floor

(PHP 4, PHP 5, PHP 7, PHP 8)

floorArrondit à l'entier inférieur

Description

floor(int|float $num): float

Retourne la valeur entière suivante la plus basse (en tant que float) en arrondissant la valeur num si nécessaire.

Liste de paramètres

num

La valeur numérique à arrondir

Valeurs de retour

floor() retourne l'entier inférieur du nombre num. La valeur retournée est un nombre à virgule flottante (nombre décimal).

Historique

Version Description
8.0.0 num n'accepte plus les objets internes qui supporte les conversions numériques.

Exemples

Exemple #1 Exemple avec floor()

<?php
echo floor(4.3); // 4
echo floor(9.999); // 9
echo floor(-3.14); // -4
?>

Voir aussi

  • ceil() - Arrondit au nombre supérieur
  • round() - Arrondit un nombre à virgule flottante

add a note

User Contributed Notes 3 notes

up
16
Antonio
5 years ago
<?php
echo (2.3 * 100) . ' - ' . round(2.3 * 100, 0) . ' - ' . floor(2.3 * 100);
?>.

Result:
230 - 230 - 229

Be careful!
up
10
jay at w3prodigy dot com
16 years ago
Note:

<?php
$int
= 0.99999999999999999;
echo
floor($int); // returns 1
?>

and

<?php
$int
= 0.9999999999999999;
echo
floor($int); // returns 0
?>
up
8
jolyon at mways dot co dot uk
20 years ago
Beware of FLOAT weirdness!

Floats have a mind of their own, and what may look like an integer stored in a float isn't.

Here's a baffling example of how floor can be tripped up by this:

<?php
$price
= 79.99;

print
$price."\r\n"; // correct result, 79.99 shown

$price = $price * 100;

print
$price."\r\n"; // correct result, 7999 shown

print floor($price); // 7998 shown! what's going on?
?>

The thing to remember here is that the way a float stores a value makes it very easy for these kind of things to happen. When the 79.99 was multiplied by 100, the actual value stored in the float was probably something like 7998.9999999999999999999999999999999999, PHP would print out 7999 when the value is displayed but floor would therefore round this down to 7998.

THe moral of this story - never use float for anything that needs to be accurate! If you're doing prices for products or a shopping cart, then always use an integer and store prices as a number of pence, you'll thank me for this later :)
To Top