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I need to round decimal numbers to six places using JavaScript, but I need to consider legacy browsers so I can't rely on Number.toFixed

The big catch with toExponential, toFixed, and toPrecision is that they are fairly modern constructs not supported in Mozilla until Firefox version 1.5 (although IE supported the methods since version 5.5). While it's mostly safe to use these methods, older browsers WILL break so if you are writing a public program it's recommended you provide your own prototypes to provide functionality for these methods for older browser.

I'm considering using something like

Math.round(N*1000000)/1000000

What is the best method for providing this a prototype to older browsers?

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7 Answers

vote up 7 vote down check

Try that:

if (!Number.prototype.toFixed)

Number.prototype.toFixed = function(precision) {
    var power = Math.pow(10, precision || 0);
    return String(Math.round(this * power)/power);
}

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vote up 0 vote down

Above function is incorrect please test 20/30000

This is correct: # Number.prototype.toFixed = function(precision) { # var power = Math.pow(10, precision || 0); # return String(Math.round(this * power)/power); # }

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Number.prototype.toFixed = function(precision) { var num = (Math.round (this*Math.pow(10,precision))).toString(); return (num.substring (0,num.length-precision)||"0") + "." + num.substring(num.length-precision, num.length); }

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vote up 0 vote down

Another option is ( which doesn't convert to a string unnecessarily, and also corrects the miscalculation of (162.295).toFixed(2) to 162.29 ( should be 162.30 )).

Number.prototype._toFixed=Number.prototype.toFixed; //Preserves the current function
Number.prototype.toFixed=function(precision){
/* step 1 */ var a=this, pre=Math.pow(10,precision||0);
/* step 2 */ a*=pre; //currently number is 162295.499999
/* step 3 */ a = a._toFixed(2); //sets 2 more digits of precision creating 16230.00
/* step 4 */ a = Math.round(a);
/* step 5 */ a/=pre;
/* step 6 */ return a._toFixed(precision);
}
/*This last step corrects the number of digits from 162.3 ( which is what we get in
step 5 to the corrected 162.30. Without it we would get 162.3 */

Edit: Upon trying this specific incarnation, this*=Math.pow(10, precision||0) creates an error invalid left-hand assignment. So gave the this keyword the variable a. It would also help if I closed my functions ^_^;;

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vote up 1 vote down

We encountered an issue where IE7 and Firefox 3 rendered the result of toFixed differently.

In IE: 0.00633633 toFixed(2) gave 0.00 (how wrong is that!!)

In Firefox: 0.00633633 toFixed(2) gave 0.01 (which is correct)

In this case the answer from Sergey is the solution we'll be using.

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vote up 0 vote down

From Bytes website, this function is almost the same than Serge llinsky's:

if (!num.toFixed) 
{
  Number.prototype.toFixed = function(precision) 
  {
     var num = (Math.round(this*Math.pow(10,precision))).toString();
     return num.substring(0,num.length-precision) + "." + 
            num.substring(num.length-precision, num.length);
  }
}
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vote up 0 vote down

I think Firefox 1.5 and IE 5 are pretty much no longer used, or by a very minor quantity of people.
It is a bit like coding to support Netscape Navigator... :-)
Unless some other major browser (Opera? Safari? unlikely...) doesn't support this, or if your Web logs show lot of legacy browser use, you can probably just use these methods.
Sometime, we have to move on. ^_^

[EDIT] Works fine on Opera 9.50 and Safari 3.1

javascript: var num = 3.1415926535897932384; alert(num.toFixed(7));

The article you reference is a year and half ago, an eternity in IT industry... I think that, unlike IE users, Firefox users often go to the latest version.

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