Class GoogleTypeDecimal
A representation of a decimal value, such as 2.5. Clients may convert values into language-native decimal formats, such as Java's BigDecimal or Python's decimal.Decimal.
Implements
Inherited Members
Namespace: Google.Apis.Playdeveloperreporting.v1alpha1.Data
Assembly: Google.Apis.Playdeveloperreporting.v1alpha1.dll
Syntax
public class GoogleTypeDecimal : IDirectResponseSchema
Properties
ETag
The ETag of the item.
Declaration
public virtual string ETag { get; set; }
Property Value
Type | Description |
---|---|
string |
Value
The decimal value, as a string. The string representation consists of an optional sign, +
(U+002B
) or
-
(U+002D
), followed by a sequence of zero or more decimal digits ("the integer"), optionally followed
by a fraction, optionally followed by an exponent. An empty string should be interpreted as 0
. The
fraction consists of a decimal point followed by zero or more decimal digits. The string must contain at
least one digit in either the integer or the fraction. The number formed by the sign, the integer and the
fraction is referred to as the significand. The exponent consists of the character e
(U+0065
) or E
(U+0045
) followed by one or more decimal digits. Services should normalize decimal values before
storing them by: - Removing an explicitly-provided +
sign (+2.5
-> 2.5
). - Replacing a
zero-length integer value with 0
(.5
-> 0.5
). - Coercing the exponent character to upper-case,
with explicit sign (2.5e8
-> 2.5E+8
). - Removing an explicitly-provided zero exponent (2.5E0
-> 2.5
). Services may perform additional normalization based on its own needs and the internal
decimal implementation selected, such as shifting the decimal point and exponent value together (example:
2.5E-1
<-> 0.25
). Additionally, services may preserve trailing zeroes in the fraction
to indicate increased precision, but are not required to do so. Note that only the .
character is
supported to divide the integer and the fraction; ,
should not be supported regardless of locale.
Additionally, thousand separators should not be supported. If a service does support them, values
must be normalized. The ENBF grammar is: DecimalString = '' | [Sign] Significand [Exponent]; Sign = '+'
| '-'; Significand = Digits '.' | [Digits] '.' Digits; Exponent = ('e' | 'E') [Sign] Digits; Digits = { '0'
| '1' | '2' | '3' | '4' | '5' | '6' | '7' | '8' | '9' }; Services should clearly document the range of
supported values, the maximum supported precision (total number of digits), and, if applicable, the scale
(number of digits after the decimal point), as well as how it behaves when receiving out-of-bounds values.
Services may choose to accept values passed as input even when the value has a higher precision or scale
than the service supports, and should round the value to fit the supported scale. Alternatively, the
service may error with 400 Bad Request
(INVALID_ARGUMENT
in gRPC) if precision would be lost.
Services should error with 400 Bad Request
(INVALID_ARGUMENT
in gRPC) if the service receives a
value outside of the supported range.
Declaration
[JsonProperty("value")]
public virtual string Value { get; set; }
Property Value
Type | Description |
---|---|
string |