568

Does anyone know how can I check whether a variable is a number or a string in JavaScript?

1

35 Answers 35

501

If you're dealing with literal notation, and not constructors, you can use typeof:.

typeof "Hello World"; // string
typeof 123;           // number

If you're creating numbers and strings via a constructor, such as var foo = new String("foo"), you should keep in mind that typeof may return object for foo.

Perhaps a more foolproof method of checking the type would be to utilize the method found in underscore.js (annotated source can be found here),

var toString = Object.prototype.toString;

_.isString = function (obj) {
  return toString.call(obj) == '[object String]';
}

This returns a boolean true for the following:

_.isString("Jonathan"); // true
_.isString(new String("Jonathan")); // true
12
  • 71
    which says "string" and "number" respectively
    – Thilo
    Sep 29, 2010 at 2:47
  • 29
    This is not correct! There are two possible representations of a string. alert(typeof new String()) will output "Object". Worse, javascript will occasionally convert back and forth between the two representations behind the scenes for optimization purposes May 16, 2011 at 20:33
  • 3
    @George According to the OP, only existing variables will be tested.
    – Sampson
    May 17, 2011 at 20:27
  • 3
    Sure, but say I have function isString(str) { return typeof str === 'string' } some Java-convert can be using my method like so var myString = new String("stuff I like"); isString(myString) this returns false. Also, I'm not exactly sure how long the backgroiund conversion lasts, I know when I call "hi".length, "hi" gets converted into an object, not sure how soon it gets converted back again or if that is ever bound to the variable. May 18, 2011 at 20:04
  • 9
    True, but wth would you want to use the String object anyway? Jul 9, 2011 at 0:57
288

Best way to do that is using isNaN + type casting:

Updated all-in method:

function isNumber(n) { return !isNaN(parseFloat(n)) && !isNaN(n - 0) }

The same using regex:

function isNumber(n) { return /^-?[\d.]+(?:e-?\d+)?$/.test(n); } 

------------------------

isNumber('123'); // true  
isNumber('123abc'); // false  
isNumber(5); // true  
isNumber('q345'); // false
isNumber(null); // false
isNumber(undefined); // false
isNumber(false); // false
isNumber('   '); // false
15
  • 31
    This looks like a good solution if you want to count strings that parse as valid numbers. Jul 16, 2010 at 11:42
  • 3
    FYI: null is coerced into 0 and returns true for isNumber(null);
    – Edward
    Apr 4, 2012 at 22:42
  • 1
    what's wrong with function is_number(n) { return /^-?[\d.]+(?:e-?\d+)?$/.test(n);}
    – OneOfOne
    Sep 29, 2013 at 20:08
  • 1
    This also fails for a string such as '123abc'.
    – ash
    Dec 1, 2017 at 18:01
  • 2
    @ash Thanks, I've updated solution to cover this case as well. Dec 4, 2017 at 14:36
78

The best way I have found is to either check for a method on the string, i.e.:

if (x.substring) {
// do string thing
} else{
// do other thing
}

or if you want to do something with the number check for a number property,

if (x.toFixed) {
// do number thing
} else {
// do other thing
}

This is sort of like "duck typing", it's up to you which way makes the most sense. I don't have enough karma to comment, but typeof fails for boxed strings and numbers, i.e.:

alert(typeof new String('Hello World'));
alert(typeof new Number(5));

will alert "object".

4
  • 2
    I find this to be better than typeof as it can always test for a string, whether primitive or String object. You just have to test for a method that's unique for the type you want.
    – ADTC
    Apr 7, 2012 at 7:25
  • From the perspective of someone who has to maintain code, choosing this path could be confusing. "Why did they use substring and not pass any values? What business logic am I missing here?" At the very least, this needs to be paired with a comment explaining the logic involved.
    – Lemmings19
    Dec 5, 2016 at 21:50
  • 4
    @Lemmings19 It does not actually call the substring method, it only checks whether x has a substring method.
    – Alokito
    Jan 2, 2017 at 17:00
  • 2
    I like the idea of this kind of duck typing but this will fail for things like {substring:"hello"}. I know for my purposes I just tested what the specific operation I needed to do (modulus) does for the type I needed to check for (on strings modulus returns undefined) then checked for that instead of getting it's type. Sep 12, 2018 at 14:59
52

Since ES2015 the correct way to check if a variable holds a valid number is Number.isFinite(value)

Examples:

Number.isFinite(Infinity)   // false
Number.isFinite(NaN)        // false
Number.isFinite(-Infinity)  // false

Number.isFinite(0)          // true
Number.isFinite(2e64)       // true

Number.isFinite('0')        // false
Number.isFinite(null)       // false
6
47

You're looking for isNaN():

console.log(!isNaN(123));
console.log(!isNaN(-1.23));
console.log(!isNaN(5-2));
console.log(!isNaN(0));
console.log(!isNaN("0"));
console.log(!isNaN("2"));
console.log(!isNaN("Hello"));
console.log(!isNaN("2005/12/12"));

See JavaScript isNaN() Function at MDN.

