My end goal is to validate an input field. The input may be either alphabetic or numeric.
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6You don't need jQuery for that.– Šime VidasApr 25, 2011 at 11:55
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Please edit your question title, to something more accurate like "jQuery input validate only alphabetic characters" since your description leads to none answer on "how to find numbers in a string", therefore it results in an irrelevant search result for our community. Thanks!– Juanma GuerreroAug 24, 2012 at 16:53
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Edited "jQuery" out of the question title, and replaced with "Javascript".– VKenOct 13, 2012 at 1:25
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@VKen, It is not necessary to put tags on title.– StarxOct 13, 2012 at 2:28
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@Starx noted, I'm just keeping the format the question poster started with.– VKenOct 13, 2012 at 2:35
19 Answers
If I'm not mistaken, the question requires "contains number", not "is number". So:
function hasNumber(myString) {
return /\d/.test(myString);
}
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this solution doesn't take into account non-integer numbers like 3.2 or 1e4– ekkisJan 12, 2017 at 21:05
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13It does. Check in console: hasNumber("check 3.2 or 1e4") = true vs hasNumber("check no numbers") = false. Because 3.2 and 1e4 contain numbers in itself.– ZonJan 17, 2017 at 18:02
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2
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2I tried putting the /\d/ in "" - that was stupid, just writing this in case someone else makes the same mistake Dec 2, 2021 at 18:22
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More information about the RegExp
.test
method can be found here: developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/…– joeljpaFeb 15, 2023 at 5:43
You can do this using javascript. No need for Jquery or Regex
function isNumeric(n) {
return !isNaN(parseFloat(n)) && isFinite(n);
}
While implementing
var val = $('yourinputelement').val();
if(isNumeric(val)) { alert('number'); }
else { alert('not number'); }
Update: To check if a string has numbers in them, you can use regular expressions to do that
var matches = val.match(/\d+/g);
if (matches != null) {
alert('number');
}
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3
matches != null
means notundefined
ornull
whilematches !== null
means specifically notnull
but passesundefined
.– NateNov 14, 2014 at 14:33 -
match()
returns an array ornull
. Soif (matches !== null)
should be fine (and it will please JSHint.) Source: developer.mozilla.org/en/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/…– JasonApr 24, 2015 at 8:54 -
It should be
isFinite(parseFloat(n))
in the first example.isNumeric("5,000")
fails. Nov 15, 2015 at 6:15 -
@m.spyratos, Well,
isFinite()
gives true if the passed value is afinite
number and number5,000
is a formatted string of number not a finite number.– StarxNov 16, 2015 at 19:41 -
@Starx, I agree. But if you don't support formatted string as input, then why do you use parse float in
isNaN
? I would suggest to either remove parse float fromisNaN
or add it toisFinite
as well to be consisted. Nov 18, 2015 at 2:31
This is what you need.
var hasNumber = /\d/;
hasNumber.test("ABC33SDF"); //true
hasNumber.test("ABCSDF"); //false
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this is an excellent answer I can't believe i never knew about this! thanks for sharing– d0rf47Mar 24, 2022 at 14:31
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Awesome bro, can't believed on this before testing. Thanks be blessed bro Feb 16, 2023 at 10:36
function validate(){
var re = /^[A-Za-z]+$/;
if(re.test(document.getElementById("textboxID").value))
alert('Valid Name.');
else
alert('Invalid Name.');
}
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I had to read the whole question to realize this actually answers the exact question asked. The question title is a little deceptive.– NateNov 14, 2014 at 14:31
It's not bulletproof by any means, but it worked for my purposes and maybe it will help someone.
var value = $('input').val();
if(parseInt(value)) {
console.log(value+" is a number.");
}
else {
console.log(value+" is NaN.");
}
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Boolean(parseInt(3)) -> true; Boolean(parseInt("3")) -> true; Boolean(parseInt("three")) -> false
Jun 18, 2018 at 16:46 -
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2
Using Regular Expressions with JavaScript. A regular expression is a special text string for describing a search pattern, which is written in the form of /pattern/modifiers where "pattern" is the regular expression itself, and "modifiers" are a series of characters indicating various options.
