Use setRoundingMode
, set the RoundingMode
explicitly to handle your issue with the half-even round, then use the format pattern for your required output.
Example:
DecimalFormat df = new DecimalFormat("#.####");
df.setRoundingMode(RoundingMode.CEILING);
for (Number n : Arrays.asList(12, 123.12345, 0.23, 0.1, 2341234.212431324)) {
Double d = n.doubleValue();
System.out.println(df.format(d));
}
gives the output:
12
123.1235
0.23
0.1
2341234.2125
EDIT: The original answer does not address the accuracy of the double values. That is fine if you don't care much whether it rounds up or down. But if you want accurate rounding, then you need to take the expected accuracy of the values into account. Floating point values have a binary representation internally. That means that a value like 2.7735 does not actually have that exact value internally. It can be slightly larger or slightly smaller. If the internal value is slightly smaller, then it will not round up to 2.7740. To remedy that situation, you need to be aware of the accuracy of the values that you are working with, and add or subtract that value before rounding. For example, when you know that your values are accurate up to 6 digits, then to round half-way values up, add that accuracy to the value:
Double d = n.doubleValue() + 1e-6;
To round down, subtract the accuracy.
You could define callFriend
this way:
public <T extends Animal> T callFriend(String name, Class<T> type) {
return type.cast(friends.get(name));
}
Then call it as such:
jerry.callFriend("spike", Dog.class).bark();
jerry.callFriend("quacker", Duck.class).quack();
This code has the benefit of not generating any compiler warnings. Of course this is really just an updated version of casting from the pre-generic days and doesn't add any additional safety.
Best Answer
You can create an Answer in Mockito. Let's assume, we have an interface named Application with a method myFunction.
Here is the test method with a Mockito answer:
Since Mockito 1.9.5 and Java 8, you can also use a lambda expression: