This question already has an answer here:
What is the difference between parseInt(string)
and Number(string)
in JavaScript?
parseInt("123hui")
returns 123
Number("123hui")
returns NaN
In other words parseInt()
parses up to the first non-digit and returns whatever it had parsed. Number()
wants to convert the entire string into a number, which can also be a float BTW.
EDIT #1: Lucero commented about the radix that can be used along with parseInt()
. As far as that is concerned, please see THE DOCTOR's answer below (I'm not going to copy that here, the doc shall have a fair share of the fame...).
EDIT #2: Regarding use cases: That's somewhat written between the lines already. Use Number()
in cases where you indirectly want to check if the given string completely represents a numeric value, float or integer. parseInt()/parseFloat()
aren't that strict as they just parse along and stop when the numeric value stops (radix!), which makes it useful when you need a numeric value at the front "in case there is one" (note that parseInt("hui")
also returns NaN
). And the biggest difference is the use of radix that Number()
doesn't know of and parseInt()
may indirectly guess from the given string (that can cause weird results sometimes).
The first one takes two parameters:
parseInt(string, radix)
The radix parameter is used to specify which numeral system to be used, for example, a radix of 16 (hexadecimal) indicates that the number in the string should be parsed from a hexadecimal number to a decimal number.
If the radix parameter is omitted, JavaScript assumes the following:
- If the string begins with "0x", the
radix is 16 (hexadecimal) - If the string begins with "0", the
radix is 8 (octal). This feature
is deprecated - If the string begins with any other value, the radix is 10 (decimal)
The other function you mentioned takes only one parameter:
Number(object)
The Number() function converts the object argument to a number that represents the object's value.
If the value cannot be converted to a legal number, NaN is returned.
parseInt(string) will convert a string containing non-numeric characters to a number, as long as the string begins with numeric characters
'10px' => 10
Number(string) will return NaN if the string contains any non-numeric characters
'10px' => NaN
The parseInt
function allows you to specify a radix for the input string and is limited to integer values.
parseInt('Z', 36) === 35
The Number
constructor called as a function will parse the string with a grammar and is limited to base 10 and base 16.
StringNumericLiteral ::: StrWhiteSpaceopt StrWhiteSpaceopt StrNumericLiteral StrWhiteSpaceopt StrWhiteSpace ::: StrWhiteSpaceChar StrWhiteSpaceopt StrWhiteSpaceChar ::: WhiteSpace LineTerminator StrNumericLiteral ::: StrDecimalLiteral HexIntegerLiteral StrDecimalLiteral ::: StrUnsignedDecimalLiteral + StrUnsignedDecimalLiteral - StrUnsignedDecimalLiteral StrUnsignedDecimalLiteral ::: Infinity DecimalDigits . DecimalDigitsopt ExponentPartopt. DecimalDigits ExponentPartopt DecimalDigits ExponentPartopt DecimalDigits ::: DecimalDigit DecimalDigits DecimalDigit DecimalDigit ::: one of 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 ExponentPart ::: ExponentIndicator SignedInteger ExponentIndicator ::: one of e E SignedInteger ::: DecimalDigits + DecimalDigits - DecimalDigits HexIntegerLiteral ::: 0x HexDigit 0X HexDigit HexIntegerLiteral HexDigit HexDigit ::: one of 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 a b c d e f A B C D E F
Addendum to @sjngm's answer:
They both also ignore whitespace:
var foo = " 3 "; console.log(parseInt(foo)); // 3 console.log(Number(foo)); // 3
It is not exactly correct. As sjngm wrote parseInt parses string to first number. It is true. But the problem is when you want to parse number separated with whitespace ie. "12 345". In that case parseInt("12 345")
will return 12
instead of 12345
.
So to avoid that situation you must trim whitespaces before parsing to number.
My solution would be:
var number=parseInt("12 345".replace(/\s+/g, ''),10);
Notice one extra thing I used in parseInt() function. parseInt("string",10)
will set the number to decimal format. If you would parse string like "08" you would get 0 because 8 is not a octal number.Explanation is here
Addendum to @sjngm's answer:
They both also ignore whitespace:
var foo = " 3 ";
console.log(parseInt(foo)); // 3
console.log(Number(foo)); // 3
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/4564158/what-is-the-difference-between-parseintstring-and-numberstring-in-javascript