What is the difference between parseInt() and Number()?

JavascriptPerformance

Javascript Problem Overview


How do parseInt() and Number() behave differently when converting strings to numbers?

Javascript Solutions


Solution 1 - Javascript

Well, they are semantically different, the Number constructor called as a function performs type conversion and parseInt performs parsing, e.g.:

// parsing:
parseInt("20px");       // 20
parseInt("10100", 2);   // 20
parseInt("2e1");        // 2

// type conversion
Number("20px");       // NaN
Number("2e1");        // 20, exponential notation

Also parseInt will ignore trailing characters that don't correspond with any digit of the currently used base.

The Number constructor doesn't detect implicit octals, but can detect the explicit octal notation:

Number("010");         // 10
Number("0o10")         // 8, explicit octal

parseInt("010");       // 8, implicit octal
parseInt("010", 10);   // 10, decimal radix used

And it can handle numbers in hexadecimal notation, just like parseInt:

Number("0xF");   // 15
parseInt("0xF"); //15

In addition, a widely used construct to perform Numeric type conversion, is the Unary + Operator (p. 72), it is equivalent to using the Number constructor as a function:

+"2e1";   // 20
+"0xF";   // 15
+"010";   // 10

Solution 2 - Javascript

typeof parseInt("123") => number
typeof Number("123") => number
typeof new Number("123") => object (Number primitive wrapper object)

first two will give you better performance as it returns a primitive instead of an object.

Solution 3 - Javascript

Summary:

parseInt():

  • Takes a string as a first argument, the radix (An integer which is the base of a numeral system e.g. decimal 10 or binary 2) as a second argument
  • The function returns a integer number, if the first character cannot be converted to a number NaN will be returned.
  • If the parseInt() function encounters a non numerical value, it will cut off the rest of input string and only parse the part until the non numerical value.
  • If the radix is undefined or 0, JS will assume the following:
  • If the input string begins with "0x" or "0X", the radix is 16 (hexadecimal), the remainder of the string is parsed into a number.
  • If the input value begins with a 0 the radix can be either 8 (octal) or 10 (decimal). Which radix is chosen is depending on JS engine implementation. ES5 specifies that 10 should be used then. However, this is not supported by all browsers, therefore always specify radix if your numbers can begin with a 0.
  • If the input value begins with any number, the radix will be 10

Number():

  • The Number() constructor can convert any argument input into a number. If the Number() constructor cannot convert the input into a number, NaN will be returned.
  • The Number() constructor can also handle hexadecimal number, they have to start with 0x.

Example:

console.log(parseInt('0xF', 16));  // 15

// z is no number, it will only evaluate 0xF, therefore 15 is logged
console.log(parseInt('0xFz123', 16));

// because the radix is 10, A is considered a letter not a number (like in Hexadecimal)
// Therefore, A will be cut off the string and 10 is logged
console.log(parseInt('10A', 10));  // 10

// first character isnot a number, therefore parseInt will return NaN
console.log(parseInt('a1213', 10));


console.log('\n');


// start with 0X, therefore Number will interpret it as a hexadecimal value
console.log(Number('0x11'));

// Cannot be converted to a number, NaN will be returned, notice that
// the number constructor will not cut off a non number part like parseInt does
console.log(Number('123A'));

// scientific notation is allowed
console.log(Number('152e-1'));  // 15.21

Solution 4 - Javascript

If you are looking for performance then probably best results you'll get with bitwise right shift "10">>0. Also multiply ("10" * 1) or not not (~~"10"). All of them are much faster of Number and parseInt. They even have "feature" returning 0 for not number argument. Here are Performance tests.

Solution 5 - Javascript

One minor difference is what they convert of undefined or null,

Number() Or Number(null) // returns 0

while

parseInt() Or parseInt(null) // returns NaN

Solution 6 - Javascript

I found two links of performance compare among several ways of converting string to int.

parseInt(str,10)	
parseFloat(str)
str << 0
+str
str*1 
str-0
Number(str)

http://jsben.ch/#/zGJHM

http://phrogz.net/js/string_to_number.html

Solution 7 - Javascript

parseInt() -> Parses a number to specified redix.

Number()-> Converts the specified value to its numeric equivalent or NaN if it fails to do so.

Hence for converting some non-numeric value to number we should always use Number() function.

eg.

Number("")//0
parseInt("")//NaN

Number("123")//123
parseInt("123")//123

Number("123ac") //NaN,as it is a non numeric string
parsInt("123ac") //123,it parse decimal number outof string

Number(true)//1
parseInt(true) //NaN

There are various corner case to parseInt() functions as it does redix conversion, hence we should avoid using parseInt() function for coersion purposes.

Now, to check weather the provided value is Numeric or not,we should use nativeisNaN() function

Solution 8 - Javascript

I always use parseInt, but beware of leading zeroes that will force it into octal mode.

Solution 9 - Javascript

It's a good idea to stay away from parseInt and use Number and Math.round unless you need hex or octal. Both can use strings. Why stay away from it?

parseInt(0.001, 10)
0

parseInt(-0.0000000001, 10)
-1

parseInt(0.0000000001, 10)
1

parseInt(4000000000000000000000, 10)
4

It completely butchers really large or really small numbers. Oddly enough it works normally if these inputs are a string.

parseInt("-0.0000000001", 10)
0

parseInt("0.0000000001", 10)
0

parseInt("4000000000000000000000", 10)
4e+21

Instead of risking hard to find bugs with this and the other gotchas people mentioned, I would just avoid parseInt unless you need to parse something other than base 10. Number, Math.round, Math.floor, and .toFixed(0) can all do the same things parseInt can be used for without having these types of bugs.

If you really want or need to use parseInt for some of it's other qualities, never use it to convert floats to ints.

Solution 10 - Javascript

parseInt converts to a integer number, that is, it strips decimals. Number does not convert to integer.

Solution 11 - Javascript

Another way to get the result is to use the ~ operator

For most circumstances

~~someThing === parseInt(something)

but ~~ will return zero for strings that parseInt will accept with trailing other characters or with the number base spec (eg hex) and will also return zero when parseInt returns NaN. Another difference is that ~~ if given a bigint returns a bigint to which you can add another bigint whereas parseInt returns an ordinary floating point number (yes really - it gives exactly the same value as parseFloat) if the bigint is large

However for most circumstances ~~ is 30% faster than parseInt. It is only slower by 10% when something is a floating point represented as a string.

So if the more restricted scope of ~~ fits your need then save the computer time and give yourself less to type

Attributions

All content for this solution is sourced from the original question on Stackoverflow.

The content on this page is licensed under the Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-SA 4.0) license.

Content TypeOriginal AuthorOriginal Content on Stackoverflow
QuestionMarkView Question on Stackoverflow
Solution 1 - JavascriptChristian C. SalvadóView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 2 - JavascriptletronjeView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 3 - JavascriptWillem van der VeenView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 4 - JavascriptSauliusView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 5 - JavascriptNaeem ShaikhView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 6 - JavascriptzangwView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 7 - JavascriptAtishay BaidView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 8 - JavascriptDiodeus - James MacFarlaneView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 9 - JavascriptkagronickView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 10 - JavascriptJohan RylanderView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 11 - JavascriptMartin BakerView Answer on Stackoverflow