8

This works fine:

["655971", "2343", "343"].map(function(x) { return parseInt(x) }) // [655971, 2343, 343]

But this doesnt:

["655971", "2343", "343"].map(parseInt) // [655971, NaN, NaN]

The same happens for Array.filter()

What am I missing here?

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3 Answers 3

22

It's because map passes more arguments than just the array item into the callback function. You get:

callback(item, index, array)

Normally your function would just ignore the arguments it didn't need. But parseInt accepts an optional second parameter:

parseInt(string, base)

for the first call, base is the index 0. That works okay because ECMAScript defines that base=0 is the same as omitting the argument, and consequently allows decimal, octal or hex (using decimal in this case).

For the second and third items, base is 1 or 2. It tries to parse the number as base-1 (which doesn't exist) or base-2 (binary). Since the first number in the string is a digit that doesn't exist in those bases, you get a NaN.

In general, parseInt without a base is pretty questionable anyway, so you probably want:

["655971", "2343", "343"].map(function(x) { return parseInt(x, 10) })
4
  • Another option (although with different semantics) in some cases is to use the Number function. When called without new it converts its argument to a number, similar to the unary + operator. Apr 15, 2010 at 21:03
  • (Yep... Number or + are fine, though they wont ensure it's an integer number.)
    – bobince
    Apr 16, 2010 at 0:17
  • 2
    .map(function(x) { return +x; }. You could possibly also do it with Number as simply .map(Number), since the Number function doesn't take any extra parameters like parseInt does. However that's assuming that ECMAScript will never add any more optional parameters (is this a safe assumption? hmm). Incidentally both Number and + will accept a hex string (but not, thankfully, accidental octals).
    – bobince
    Apr 16, 2010 at 9:08
  • just a tiny quibble, but although it might not be supported by JavaScript, base-1 does exist. It's called unarry and for example the number 4 could be written 1111.base-1 Dec 17, 2011 at 12:28
5

The problem is that map expects that the callback should be a function that accepts three arguments, callbackfn(value, index, array).

The second argument is clashing with the radix argument of the parseInt(string, radix) function.

Map calls parseInt like this for each element:

parseInt("655971",0); // 655971
parseInt("2343", 1);  // NaN
parseInt("343", 2);   // NaN

The first one works because if radix is undefined or 0, it is assumed to be 10.

1
  • wish I could give both you guys the answer but had to choose the first. :)
    – bucabay
    Apr 15, 2010 at 20:45
1

Array.Filter takes a function that returns information whether or not the item to evaluated satisfies the condition. IsNumeric will work for what you want.

http://www.hunlock.com/blogs/Mastering_Javascript_Arrays

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