Template:Ordinal to word: Difference between revisions
en>Johnuniq (invoke Module:ConvertNumeric per TfD; TODO: method of getting parameters is slightly broken: need |zeroth=zeroth for what should be default to avoid zero giving an empty string; also 999999 might have an "and" missing) |
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Latest revision as of 13:02, 25 August 2022
This template uses Lua: |
Converts an integer in the range -999,999 to 999,999 into an ordinal number in the English language.
Usage
{{Ordinal to word|integer[|zeroth=zeroth][|us=on]}}
integer: Required. An integer in the range -999,999 to 999,999.
zeroth: Optional. The value to use when the number is 0. Default is "zeroth". Can be made empty or, for example, "seed" or "one before the first" as appropriate for the context.
us: Optional. If the value is "on", the output of numbers does not include "and" to separate hundreds from smaller values, nor to separate thousands from hundreds. This accords with American usage as described at English numerals.
This template should not be used in running prose in articles; it is intended for automated script processing of numeric data. Writing something like "in the {{ordinal to word|13}} match of the seasons
" serves no purpose, and just makes the wikicode harder to understand and edit.
Examples
{{Ordinal to word|-999999}} {{Ordinal to word|-1001|us=on}} {{Ordinal to word|-100}} {{Ordinal to word|-30}} {{Ordinal to word|0|zeroth=not a sausage}} {{Ordinal to word|30}} {{Ordinal to word|100}} {{Ordinal to word|1001|us=on}} {{Ordinal to word|999999}}
produces:
negative nine hundred ninety-nine thousand nine hundred and ninety-ninth negative one thousand first negative one hundredth negative thirtieth not a sausage thirtieth one hundredth one thousand first nine hundred ninety-nine thousand nine hundred and ninety-ninth