The character class is the most basic regex concept after a literal match. It makes one small sequence of characters match a larger set of characters. For example, [A-Z]
could stand for the upper case alphabet, and \d
could mean any digit.
From below example
contains_alphaNumeric
« It checks for string contains either letter or number (or) both letter and number. The hyphen (-) is ignored.onlyMixOfAlphaNumeric
« It checks for string contain both letters and numbers only of any sequence order.
Example:
function matchExpression( str ) {
var rgularExp = {
contains_alphaNumeric : /^(?!-)(?!.*-)[A-Za-z0-9-]+(?<!-)$/,
containsNumber : /\d+/,
containsAlphabet : /[a-zA-Z]/,
onlyLetters : /^[A-Za-z]+$/,
onlyNumbers : /^[0-9]+$/,
onlyMixOfAlphaNumeric : /^([0-9]+[a-zA-Z]+|[a-zA-Z]+[0-9]+)[0-9a-zA-Z]*$/
}
var expMatch = {};
expMatch.containsNumber = rgularExp.containsNumber.test(str);
expMatch.containsAlphabet = rgularExp.containsAlphabet.test(str);
expMatch.alphaNumeric = rgularExp.contains_alphaNumeric.test(str);
expMatch.onlyNumbers = rgularExp.onlyNumbers.test(str);
expMatch.onlyLetters = rgularExp.onlyLetters.test(str);
expMatch.mixOfAlphaNumeric = rgularExp.onlyMixOfAlphaNumeric.test(str);
return expMatch;
}
// HTML Element attribute's[id, name] with dynamic values.
var id1 = "Yash", id2="777", id3= "Yash777", id4= "Yash777Image4"
id11= "image5.64", id22= "55-5.6", id33= "image_Yash", id44= "image-Yash"
id12= "_-.";
console.log( "Only Letters:\n ", matchExpression(id1) );
console.log( "Only Numbers:\n ", matchExpression(id2) );
console.log( "Only Mix of Letters and Numbers:\n ", matchExpression(id3) );
console.log( "Only Mix of Letters and Numbers:\n ", matchExpression(id4) );
console.log( "Mixed with Special symbols" );
console.log( "Letters and Numbers :\n ", matchExpression(id11) );
console.log( "Numbers [-]:\n ", matchExpression(id22) );
console.log( "Letters :\n ", matchExpression(id33) );
console.log( "Letters [-]:\n ", matchExpression(id44) );
console.log( "Only Special symbols :\n ", matchExpression(id12) );
Out put:
Only Letters:
{containsNumber: false, containsAlphabet: true, alphaNumeric: true, onlyNumbers: false, onlyLetters: true, mixOfAlphaNumeric: false}
Only Numbers:
{containsNumber: true, containsAlphabet: false, alphaNumeric: true, onlyNumbers: true, onlyLetters: false, mixOfAlphaNumeric: false}
Only Mix of Letters and Numbers:
{containsNumber: true, containsAlphabet: true, alphaNumeric: true, onlyNumbers: false, onlyLetters: false, mixOfAlphaNumeric: true}
Only Mix of Letters and Numbers:
{containsNumber: true, containsAlphabet: true, alphaNumeric: true, onlyNumbers: false, onlyLetters: false, mixOfAlphaNumeric: true}
Mixed with Special symbols
Letters and Numbers :
{containsNumber: true, containsAlphabet: true, alphaNumeric: false, onlyNumbers: false, onlyLetters: false, mixOfAlphaNumeric: false}
Numbers [-]:
{containsNumber: true, containsAlphabet: false, alphaNumeric: false, onlyNumbers: false, onlyLetters: false, mixOfAlphaNumeric: false}
Letters :
{containsNumber: false, containsAlphabet: true, alphaNumeric: false, onlyNumbers: false, onlyLetters: false, mixOfAlphaNumeric: false}
Letters [-]:
{containsNumber: false, containsAlphabet: true, alphaNumeric: true, onlyNumbers: false, onlyLetters: false, mixOfAlphaNumeric: false}
Only Special symbols :
{containsNumber: false, containsAlphabet: false, alphaNumeric: false, onlyNumbers: false, onlyLetters: false, mixOfAlphaNumeric: false}
java Pattern Matching with Regular Expressions.
