# Math.round not doing anything on my webpage

And it's supposed to be a revision site for some students I'm tutoring, but I'm having some trouble getting a number to round to 2 dp and I'm not sure why. I've written on lines 99 to 107:

function answers() {
c = Math.sqrt(a*a+b*b)
console.log(c)
Math.round(c*100)/100
console.log(c)
var el = document.getElementById("c")
el.innerHTML="$"+c+"$"
MathJax.Hub.Queue(["Typeset", MathJax.Hub, el])
}


but for some reason it skips the Math.round() function. Here's a sample output from the console:

46.32493928760188
46.32493928760188


I just don't understand why it isn't rounding, what am I doing wrong? Strangely typing

Math.round(c*100)/100


directly into the console gives: 46.32.

Screenshot:

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You need to assign the result of Math.round to a variable, e.g.

c = Math.round(c*100)/100;

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You have to assign the result (returned value) of Math.round(c * 100) / 100 to the variable c again.

And always use a semicolon to separate your JavaScript statements so that you won't have an error when two statements get on the same line (f.e. when you minify the js).

function answers() {
var c = Math.sqrt(a * a + b * b);
c = Math.round(c * 100) / 100;
var el = document.getElementById("c");
el.innerHTML = "$" + c + "$";
MathJax.Hub.Queue(["Typeset", MathJax.Hub, el]);
}

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Oh yeah, thanks everyone, that was a noobish mistake. I assumed Math.round would round it, but yes, of course, it returns the rounded value. How silly I am. In my defence it's exam time for me at uni and I'm distracted. I don't really use semicolons, I'm not very used to it and it seems to work well enough without. – captainjamie May 22 '14 at 16:35
Don't forget to mark one of the answers as correct. I recommend Genti Saliu's answer, since it came in first (by a few seconds). Several of us answered more-or-less simultaneously; I've upvoted the other two, since we can't all get points for a correct answer. – Joe DeRose May 22 '14 at 16:39
@JoeDeRose people are always commenting this on my questions. Is it only me that gets the "Wait x more minutes before accepting an answer"? – captainjamie May 22 '14 at 17:04
@captainjamie, it's just just you. I hope the reminder didn't offend -- it's just that so many people forget. If you want to forestall that reminder on future questions, it would probably work to upvote the answer you intend to accept, and add a comment saying you plan to mark it as correct when the timeout on accepting answers is finished. – Joe DeRose May 22 '14 at 18:52

You need:

c = Math.round(c*100)/100;


As it is, your function doesn't update c, nor write its result to any variable.

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mkay why make multiple set's

when u can just

function answers() {
c = Math.round(Math.sqrt(a*a+b*b)*100)/100
console.log(c)
var el = document.getElementById("c")
el.innerHTML="$"+c+"$"
MathJax.Hub.Queue(["Typeset", MathJax.Hub, el])
}


Edit:

another alternative

if the number is already a float is the .toFixed() option

function answers() {
c = Math.sqrt(a*a+b*b).toFixed(2)
console.log(c)
var el = document.getElementById("c")
el.innerHTML="$"+c+"$"
MathJax.Hub.Queue(["Typeset", MathJax.Hub, el])
}

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Math.round(c) 42 Math.round(c*100)/100 41.87 i.e. it rounds it to 2 dp not 0 dp – captainjamie May 22 '14 at 16:50
hmm thats odd i see it the same though gonna js fiddle – Kamijou Touma May 22 '14 at 16:51
edited you really shouldnt do multi sets for the same thing unless your doing other code in between besides a console.log() – Kamijou Touma May 22 '14 at 17:02
added another option (46.32493928760188).toFixed(2) === 46.32 – Kamijou Touma May 22 '14 at 17:51