10
  • 3
    I find it strange that they would choose the inverse operation for the method name. Seems more intuitive to call isNumber(). Aug 20, 2009 at 2:54
  • 12
    It isn't actually an inverse operation of 'isNumber'. NaN is a special value of number in javascript. isNaN converts everything supplied to it to number and checks if the result is NaN or not. For strings like "25", you get incorrect result.
    – Chetan S
    Aug 20, 2009 at 3:14
  • 3
    I just tested with "25" and it returned false - like I would expect.
    – Jakob Gade
    Aug 20, 2009 at 5:01
  • 2
    NaN is a special value in the IEEE 754 Standard for Binary Floating-Point Arithmetic, not just a JavaScript thing. (Well, to be precise: "the 9007199254740990 (that is, (2^53)-2) distinct “Not-a-Number” values of the IEEE Standard are represented in ECMAScript as a single special NaN value.")
    – NickFitz
    Aug 20, 2009 at 9:42
  • 6
    Keep in mind that isNaN returns false for null (but true for undefined).
    – Toni
    Aug 8, 2018 at 8:02
28

Check if the value is a string literal or String object:

function isString(o) {
    return typeof o == "string" || (typeof o == "object" && o.constructor === String);
}

Unit test:

function assertTrue(value, message) {
    if (!value) {
        alert("Assertion error: " + message);
    }
}

function assertFalse(value, message)
{
    assertTrue(!value, message);
}

assertTrue(isString("string literal"), "number literal");
assertTrue(isString(new String("String object")), "String object");
assertFalse(isString(1), "number literal");
assertFalse(isString(true), "boolean literal");
assertFalse(isString({}), "object");

Checking for a number is similar:

function isNumber(o) {
    return typeof o == "number" || (typeof o == "object" && o.constructor === Number);
}
4
  • 1
    (o.constructor === String) by itself seems to be sufficient, even for string literals.
    – Chris Noe
    Aug 21, 2012 at 19:04
  • 2
    This will cause an exception if o === null May 10, 2013 at 11:09
  • 3
    I loved this solution. To avoid the exception though for the null case, use o["constructor"] instead of o.constructor Sep 6, 2013 at 19:16
  • 2
    @VishalKumar So this is all one needs: function is (type, value) { return value["constructor"] === type; }?
    – ceving
    Dec 2, 2015 at 9:56
17

Try this,

<script>
var regInteger = /^-?\d+$/;

function isInteger( str ) {    
    return regInteger.test( str );
}

if(isInteger("1a11")) {
   console.log( 'Integer' );
} else {
   console.log( 'Non Integer' );
}
</script>
2
  • try '-2'. it returns false.
    – KChen
    Sep 12, 2016 at 2:23
  • 2
    Why do you keep (or not edit) an answer that doesn't work? ... Do note, also a negative number can be an integer.
    – Asons
    Jul 7, 2019 at 8:43
15

Simple and thorough:

function isNumber(x) {
  return parseFloat(x) == x
};

Test cases:

console.log('***TRUE CASES***');
console.log(isNumber(0));
console.log(isNumber(-1));
console.log(isNumber(-500));
console.log(isNumber(15000));
console.log(isNumber(0.35));
console.log(isNumber(-10.35));
console.log(isNumber(2.534e25));
console.log(isNumber('2.534e25'));
console.log(isNumber('52334'));
console.log(isNumber('-234'));
console.log(isNumber(Infinity));
console.log(isNumber(-Infinity));
console.log(isNumber('Infinity'));
console.log(isNumber('-Infinity'));

console.log('***FALSE CASES***');
console.log(isNumber(NaN));
console.log(isNumber({}));
console.log(isNumber([]));
console.log(isNumber(''));
console.log(isNumber('one'));
console.log(isNumber(true));
console.log(isNumber(false));
console.log(isNumber());
console.log(isNumber(undefined));
console.log(isNumber(null));
console.log(isNumber('-234aa'));
3
  • this answer helped, although it doesn't really answer the original question :)
    – Roey
    Jul 14, 2020 at 13:00
  • 1
    Wait, isn't this wrong? const myVar = "5"; // Set it to a string. isNumber(myVar); // True, but it should be false since this variable is a string not a number.
    – Don P
    Aug 8, 2021 at 19:53
  • 1
    @DonP Yeah, as you and Roey pointed out, my answer doesn't answer the original question. I posted it here because it seemed like a useful discovery and a shorter/better version of the many answers here that are instead concerned with determining whether a value is [either a regular number already or a string that can be converted to one] or not. Aug 8, 2021 at 22:26
14

