * pow10) / pow10;
}

then use

cout << "Result: " << fixed << setprecision(2) << trunc(c,2) << endl;
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