2

I use one small code js to add comma to value:

function addCommas(nStr)
{
    nStr += '';
    x = nStr.split('.');
    x1 = x[0];
    x2 = x.length > 1 ? '.' + x[1] : '';
    var rgx = /(\d+)(\d{3})/;
    while (rgx.test(x1)) {
        x1 = x1.replace(rgx, '$1' + ',' + '$2');
    }
    return x1 + x2;
}

I have problem when try to add comma to big values like sextillion values. Eg.

addCommas(1000000) //return correct "1,000,000"

but if use big values like this

addCommas(50949024266983356472874) // return wrong "5.094902426698335e+22"

What or where I do wrong?

1

3 Answers 3

2

Your input might already be a float. Numbers larger than 2^32 tend to be like this. Make sure your input is a string and your function will run fine.

JavaScript doesn't have int and float types. Instead it just has a Number type and it will decide on it's own when to use which.

2
  • No, 50949024266983356472874 is represented in scientific notation when converted to a string. Nov 29, 2012 at 16:57
  • E.g. call it as addCommas('50949024266983356472874');. Nov 29, 2012 at 16:58
1

When you do

nStr += '';

You're asking javascript to first convert your number to a string. That's when it decides to write it as "5.094902426698335e+22". The problem isn't in the rest of your algorithm.

The conversion is described here in ecmascript

0

If your number is stored in a string the following function will achieve what you are asking for.

function addCommas( txtNum ) {
    var parts = txtNum.split(".");
    parts[0] = parts[0].reverse().replace(/(\d{3})/g, "$1,").reverse();
    return parts.join(".");
}   

String.prototype.reverse = function () {
    return this.split("").reverse().join("");
}

addCommas( "-50000000000000000000000000000000000000000.0000" );
// => -50,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000.0000
3
  • This works only if the input is a string, not a number, which isn't what appear in the question. Nov 29, 2012 at 17:18
  • @dystroy You are correct. Just thought I would add just in case but happy to delete if it turns out that it is irrelevant :)
    – Bruno
    Nov 29, 2012 at 17:22
  • That is what i need. I search response for my problem here but I did not find. Thank you! Nov 29, 2012 at 17:24

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