Best way to do this:

function isNumber(num) {
  return (typeof num == 'string' || typeof num == 'number') && !isNaN(num - 0) && num !== '';
};

This satisfies the following test cases:

assertEquals("ISNUMBER-True: 0", true, isNumber(0));
assertEquals("ISNUMBER-True: 1", true, isNumber(-1));
assertEquals("ISNUMBER-True: 2", true, isNumber(-500));
assertEquals("ISNUMBER-True: 3", true, isNumber(15000));
assertEquals("ISNUMBER-True: 4", true, isNumber(0.35));
assertEquals("ISNUMBER-True: 5", true, isNumber(-10.35));
assertEquals("ISNUMBER-True: 6", true, isNumber(2.534e25));
assertEquals("ISNUMBER-True: 7", true, isNumber('2.534e25'));
assertEquals("ISNUMBER-True: 8", true, isNumber('52334'));
assertEquals("ISNUMBER-True: 9", true, isNumber('-234'));

assertEquals("ISNUMBER-False: 0", false, isNumber(NaN));
assertEquals("ISNUMBER-False: 1", false, isNumber({}));
assertEquals("ISNUMBER-False: 2", false, isNumber([]));
assertEquals("ISNUMBER-False: 3", false, isNumber(''));
assertEquals("ISNUMBER-False: 4", false, isNumber('one'));
assertEquals("ISNUMBER-False: 5", false, isNumber(true));
assertEquals("ISNUMBER-False: 6", false, isNumber(false));
assertEquals("ISNUMBER-False: 7", false, isNumber());
assertEquals("ISNUMBER-False: 8", false, isNumber(undefined));
assertEquals("ISNUMBER-False: 9", false, isNumber(null));
0
14
//testing data types accurately in JavaScript (opposed to "typeof")
//from http://bonsaiden.github.com/JavaScript-Garden/
function is(type, obj) {
    var clas = Object.prototype.toString.call(obj).slice(8, -1);
    return obj !== undefined && obj !== null && clas === type;
}

//basic usage
is('String', 'test'); // true
is('Array', true); // false

Or adapt it to return an unknown type:

function realTypeOf(obj) {
    return Object.prototype.toString.call(obj).slice(8, -1);
}

//usage
realTypeOf(999); // 'Number'

May 12, 2012 Update: Full example at Javascript: A Better typeof.

1
  • Still room for improvement regarding realTypeOf: realTypeOf(NaN) -> "Number" which is same behaviour as typeof agreed but still far from ideal.
    – Max
    Aug 24, 2012 at 8:09
10

Here's an approach based on the idea of coercing the input to a number or string by adding zero or the null string, and then do a typed equality comparison.

function is_number(x) { return x === x+0;  }
function is_string(x) { return x === x+""; }

For some unfathomable reason, x===x+0 seems to perform better than x===+x.

Are there any cases where this fails?

In the same vein:

function is_boolean(x) { return x === !!x; }

This appears to be mildly faster than either x===true || x===false or typeof x==="boolean" (and much faster than x===Boolean(x)).

Then there's also

function is_regexp(x)  { return x === RegExp(x); }

All these depend on the existence of an "identity" operation particular to each type which can be applied to any value and reliably produce a value of the type in question. I cannot think of such an operation for dates.

For NaN, there is

function is_nan(x) { return x !== x;}

This is basically underscore's version, and as it stands is about four times faster than isNaN(), but the comments in the underscore source mention that "NaN is the only number that does not equal itself" and adds a check for _.isNumber. Why? What other objects would not equal themselves? Also, underscore uses x !== +x--but what difference could the + here make?

Then for the paranoid:

function is_undefined(x) { return x===[][0]; }

or this

function is_undefined(x) { return x===void(0); }
1
  • 1
    x !== +x first attempts to convert x into a number. Sep 22, 2014 at 21:08
9

Or just use the invert of isNaN():

if(!isNaN(data))
  do something with the number
else
  it is a string

And yes, using jQuery's $.isNumeric() is more fun for the buck.

