# number # Number utilities. ## abbreviate(val[, nDecimalDigits, dictionary]):String Abbreviate number to thousands (K), millions (M) or billions (B). The default value for `nDecimalDigits` is `1`. ### Example abbreviate(123456); // "123.5K" abbreviate(12345678); // "12.3M" abbreviate(1234567890); // "1.2B" You can set the amount of decimal digits (default is `1`): abbreviate(543); // "0.5K" abbreviate(543, 1); // "0.5K" abbreviate(543, 2); // "0.54K" abbreviate(543, 3); // "0.543K" You can customize the abbreviation by passing a custom "dictionary": var _ptbrDict = { thousands : ' mil', millions : ' Mi', billions : ' Bi' }; function customAbbr(val) { return abbreviate(val, 1, _ptbrDict); } customAbbr(123456); // "123.5 mil" customAbbr(12345678); // "12.3 Mi" customAbbr(1234567890); // "1.2 Bi" ## currencyFormat(val[, nDecimalDigits, decimalSeparator, thousandsSeparator]):String Format a number as currency. ### Example: currencyFormat(1000); // "1,000.00" currencyFormat(1000, 1); // "1,000.0" currencyFormat(1000, 2, ',', '.'); // "1.000,00" ## enforcePrecision(val, nDecimalDigits):Number Enforce a specific amount of decimal digits and also fix floating point rounding issues. ### Example: ```js enforcePrecision(0.615, 2); // 0.62 enforcePrecision(0.625, 2); // 0.63 //floating point rounding "error" (rounds to odd number) +(0.615).toFixed(2); // 0.61 +(0.625).toFixed(2); // 0.63 ``` ## isNaN(val):Boolean ES6 `Number.isNaN()`, checks if supplied value is `NaN`. ```js // only returns `true` for `NaN` isNaN(NaN); // true isNaN(0 / 0); // true // everything else is `false` isNaN(true); // false isNaN(123); // false isNaN('asd'); // false isNaN('NaN'); // false ``` ## MAX_INT:Number Maximum 32-bit signed integer value. `Math.pow(2, 31) - 1` ### Example: ```js console.log( MAX_INT ); // 2147483647 ``` ## MAX_UINT:Number Maximum 32-bit unsigned integer value. `Math.pow(2, 32) - 1` ### Example: ```js console.log( MAX_UINT ); // 4294967295 ``` ## MIN_INT:Number Minimum 32-bit signed integer value. `Math.pow(2, 31) * -1`. ### Example: ```js console.log( MIN_INT ); // -2147483648 ``` ## nth(n):String Returns the "nth" of number. (`"st"`, `"nd"`, `"rd"`, `"th"`) ```js nth(1); // "st" nth(2); // "nd" nth(12); // "th" nth(22); // "nd" nth(23); // "rd" nth(34); // "th" ``` See: [`ordinal()`](#ordinal) ## ordinal(n):String Converts number into ordinal form (1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th, ...) ```js ordinal(1); // "1st" ordinal(2); // "2nd" ordinal(3); // "3rd" ordinal(14); // "14th" ordinal(21); // "21st" ``` See: [`nth()`](#nth) ## pad(n, minLength[, char]):String Add padding zeros if `n.length` < `minLength`. ### Example: ```js pad(1, 5); // "00001" pad(12, 5); // "00012" pad(123, 5); // "00123" pad(1234, 5); // "01234" pad(12345, 5); // "12345" pad(123456, 5); // "123456" // you can also specify the "char" used for padding pad(12, 5, '_'); // "___12" ``` see: [string/lpad](./string.html#lpad) ## rol(val, shift):Number Bitwise circular shift left. More info at [Wikipedia#Circular_shift](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Circular_shift) ## ror(val, shift):Number Bitwise circular shift right. More info at [Wikipedia#Circular_shift](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Circular_shift) ## sign(val):Number Returns `-1` if value is negative, `0` if the value is `0` and `1` if value is positive. Useful for multiplications. ```js sign(-123); // -1 sign(123); // 1 sign(0); // 0 ``` ## toInt(val):Number "Convert" value into an 32-bit integer. Works like `Math.floor` if `val > 0` and `Math.ceil` if `val < 0`. **IMPORTANT:** val will wrap at [number/MIN_INT](#MIN_INT) and [number/MAX_INT](#MAX_INT). Created because most people don't know bitwise operations and also because this feature is commonly needed. [Perf tests](http://jsperf.com/vs-vs-parseint-bitwise-operators/7) ### Example: ```js toInt(1.25); // 1 toInt(0.75); // 0 toInt(-0.55); // 0 toInt(-5.0001) // -5 ``` ## toUInt(val):Number "Convert" value into an 32-bit unsigned integer. Works like AS3#uint(). **IMPORTANT:** val will wrap at 2^32. ### Example: ```js toUInt(1.25); // 1 toUInt(0.75); // 0 toUInt(-0.55); // 0 toUInt(-5.0001); // 4294967291 toUInt(Math.pow(2,32) - 0.5); // 4294967295 toUInt(Math.pow(2,32) + 0.5); // 0 ``` ## toUInt31(val):Number "Convert" value into an 31-bit unsigned integer (since 1 bit is used for sign). Useful since all bitwise operators besides `>>>` treat numbers as signed integers. **IMPORTANT:** val will wrap at 2^31 and negative numbers will be treated as `zero`. ### Example: ```js toUInt31(1.25); // 1 toUInt31(0.75); // 0 toUInt31(-0.55); // 0 toUInt31(-5.0001); // 0 toUInt31(Math.pow(2,31) - 0.5); // 21474836470 toUInt31(Math.pow(2,31) + 0.5); // 0 ``` ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- For more usage examples check specs inside `/tests` folder. Unit tests are the best documentation you can get...