double A= 123.1, B= -1.1;
DecimalFormat numform = new DecimalFormat(" ##0.###;-##0.###");
System.out.println( "A = " + numform.format(A) );
System.out.println( "B = " + numform.format(B) );
A = 123.1 B = -1.1
If you are using #, there is usually little benefit in
also using a subpattern for negative numbers.
Find a pattern that works well for the range of numbers
you expect to write.
The format pattern ###0.0### works well
for typical floating point numbers.
Add more #s on the left for larger numbers
or on the right for greater accuracy.
The pattern ###0 works well for typical integers.
(Trick Question: ) What does the following fragment write:
int A= 12, B= -456;
DecimalFormat numform = new DecimalFormat("###0.0###");
System.out.println( "A = " + numform.format(A) );
System.out.println( "B = " + numform.format(B) );
Hint: what types are the variables?