You can do this using javascript. No need for Jquery or Regex
function isNumeric(n)
{
return !isNaN(n);
}
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15Overkill. Could be just
function isNumeric(n) { return !isNaN(n); }
Jun 18, 2015 at 16:58 -
1This also doesn't check to see if ANY character is a number. But I can think of a solution inspired by this. Jan 29, 2018 at 19:42
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1This only checks if it is a number, not if it contains a number. "ABC123" would resolve to false, whereas it should resolve to true. Also why create an extra function instead of just if ( !isNaN(str) ) {} ? Dec 8, 2020 at 15:28
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To test if any char is a number, without overkill❓, to be adapted as need.
const s = "EMA618"
function hasInt(me){
let i = 1,a = me.split(""),b = "",c = "";
a.forEach(function(e){
if (!isNaN(e)){
console.log(`CONTAIN NUMBER «${e}» AT POSITION ${a.indexOf(e)} => TOTAL COUNT ${i}`)
c += e
i++
} else {b += e}
})
console.log(`STRING IS «${b}», NUMBER IS «${c}»`)
if (i === 0){
return false
// return b
} else {
return true
// return +c
}
}
hasInt(s)
One way to check it is to loop through the string and return true (or false depending on what you want) when you hit a number.
function checkStringForNumbers(input){
let str = String(input);
for( let i = 0; i < str.length; i++){
console.log(str.charAt(i));
if(!isNaN(str.charAt(i))){ //if the string is a number, do the following
return true;
}
}
}
parseInt
provides integers when the string begins with the representation of an integer:
(parseInt '1a') is 1
..so perhaps:
isInteger = (s)->
s is (parseInt s).toString() and s isnt 'NaN'
(isInteger 'a') is false
(isInteger '1a') is false
(isInteger 'NaN') is false
(isInteger '-42') is true
Pardon my CoffeeScript.
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Basically,
parseInt('10m') /* returns 10*/
will do the trick if the string starts with a number. Otherwise returns NaN. If at all this behaviour is ok for you, considerparseFloat('2.34million')
so you get 2.34 instead of losing money ;-)– mixdevAug 10, 2020 at 10:41
I think it's simple and easy way to extract numbers and string.
str = "jdghj4874y6jfngvjbng"
let num = []
let strEx = []
for (i = 0; i < str.length; i++) {
if (str[i] >= 0) {
num.push(str[i])
} else {
strEx.push(str[i])
}
}
console.log('nums:', JSON.stringify(num))
console.log('chars:', JSON.stringify(strEx))
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I think there is no need to convert object into stringy Please put the reason Thank you Mar 3, 2023 at 19:28
This code also helps in, "To Detect Numbers in Given String" when numbers found it stops its execution.
function hasDigitFind(_str_) {
this._code_ = 10; /*When empty string found*/
var _strArray = [];
if (_str_ !== '' || _str_ !== undefined || _str_ !== null) {
_strArray = _str_.split('');
for(var i = 0; i < _strArray.length; i++) {
if(!isNaN(parseInt(_strArray[i]))) {
this._code_ = -1;
break;
} else {
this._code_ = 1;
}
}
}
return this._code_;
}
Below code checks for same number, sequence number and reverse number sequence.
