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List billing history for current organization

GET 

/bv/billing/v1/billings

Lists the history of billing details associated with the current organization within a time-range.

Request

Query Parameters

    current_page int32
    items_per_page int32
    start_time_gte date-time

    start_time greater than or equal to this value

    end_time_lte date-time

    end_time less than or equal to this value

    org_id string

    If set, list billing histories for the specified organization.

Responses

A successful response.

Schema
    billings object[]
  • Array [
  • id string
    org_id string
    org_name string
    org_type string

    Possible values: [ORGANIZATION_TYPE_ROOT, ORGANIZATION_TYPE_GENERAL_DISTRIBUTOR, ORGANIZATION_TYPE_RESELLER, ORGANIZATION_TYPE_BUSINESS]

    parent_org_name string
    parent_org_type string

    Possible values: [ORGANIZATION_TYPE_ROOT, ORGANIZATION_TYPE_GENERAL_DISTRIBUTOR, ORGANIZATION_TYPE_RESELLER, ORGANIZATION_TYPE_BUSINESS]

    org_time_zone string
    plan_type string

    Possible values: [PLAN_TYPE_STANDARD, PLAN_TYPE_PAY_AS_YOU_GO]

    logo_type string

    Possible values: [LOGO_TYPE_BLEND_VISION, LOGO_TYPE_BLEND_VISION_AIM, LOGO_TYPE_BLEND_VISION_ONE, LOGO_TYPE_BLEND_VISION_AISK]

    currency_code string
    total_price object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    subscription_price object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    overage_price object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    additional_price object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    start_time date-time
    end_time date-time
    plans object[]
  • Array [
  • id string
    name string
    count int64
    price object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    unit_price object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

  • ]
  • storage object
    usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    price object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    quota object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    overage_usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    unit_price object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    encoding object
    usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    price object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    quota object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    overage_usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    unit_price object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    live object
    usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    price object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    quota object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    overage_usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    unit_price object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    drm object
    usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    price object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    quota object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    overage_usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    unit_price object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    cdn object
    usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    price object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    quota object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    overage_usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    unit_price object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    audio_encoding_times object
    usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    price object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    quota object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    overage_usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    unit_price object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    player_license object
    usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    price object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    quota object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    overage_usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    unit_price object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    bot object
    usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    price object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    quota object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    overage_usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    unit_price object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    message object
    usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    price object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    quota object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    overage_usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    unit_price object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    embedding_character object
    usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    price object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    quota object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    overage_usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    unit_price object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    stt object
    usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    price object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    quota object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    overage_usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    unit_price object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    stored_character object
    usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    price object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    quota object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    overage_usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    unit_price object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    ai_insight object
    usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    price object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    quota object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    overage_usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    unit_price object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    ai_translation object
    usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    price object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    quota object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    overage_usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    unit_price object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    premium_support_price object
    usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    price object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    quota object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    overage_usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    unit_price object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    live_support_price object
    usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    price object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    quota object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    overage_usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    unit_price object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    video_library_usage_info object
    real_usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    rate object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    history_vod_usage_info object
    real_usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    rate object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    history_audio_usage_info object
    real_usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    rate object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    encoding_base_usage_info object
    real_usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    rate object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    encoding_pte_usage_info object
    real_usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    rate object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    encoding_faster_usage_info object
    real_usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    rate object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    encoding_h265_usage_info object
    real_usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    rate object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    encoding_live_to_vod_usage_info object
    real_usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    rate object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    encoding_audio_usage_info object
    real_usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    rate object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    cdn_base_usage_info object
    real_usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    rate object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    cdn_others_usage_info object
    real_usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    rate object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    live_base_usage_info object
    real_usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    rate object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    live_4k_usage_info object
    real_usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    rate object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    live_ull_usage_info object
    real_usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    rate object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    drm_usage_info object
    real_usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    rate object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    audio_encoding_times_usage_info object
    real_usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    rate object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    player_license_usage_info object
    real_usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    rate object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    bot_usage_info object
    real_usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    rate object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    message_base_usage_info object
    real_usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    rate object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    embedding_character_usage_info object
    real_usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    rate object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    stt_usage_info object
    real_usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    rate object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    stored_character_usage_info object
    real_usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    rate object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    ai_insight_usage_info object
    real_usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    rate object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    ai_translation_usage_info object
    real_usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    rate object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    usage object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    live_support_histories object[]
  • Array [
  • start_time date-time
    end_time date-time
    hour_count object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    unit_price object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

    price object

    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.

    value string

    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.

    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 lower-case (2.5E8 -> 2.5e8).
    • 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] '.' 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.

  • ]
  • update_time date-time
  • ]
  • pagination object
    total_items int32

    Output only. The total numbers of the list in the current pagination.

    items_per_page int32

    Output only. The number of items per page in the current pagination.

    current_page int32

    Output only. The current page in the current pagination.

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