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package convertornumber;
import java.util.ArrayList;
import java.util.List;
/**
* This class will convert numeric values into an english representation
*
* @author mkgurramu@gmail.com
…
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```
Problem:
In most contexts (even notepad apps), numbers are spoken like U.S. phone
numbers:
one hundred twenty-three, four hundred fifty-six, seventy-eight, ninety
or
one hundred twenty-three,…
-
```
Problem:
In most contexts (even notepad apps), numbers are spoken like U.S. phone
numbers:
one hundred twenty-three, four hundred fifty-six, seventy-eight, ninety
or
one hundred twenty-three,…
-
```
Problem:
In most contexts (even notepad apps), numbers are spoken like U.S. phone
numbers:
one hundred twenty-three, four hundred fifty-six, seventy-eight, ninety
or
one hundred twenty-three,…
-
```
Problem:
In most contexts (even notepad apps), numbers are spoken like U.S. phone
numbers:
one hundred twenty-three, four hundred fifty-six, seventy-eight, ninety
or
one hundred twenty-three,…
-
```
Problem:
In most contexts (even notepad apps), numbers are spoken like U.S. phone
numbers:
one hundred twenty-three, four hundred fifty-six, seventy-eight, ninety
or
one hundred twenty-three,…
-
it would be very helpful to include the ability to convert a dollar amount to words.
For example:
$1,578.32 to "one thousand five hundred and seventy eight dollars and thirty two cents"
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### Expected Behaviour
Numbers when spelled should not get truncated
### Actual Behaviour
modify lang_EN_IN.py by adding higher power, which are not necessarily increasing in power 2 or 3.
n…
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I'm running through a whole pile of inputs for the ASCII number parsing, and I've discovered a number of bugs:
```
'One Hundred and Eighty Eight' parses as: 110.0
'One Hundred and Eighty Five' parses…
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```
Problem:
In most contexts (even notepad apps), numbers are spoken like U.S. phone
numbers:
one hundred twenty-three, four hundred fifty-six, seventy-eight, ninety
or
one hundred twenty-three,…