1
  • isNaN('123') gives false, although the argument is a numeric string and not numeric type Jan 28, 2020 at 12:32
8

Can you just divide it by 1?

I assume the issue would be a string input like: "123ABG"

var Check = "123ABG"

if(Check == Check / 1)
{
alert("This IS a number \n")
}

else
{
alert("This is NOT a number \n")
}

Just a way I did it recently.

1
  • I don't think he wants it to return true if it's a string of numbers. Maybe use ===
    – Curtis
    Aug 10, 2017 at 6:42
8

I think converting the var to a string decreases the performance, at least this test performed in the latest browsers shows so.

So if you care about performance, I would, I'd use this:

typeof str === "string" || str instanceof String

for checking if the variable is a string (even if you use var str = new String("foo"), str instanceof String would return true).

As for checking if it's a number I would go for the native: isNaN; function.

7

uh, how about just:

function IsString(obj) {
    return obj !== undefined && obj != null && obj.toLowerCase !== undefined;
}

After further review many months later, this only guarantees obj is an object that has the method or property name toLowerCase defined. I am ashamed of my answer. Please see top-voted typeof one.

7

Beware that typeof NaN is... 'number'

typeof NaN === 'number'; // true
5

jQuery uses this:

function isNumber(obj) {
  return !isNaN( parseFloat( obj ) ) && isFinite( obj );
}
4

This solution resolves many of the issues raised here!

This is by far the most reliable method I have used by far. I did not invent this, and cannot recall where I originally found it. But it works where other techniques fail:

// Begin public utility /getVarType/
// Returns 'Function', 'Object', 'Array',
// 'String', 'Number', 'Boolean', or 'Undefined'
getVarType = function ( data ){
  if (undefined === data ){ return 'Undefined'; }
  if (data === null ){ return 'Null'; }
  return {}.toString.call(data).slice(8, -1);
};  
// End public utility /getVarType/

Example of correctness

var str = new String();
console.warn( getVarType(str) ); // Reports "String"    
console.warn( typeof str );      // Reports "object"

var num = new Number();
console.warn( getVarType(num) ); // Reports "Number"
console.warn( typeof num );      // Reports "object"

var list = [];
console.warn( getVarType( list ) ); // Reports "Array"
console.warn( typeof list );        // Reports "object"
14
  • Tarazaburo, I don't know where you get your data, but a little benchmarkining is in order: Jun 29, 2013 at 19:27
  • I don't find this "really slow". Testing speed over 1 million iterations, I find it no worse than half the speed of the native typeof method (0.788s vs 1.481s) on Chrome. This certainly is acceptable performance considering the improved results. Why do you think it is "really slow?" Maybe it is - in IE6/7/8? But everything is "really slow" in those browsers. Jun 29, 2013 at 19:34
  • Well, I said that because I had already done the benchmarking. Put together a new little one at jsperf.com/check-typeof-number-again, and typeof is 100x faster, what am I missing?
    – user663031
    Jul 4, 2013 at 15:40
  • You are missing the fact that 3m ops/s is a non-issue for most code when checking type. I wouldn't call that "really slow" by any measure. My benchmark looked like this: var i,k, start=+new Date(); for ( i = 0; i < 1000000; i++ ){ k = typeof( 'foo' ); k = typeof( 123.5 ); }; end=+new Date(); console.log( end - start); Jul 6, 2013 at 21:27
  • The delta with the alternate is 2-3x: var i,k, start=+new Date(); for ( i = 0; i < 1000000; i++ ){ k = getVarType( 'foo' ); k = getVarType( 123.5 ); }; end=+new Date(); console.log( end - start); Jul 6, 2013 at 21:35
4

Jsut an FYI, if you're using jQuery you have

$.isNumeric() 

to handle this. More details on http://api.jquery.com/jQuery.isNumeric/

3

the best way i found which also thinks of positive and negative numbers is from : O'Reilly Javascript and DHTML Cookbook :

function isNumber(elem) {
var str = elem.value;
var oneDecimal = false;
var oneChar = 0;
// make sure value hasn't cast to a number data type
str = str.toString( );
for (var i = 0; i < str.length; i++) {
    oneChar = str.charAt(i).charCodeAt(0);
    // OK for minus sign as first character
    if (oneChar =  = 45) {
        if (i =  = 0) {
            continue;
        } else {
            alert("Only the first character may be a minus sign.");
            return false;
        }
    }
    // OK for one decimal point
    if (oneChar =  = 46) {
        if (!oneDecimal) {
            oneDecimal = true;
            continue;
        } else {
            alert("Only one decimal is allowed in a number.");
            return false;
        }
    }
    // characters outside of 0 through 9 not OK
    if (oneChar < 48 || oneChar > 57) {
        alert("Enter only numbers into the field.");
        return false;
    }
}
return true;

