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Home/ Questions/Q 227259
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 11, 20262026-05-11T19:35:01+00:00 2026-05-11T19:35:01+00:00

I’d like to get the first three digits from large floats or integers and

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I’d like to get the first three digits from large floats or integers and on some insert a decimal. For example:

KB
----------
32589 >> 325
43266 >> 432

MB
----------
1234599 >> 1.23
3422847 >> 3.42

For the particular number, I will have the “KB” and “MB” strings. This will let me know if the decimal is required, as in “MB” examples. I looked at NSNumberFormatter but wasn’t sure what on there would help. Any suggestions?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-11T19:35:01+00:00Added an answer on May 11, 2026 at 7:35 pm

    Actually, decided to chime in with my own answer. This is my routine for generating strings for outputting human sizes from byte counts:

    #include <math.h>    // for isgreater()
    static NSString * MemorySizeString( mach_vm_size_t size )
    {
        enum
        {
            kSizeIsBytes        = 0,
            kSizeIsKilobytes,
            kSizeIsMegabytes,
            kSizeIsGigabytes,
            kSizeIsTerabytes,
            kSizeIsPetabytes,
            kSizeIsExabytes
        };
    
        int sizeType = kSizeIsBytes;
        double dSize = (double) size;
    
        while ( isgreater(dSize, 1024.0) )
        {
            dSize = dSize / 1024.0;
            sizeType++;
        }
    
        NSMutableString * str = [[NSMutableString alloc] initWithFormat: (sizeType == kSizeIsBytes ? @"%.00f" : @"%.02f"), dSize];
        switch ( sizeType )
        {
            default:
            case kSizeIsBytes:
                [str appendString: @" bytes"];
                break;
    
            case kSizeIsKilobytes:
                [str appendString: @"KB"];
                break;
    
            case kSizeIsMegabytes:
                [str appendString: @"MB"];
                break;
    
            case kSizeIsGigabytes:
                [str appendString: @"GB"];
                break;
    
            case kSizeIsTerabytes:
                [str appendString: @"TB"];
                break;
    
            case kSizeIsPetabytes:
                [str appendString: @"PB"];
                break;
    
            case kSizeIsExabytes:
                [str appendString: @"EB"];
                break;
        }
    
        NSString * result = [str copy];
        [str release];
    
        return ( [result autorelease] );
    }
    

    It works out the correct size by seeing what order of binary magnitude it is, using 1024 as the base (1024 bytes = 1KB, 1024KB = 1MB, etc.). While doing this, it shrinks the input value (using floating-point arithmetic) such that once it’s below 1024, it has both a human-readable value and a magnitude specifier. It then generates a string containing the formatted value (no decimal places for bytes, 2 decimal places for any larger magnitude), and inspects the magnitude constant to determine what suffix to attach.

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