Trouble converting javascript string to number - javascript

I have a script assigns a variable using parseFloat as follows:
var vendorCost = parseFloat(vendorSearchresults[0].getValue('vendorcost')).toFixed(2);
I assumed this would make the variable a number. However when I check it with typeof - it reports it as a string. My solution is as follows:
vendorCost = parseFloat(vendorCost);
Which works, however I'm trying to be more efficient when coding and would like to understand why it doesn't make vendorCost a number when assigning it a number? Is there a way I could make the first statement make vendorCost a number without the need for the second statement? Thanks in advance.
Update - just thought I should mention I'm having the exact same issue without using .toFixed -
var vendorLandedCost = parseFloat(vendorSearchresults[0].getValue('custentity_asg_landed_cost','vendor'));
vendorLandedCost = parseFloat(vendorLandedCost);

The last toFixed() call converts the result of the first parseFloat into a string.
Looks like you need to round the number to two decimal places, which is why you're using the parseFloat call. You can do something like this instead:
vendor_cost = Math.round(parseFloat(vendorSearchresults[0].getValue('vendorcost')) * 100) / 100

Well, Number.toFixed returns string because it is a data presentation function.
See the docs.

Related

Java Script Buffer,alloc(5,number.toString()) returns float

i was working with buffer in JavaScript. I want to write the buffer with first five digit of provided input. But instead of returning 23917 it return 2.391.Can someone explain why it does that?
Thank you so much in advance.
var number=23917397219379217392781;
var buffer=new Buffer.alloc(5,number.toString());
console.log(buffer.toString());
That's because for large numbers, toString() returns a scientific-notation string representation of the number.
In your case, number.toString() is '2.3917397219379218e+22'.
To get around this, implement your own numberToString method, and use that to get a non-scientific-notation string like '23917397219379217392781'

How to get an 8 decimal output?

I am trying to get an 8 decimal output from the following function.
The following function multiplies an input by 2 and then updates this input with the wagerUpdate variable. I would like this outputted number to have 8 decimal places.
For example: if input number is 0.00000001 (this code is for a bitcoin website), then I would like output number to be 0.00000002. For some reason the code below is not working properly as the output number is in the format of 2e-8 without the .toFixed(8) code. Please help if you are able to. Thank you so much.
<script>
function MultiplyWagerFunction() {
var wager = document.getElementById("wagerInputBox").value;
var wagerUpdate = wager*2;
document.getElementById("wagerInputBox").value = +wagerUpdate.toFixed(8);
}
</script>
If you remove the + before wagerUpdate.toFixed(8) it should work fine. wagerUpdate has already be converted to a number when you multiplied it by 2 so there should be no need for the unary +
var a = "0.00000001";
var b = a*2;
console.log(b.toFixed(8));
console.log(+b.toFixed(8));
^ see the difference.
The reason it doesn't work is because what you are doing is equivalent to:
+(b.toFixed(8))
because of the precedence of the operators (member access . is higher than unary +). You are converting b to a string with .toFixed and then converting it back into a number with + and then converting it back into a string again! (this time with the default toString behavior for numbers giving you exponential notation)
Just remove + from +wagerUpdate.toFixed(8); and you would be good.
Instead of:
document.getElementById("wagerInputBox").value = +wagerUpdate.toFixed(8);
try:
document.getElementById("wagerInputBox").innerHTML = +wagerUpdate.toFixed(8);
Why I say so is may be when you set value, browser tries to convert to best possible outcome. But, inner HTML should take the string equivalent!

Is using parseInt extraenous if unnecessary?

I am a beginner to coding and JavaScript but I am doing a practice exercise and I came across something I am unsure about.
var nameLength = parseInt(fullName.length);
var nameLength = fullName.length;
I used the first line not even thinking it would already be an integer, so should I still have included the parseInt or not?
Yes, remove var nameLength = parseInt(fullName.length); Below is your explanation:The parseInt() method in JavaScript is used to turn the integer value of a string into an integer. If I have string, say var s = "3";, I could use the + operator to it, but it wouldn't add as if they were numbers (ex. s += 9;, then s would equal "39"). You call the parseInt() method only if you have a value with the type of string. In your case, and in most, if not all languages, the .length or .length() of anything will return an integer. What you're doing is trying to convert a number to a number, which is (after I googled the definition) extraneous.

