Lightweight currency conversion library, successor of money.js
- Motivation
- Highlights
- Install
- Usage
- API
- Migrating from money.js
- Floating point issues
- Related projects
- AI disclosure
- License
This package was created, because the popular money.js library:
- is not maintained (last commit was over 10 years ago)
- has over 20 open issues
- does not support TypeScript
- has implicit globals
- does not have any unit tests
- has floating point issues
- Simple API
- 0 runtime dependencies
- Well tested and documented
- Easy migration from money.js
- Written in TypeScript
- ESM-only
$ pnpm add cashify
This package is ESM-only and requires Node.js 24 or higher.
import {Cashify} from 'cashify';
const rates = {
GBP: 0.92,
EUR: 1.00,
USD: 1.12
};
const cashify = new Cashify({base: 'EUR', rates});
const result = cashify.convert(10, {from: 'EUR', to: 'GBP'});
console.log(result); //=> 9.2Using the Cashify constructor is not required. Instead, you can just use the convert function:
import {convert} from 'cashify';
const rates = {
GBP: 0.92,
EUR: 1.00,
USD: 1.12
};
const result = convert(10, {from: 'EUR', to: 'GBP', base: 'EUR', rates});
console.log(result); //=> 9.2Cashify supports parsing, so you can pass a string to the amount argument and the from and/or to currency will be automatically detected:
import {Cashify} from 'cashify';
const rates = {
GBP: 0.92,
EUR: 1.00,
USD: 1.12
};
const cashify = new Cashify({base: 'EUR', rates});
// Basic parsing
cashify.convert('€10 EUR', {to: 'GBP'});
// Full parsing
cashify.convert('10 EUR to GBP');Alternatively, if you just want to parse a string without conversion you can use the parse function which returns an object with parsing results:
import {parse} from 'cashify';
parse('10 EUR to GBP'); //=> {amount: 10, from: 'EUR', to: 'GBP'}Note: If you want to use full parsing, you need to pass a string in a specific format:
10 usd to pln
12.5 GBP in EUR
3.1415 eur as chf
You can use to, in or as to separate the expression (case insensitive). Used currencies name case doesn't matter, as cashify will automatically convert them to upper case.
Integration with big.js
big.js is a small JavaScript library for arbitrary-precision decimal arithmetic. You can use it with cashify to make sure you won't run into floating point issues:
import {Cashify} from 'cashify';
import Big from 'big.js';
const rates = {
EUR: 0.8235,
USD: 1
};
const cashify = new Cashify({base: 'USD', rates});
const result = cashify.convert(1, {
from: 'USD',
to: 'EUR',
BigJs: Big
});
console.log(result); //=> 0.8235 (without big.js you would get something like 0.8234999999999999)Formatting with Intl.NumberFormat
You can use the built-in Intl.NumberFormat API to format conversion results as currency strings:
import {Cashify} from 'cashify';
const rates = {
GBP: 0.92,
EUR: 1.00,
USD: 1.12
};
const cashify = new Cashify({base: 'EUR', rates});
const converted = cashify.convert(8635619, {from: 'EUR', to: 'GBP'}); // => 7944769.48
// Format the conversion result
new Intl.NumberFormat('en-GB', {style: 'currency', currency: 'GBP'}).format(converted); // => '£7,944,769.48'Constructor.
Type: string
The base currency.
Type: object
An object containing currency rates (for example from an API, such as Open Exchange Rates).
Type: big.js constructor
Returns conversion result (number).
Type: number or string
Amount of money you want to convert. You can either use a number or a string. If you choose the second option, you can take advantage of parsing and not specify from and/or to argument(s).
Type: string
Currency from which you want to convert. You might not need to specify it if you are using parsing.
Type: string
Currency to which you want to convert. You might not need to specify it if you are using parsing.
Type: string
The base currency.
Type: object
An object containing currency rates (for example from an API, such as Open Exchange Rates).
Type: big.js constructor
Returns an object, which contains parsing results:
{
amount: number;
from: string | undefined;
to: string | undefined;
}
Type: string
Expression you want to parse, ex. 10 usd to pln or €1.23 eur
With Cashify constructor:
- import fx from 'money';
+ import {Cashify} from 'cashify';
- fx.base = 'EUR';
- fx.rates = {
- GBP: 0.92,
- EUR: 1.00,
- USD: 1.12
- };
+ const rates = {
+ GBP: 0.92,
+ EUR: 1.00,
+ USD: 1.12
+ };
+ const cashify = new Cashify({base: 'EUR', rates});
- fx.convert(10, {from: 'GBP', to: 'EUR'});
+ cashify.convert(10, {from: 'GBP', to: 'EUR'});With convert function:
- import fx from 'money';
+ import {convert} from 'cashify';
- fx.base = 'EUR';
- fx.rates = {
- GBP: 0.92,
- EUR: 1.00,
- USD: 1.12
- };
+ const rates = {
+ GBP: 0.92,
+ EUR: 1.00,
+ USD: 1.12
+ };
- fx.convert(10, {from: 'GBP', to: 'EUR'});
+ convert(10, {from: 'GBP', to: 'EUR', base: 'EUR', rates});When working with currencies, decimals only need to be precise up to the smallest cent value while avoiding common floating point errors when performing basic arithmetic.
Let's take a look at the following example:
import {Cashify} from 'cashify';
const rates = {
GBP: 0.92,
USD: 1.12
};
const cashify = new Cashify({base: 'EUR', rates});
// money.js would give: 9.200000000000001
cashify.convert(10, {from: 'EUR', to: 'GBP'}); //=> 9.2Cashify uses a simple rounding trick (amount * 100 * rate / 100) that avoids floating point errors in many common currency conversions. This works well for most practical currency values, but it is not a complete solution for all possible floating point edge cases. For guaranteed arbitrary-precision arithmetic, use the big.js integration.
- nestjs-cashify – Node.js Cashify module for Nest.js.
- cashify-rs – Cashify port for Rust.
This project contains code generated by Large Language Models (LLMs), under human supervision and proofreading.
MIT © Antoni Kępiński