}

3

Errr? Just use regular expressions! :)

function isInteger(val) {
  return val.match(/^[0-9]$/)
}

function isFloat(val) {
  return val.match(/^[0-9]*/\.[0-9]+$/)
}
3

since a string as '1234' with typeof will show 'string', and the inverse cannot ever happen (typeof 123 will always be number), the best is to use a simple regex /^\-?\d+$/.test(var). Or a more advanced to match floats, integers and negative numbers, /^[\-\+]?[\d]+\.?(\d+)?$/ The important side of .test is that it WON'T throw an exception if the var isn't an string, the value can be anything.

var val, regex = /^[\-\+]?[\d]+\.?(\d+)?$/;

regex.test(val)       // false 
val = '1234';
regex.test(val)       // true
val = '-213';
regex.test(val)       // true
val = '-213.2312';
regex.test(val)       // true
val = '+213.2312';
regex.test(val)       // true
val = 123;
regex.test(val)       // true
val = new Number(123);
regex.test(val)       // true
val = new String('123');
regex.test(val)       // true
val = '1234e';
regex.test(val)       // false 
val = {};
regex.test(val)       // false 
val = false;
regex.test(val)       // false 
regex.test(undefined) // false 
regex.test(null)      // false 
regex.test(window)    // false 
regex.test(document)  // false 

If you are looking for the real type, then typeof alone will do.

3

@BitOfUniverse's answer is good, and I come up with a new way:

function isNum(n) {
    return !isNaN(n/0);
}

isNum('')  // false
isNum(2)   // true
isNum('2k') // false
isNum('2')  //true

I know 0 can't be dividend, but here the function works perfectly.

3

typeof works very well for me in most case. You can try using an if statement

if(typeof x === 'string' || typeof x === 'number') {
    console.log("Your statement");
}

where x is any variable name of your choice

2
  • What does this answer add over the most upvoted one? Mar 1, 2016 at 10:12
  • 2
    Simplicity and clarity? Jul 31, 2016 at 20:45
3

Type checking

You can check the type of variable by using typeof operator:

typeof variable

Value checking

The code below returns true for numbers and false for anything else:

!isNaN(+variable);
3
  • var variable= '123'; console.log(!isNaN(+variable)); gives true although it is a string and not a number type Jan 28, 2020 at 12:34
  • Because '123' is a number! If you want to know the type of the variable, You can easily use typeof operator! @JustAMartin
    – Amir Fo
    Jan 28, 2020 at 13:12
  • Yes, but the original question was to distinguish any string-typed variables from number-typed variables. '123` is still a string. If I pass 123, the answer should be number but if I pass '123' or 'abc' or any other quoted literal, it is a string, and it does not matter if it can be parsed into a number or not. Jan 28, 2020 at 14:11
3

XOR operation can be used to detect number or string. number ^ 0 will always give the same number as output and string ^ 0 will give 0 as output.

Example: 
   1)  2 ^ 0 = 2
   2)  '2' ^ 0  = 2
   3)  'Str' ^ 0 = 0
2
  • 2
    But this breaks for '0' ^ 0 = 0 - can't figure out if this is a number or a string then. Apr 12, 2022 at 6:25
  • Yes, it has limitation Apr 12, 2022 at 6:29
1
function IsNumeric(num) {
    return ((num >=0 || num < 0)&& (parseInt(num)==num) );
}
1
  • why parseInt(num)==num?
    – Ali
    May 3, 2022 at 10:48
1

For detecting numbers, the following passage from JavaScript: The Good Parts by Douglas Crockford is relevant:

The isFinite function is the best way of determining whether a value can be used as a number because it rejects NaN and Infinity . Unfortunately, isFinite will attempt to convert its operand to a number, so it is not a good test if a value is not actually a number. You may want to define your own isNumber function:

var isNumber = function isNumber(value) { return typeof value === 'number' &&
            isFinite(value);
};
0

Simply use

myVar.constructor == String

or

myVar.constructor == Number

if you want to handle strings defined as objects or literals and saves you don't want to use a helper function.

0

Very late to the party; however, the following has always worked well for me when I want to check whether some input is either a string or a number in one shot.

return !!Object.prototype.toString.call(input).match(/\[object (String|Number)\]/);

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.