Javascript convert string to integer

I am just dipping my toe into the confusing world of javascript, more out of necessity than desire and I have come across a problem of adding two integers.
1,700.00 + 500.00
returns 1,700.00500.00
So after some research I see that 1,700.00 is being treated as a string and that I need to convert it.
The most relevant pages I read to resolve this were this question and this page. However when I use
parseInt(string, radix)
it returns 1. Am I using the wrong function or the an incorrect radix (being honest I can't get my head around how I decide which radix to use).
var a="1,700.00";
var b=500.00;
parseInt(a, 10);
Basic Answer
The reason parseInt is not working is because of the comma. You could remove the comma using a regex such as:
var num = '1,700.00';
num = num.replace(/\,/g,'');
This will return a string with a number in it. Now you can parseInt. If you do not choose a radix it will default to 10 which was the correct value to use here.
num = parseInt(num);
Do this for each of your string numbers before adding them and everything should work.
More information
How the replace works:
More information on replace at mdn:
`/` - start
`\,` - escaped comma
`/` - end
`g` - search globally
The global search will look for all matches (it would stop after the first match without this)
'' replace the matched sections with an empty string, essentially deleting them.
Regular Expressions
A great tool to test regular expressions: Rubular and more info about them at mdn
If you are looking for a good tutorial here is one.
ParseInt and Rounding, parseFloat
parseInt always rounds to the nearest integer. If you need decimal places there are a couple of tricks you can use. Here is my favorite:
2 places: `num = parseInt(num * 100) / 100;`
3 places: `num = parseInt(num * 1000) / 1000;`
For more information on parseInt look at mdn.
parseFloat could also be used if you do not want rounding. I assumed you did as the title was convert to an integer. A good example of this was written by #fr0zenFry below. He pointed out that parseFloat also does not take a radix so it is always in base10. For more info see mdn.
Try using replace() to replace a , with nothing and then parseFloat() to get the number as float. From the variables in OP, it appears that there may be fractional numbers too, so, parseInt() may not work well in such cases(digits after decimal will be stripped off).
Use regex inside replace() to get rid of each appearance of ,.
var a = parseFloat('1,700.00'.replace(/,/g, ''));
var b = parseFloat('500.00'.replace(/,/g, ''));
var sum = a+b;
This should give you correct result even if your number is fractional like 1,700.55.
If I go by the title of your question, you need an integer. For this you can use parseInt(string, radix). It works without a radix but it is always a good idea to specify this because you never know how browsers may behave(for example, see comment #Royi Namir). This function will round off the string to nearest integer value.
var a = parseInt('1,700.00'.replace(/,/g, ''), 10); //radix 10 will return base10 value
var b = parseInt('500.00'.replace(/,/g, ''), 10);
var sum = a+b;
Note that a radix is not required in parseFloat(), it will always return a decimal/base10 value. Also, it will it will strip off any extra zeroes at the end after decimal point(ex: 17500.50 becomes 17500.5 and 17500.00 becomes 17500). If you need to get 2 decimal places always, append another function toFixed(decimal places).
var a = parseFloat('1,700.00'.replace(/,/g, ''));
var b = parseFloat('500.00'.replace(/,/g, ''));
var sum = (a+b).toFixed(2); //change argument in toFixed() as you need
// 2200.00
Another alternative to this was given by #EpiphanyMachine which will need you to multiply and then later divide every value by 100. This may become a problem if you want to change decimal places in future, you will have to change multiplication/division factor for every variable. With toFixed(), you just change the argument. But remember that toFixed() changes the number back to string unlike #EpiphanyMachine solution. So you will be your own judge.
try this :
parseFloat(a.replace(/,/g, ''));
it will work also on : 1,800,300.33
Example :
parseFloat('1,700,800.010'.replace(/,/g, '')) //1700800.01
Javascript doesn't understand that comma. Remove it like this:
a.replace(',', '')
Once you've gotten rid of the comma, the string should be parsed with no problem.

How to pass complete value through parseint () method

i am working with parseInt() as it only allow to pass value before decimcal place how i could pass the whole value i need to add the value in the textboxes .this below is code for the display of result after getting value from three different textbox using javascripting
function getText6(){
var in32=document.getElementById('in3').value;<value from textbox1>
var in332=document.getElementById('in33').value;<value from textbox2>
var in3332=document.getElementById('in333').value;<value from textbox3>
var in123=parseInt(in32)+parseInt(in332)+parseInt(in3332);
document.getElementById('in123').value=in123.toFixed(2);
}
now when in textbox in123 value come only take two digits before decimal plce.
like 34.56+138.00+964.80=1136.00 it take only 34+138+964=1136 i want that it take whole term and ans =1137.36
kindly help me for this result
Use parseFloat instead of parseInt. The latter strips away any decimal places since integers do not have them.
use parseFloat() instead of parseInt()
var in123=parseFloat(in32)+parseFloat(in332)+parseFloat(in3332);

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