Lua - Number to string behaviour

Lua converts the numbers as is:

print(tostring(10)) => "10"
print(tostring(10.0)) => "10.0"
print(tostring(10.1)) => "10.1"

If you want to play around with them, there's a small online parser for simple commands like this : http://www.lua.org/cgi-bin/demo This uses Lua 5.3.1

edit I must support Egor's comment, it's version dependent. I ran this locally on my system:

Lua 5.2.4  Copyright (C) 1994-2015 Lua.org, PUC-Rio
> print(tostring(10))
10
> print(tostring(10.0)) 
10

If you are using 5.3.4 and you need a quick hotfix, use math.floor - it casts it to an int-number. This beats @warspyking answer in efficiency, but lacks the coolness that is bunches of code.

>tostring(math.floor(54.0))
54
>tostring(54.0)
54.0
>type(math.floor(54.0))
integer
>type(54.0)
number

In Lua 5.3, due to the integer type, tostring on a float (although it's Numeric value may be equivalent to an integer) will add a "'.0' suffix, but that doesn't mean you can't shorten it!

local str = tostring(n)
if str:sub(-2) == ".0" then
    str = str:sub(1,-3)
end

In Lua 5.2 or earlier, both tostring(10) and tostring(10.0) result as the string "10".

In Lua 5.3, this has changed:

print(tostring(10)) -- "10"
print(tostring(10.0)) -- "10.0"

That's because Lua 5.3 introduced the integer subtype. From Changes in the Language:

The conversion of a float to a string now adds a .0 suffix to the result if it looks like an integer. (For instance, the float 2.0 will be printed as 2.0, not as 2.) You should always use an explicit format when you need a specific format for numbers.

Tags:

C

Lua

Tostring