Lingua::Number - Write cardinal and ordinal numbers with words in over fifty languages
use Lingua::Number;
my $number = 451;
my $language = 'en';
say cardinal($number, $language); # "four hundred fifty-one"
say ordinal($number, $language); # "four hundred fifty-first"
say ordinal-digits($number, $language) # "451st"
say cardinal 764013, 'ja'; # "七十六万四千十三"
say cardinal 54321, 'es', gender => 'F'; # "cincuenta y cuatro mil trescientas veintiuna"
say cardinal 1.23; # English is default, prints "one point two three"
say roman-numeral Date.today.year; # "MMXIII" when I wrote this
say rule2text 'en', 'spellout-numbering-year', Date.today.year; # "twenty thirteen"
This module takes an integer input, and translates it into a natural language. English is the default language, but 60 other languages are supported. The module currently tests for 'en', 'es', and 'ja' (kanji) translations, but any of the languages available in the lib/Lingua/Number/rbnf-xml
directory are available for use.
cardinal ($number, $language = 'en', :$gender = '', :$slang = '')
Returns the number written as a cardinal (counting) number. Gender options include 'masculine', 'feminine', and 'neuter', though really any string beginning in 'm', 'f', or 'n' will dwim. Slangs will vary by language; see Lingua-Number-rulesets
to look at them.
ordinal ($number, $language = 'en', :$gender = '', :$slang = '')
Returns the number written as an ordinal (ranking) number.
roman-numeral ($number)
Returns the number in classy roman numerals.
rule2text (Str $lingua, Str $ruletype, $number)
This is the function which does most of the work for cardinal and ordinal. What it does not do is figure out which rule to call. You need to figure that out yourself, by looking at the XML files or calling Lingua-Number-rulesets
. Note that private rules are prefixed with '%' in the internal data, if you want to use them for some reason. Also note that the arguments are reversed, because, well, who knows.
Anyway, this is mainly exported to aid in developing new rules.
Lingua-Number-rulesets (Str $lingua)
Returns an array of rulesets available to use by rule2text
in the given language. Mostly for debugging purposes. Rulesets beginning in '%' are subrules, and usually should not be used to format full numbers.
Note that whenever you use a language for the first time, it will take much longer to load. This is normal, because we need to parse the XML files. If you want to preload a language for some reason, just call cardinal(0, $language)
.
-
Handle Inf/NaN cases.
-
Write tests for some more languages, especially for gender.
-
Write some English fractional rules.
Brent Laabs
Copyright 2013 - 2018 Brent Laabs
Copyright 2024 Raku Community
The code under the same terms as Raku; see the LICENSE file for details.
Rule-Based Number Format XML data from the Unicode CLDR project is licensed under the Unicode License; see unicode-license.txt
for details. These files are from CLDR 22.1; translations to JSON are included. Modified files: "ja.xml" to add a romaji translation.