function checkNumSequnce(arrayNM2) {
inseqCounter=1;
continousSeq = 1;
decsequenceConter = 1;
var isequence = true;
for (i=0;i<arrayNM2.length-1;i++) {
j=i+1;
if (arrayNM2[i] == arrayNM2[i+1]) {
if(inseqCounter > 1 || decsequenceConter > 1){
isequence = false; break;
}
continousSeq++;
}
else if (arrayNM2[j]- arrayNM2[i] == 1) {
if(decsequenceConter > 1 || continousSeq > 1){
isequence = false; break;
}
inseqCounter++;
} else if(arrayNM2[i]- arrayNM2[j] == 1){
if(inseqCounter > 1 || continousSeq > 1){
isequence = false; break;
}
decsequenceConter++;
}else{
isequence= false;
break;
}
};
console.log("isequence: "+ isequence);
};
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2This is undoubtedly the most confusing and verbose SO solution I have ever seen– BarrisJan 14, 2021 at 12:39
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@kshitij This is answer is working for sequential and repeated number validation. May be this answer is not 100% match for this question. But great logic. Thanks Feb 11, 2021 at 12:49
We can check it by using !/[^a-zA-Z]/.test(e)
Just run snippet and check.
function handleValueChange() {
if (!/[^a-zA-Z]/.test(document.getElementById('textbox_id').value)) {
var x = document.getElementById('result');
x.innerHTML = 'String does not contain number';
} else {
var x = document.getElementById('result');
x.innerHTML = 'String does contains number';
}
}
input {
padding: 5px;
}
<input type="text" id="textbox_id" placeholder="Enter string here..." oninput="handleValueChange()">
<p id="result"></p>
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1this doesn't work for input
abc!
- the regex you have checks if its not an alphabet; this means even symbols like ! will be treated as number. May 25, 2022 at 10:08
Nobody has addressed the body of the question:
My end goal is to validate an input field. The input may be either alphabetic or numeric.
-- op
So here is a function that returns a boolean
answer,
true
if the passed input
has a Number
value OR a strictly alphabetic string value,
false
otherwise:
const isAlphaOrNumeric = input => {
if ('' === input.value.trim())
return false // empty
if (!Number.isNaN(Number(input.value)))
return true //'number'
return /^[a-zA-Z]+$/.test(input.value.trim()) // 'alphabetic'
}
const isAlphaOrNumeric = input => {
if ('' === input.value.trim())
return false
if (!Number.isNaN(Number(input.value)))
return true
return /^[a-zA-Z]+$/.test(input.value.trim())
}
const f = document.querySelector('form')
const test = f.querySelector('[name="test"]')
const test2 = f.querySelector('[name="test2"]')
const test3 = f.querySelector('[name="test3"]')
f.onsubmit = e => {
e.preventDefault()
console.log(test.value, isAlphaOrNumeric(test))
console.log(test2.value, isAlphaOrNumeric(test2))
console.log(test3.value, isAlphaOrNumeric(test3))
}
<form>
<input name="test" value="abc"><br>
<input name="test2" value="-3.14"><br>
<input name="test3" value="AFF4B3"><br>
<button>
check it
</button>
</form>
Try this to check whether string has number or not.
'test123'.split('').reduce((result,ch) => ch.charCodeAt(0) >= 48 && ch.charCodeAt(0) <= 57), false);
function check_string(str){
const number_pattern = /\d/;
return number_pattern.test(str)
}
let sample_string = "Hello World 1234";
let is_string_contains_number = check_string(sample_string);
//output : true [if the string contains number in it]
function containsNumbers(inputString) {
return /\d/.test(inputString);
}
// Example usage:
console.log(containsNumbers("Hello123")); // Output: true
console.log(containsNumbers("Hello")); // Output: false
the containsNumbers function checks if the input string contains any digit (\d) using the test() method with a regular expression. If any digit is found in the input string, it returns true; otherwise, it returns false.
function containsNumber(str) {
return /[0-9]/.test(str);
}
// Example usage:
console.log(containsNumber("Hello123")); // Output: true
console.log(containsNumber("Hello")); // Output: false
return /[0-9]/.test(str);: This line contains the core logic of the function. Here's what it does:
/[0-9]/: This is a regular expression literal enclosed within /.../. [0-9] is a character class that matches any single digit from 0 to 9. .test(str): This is a method of the regular expression object that tests whether the provided string str contains a match for the regular expression. It returns true if a match is found, otherwise false.
You can also try lodash:
const isNumeric = number =>
_.isFinite(_.parseInt(number)) && !_.isNaN(_.parseInt(number))