4

I'm using the following script to count upward at an interval and it works perfectly. However, I'd like it to format the number with commas (56,181,995 instead of 56181995).

var START_DATE = new Date("July 27, 2010 13:30:00"); // put in the starting date here
var INTERVAL = 1; // in seconds
var INCREMENT = 2; // increase per tick
var START_VALUE = 101; // initial value when it's the start date
var count = 0;

window.onload = function()
{
var msInterval = INTERVAL * 1000;
var now = new Date();
count = parseInt((now - START_DATE)/msInterval) * INCREMENT + START_VALUE;
document.getElementById('counter').innerHTML = count;
setInterval("count += INCREMENT; document.getElementById('counter').innerHTML = count;", msInterval);
}

I thought I had found an answer here on SO but I can't get it to work:

How to print a number with commas as thousands separators in JavaScript

3
  • How are you trying to apply the solution from the other question? It should work perfectly, just pass the number you want to format. Jun 17, 2011 at 21:37
  • Works pretty well for me: jsfiddle.net/fkling/wnWVA What is your problem? Jun 17, 2011 at 22:22
  • Check this npm package: reformat-number
    – Carloluis
    Mar 10, 2018 at 1:26

4 Answers 4

18
(1234567890).toLocaleString();
2
  • According to MDN, calling .toLocaleString without any arguments is supported across all browsers. Mar 9, 2015 at 4:15
  • Thank you for this answer, was looking for something native and simple
    – Osinachi
    Feb 24, 2021 at 16:50
12
function addCommas(nStr)
{
    nStr += '';
    var x = nStr.split('.');
    var x1 = x[0];
    var x2 = x.length > 1 ? '.' + x[1] : '';
    var rgx = /(\d+)(\d{3})/;
    while (rgx.test(x1)) {
        x1 = x1.replace(rgx, '$1' + ',' + '$2');
    }
    return x1 + x2;
}

http://www.mredkj.com/javascript/nfbasic.html

To integrate:

var msInterval = INTERVAL * 1000;
var now = new Date();
count = parseInt((now - START_DATE)/msInterval) * INCREMENT + START_VALUE;
document.getElementById('counter').innerHTML = addCommas(count);
setInterval("count += INCREMENT; document.getElementById('counter').innerHTML = addCommas(count);", msInterval);
2
  • How do I integrate this with the function I'm using?
    – brianrhea
    Jun 17, 2011 at 21:49
  • 1
    I don't know whether you noticed, but this function implicitly declares x, x1, and x2 in the global namespace. I only discovered this because I found someone had added this function in our codebase verbatim, and went looking for the source. No downvote, because it's slapdash sample code, but I think you ought to fix it for future C&P jockeys.
    – Robusto
    Oct 9, 2013 at 12:54
2

formatting - How can I format numbers as money in JavaScript?

using this SO post on formatting money as a basis, you can re-engineer this to work for just comma separation

here's an example - http://jsfiddle.net/pxfunc/etfjW/

You can extend the javascript Number type to include a commaSeparated formatter method like so:

Number.prototype.commaSeparated = function() {
    var n = this,
        t = ",",
        s = n < 0 ? "-" : "",
        i = parseInt(n = Math.abs(+n || 0)) + "",
        j = (j = i.length) > 3 ? j % 3 : 0;
    return s + (j ? i.substr(0, j) + t : "") + i.substr(j).replace(/(\d{3})(?=\d)/g, "$1" + t);
};

then call it like so

count.commaSeparated();

or

(1234567890).commaSeparated();
2
function addCommas(str){
   var arr,int,dec;
   str += '';

   arr = str.split('.');
   int = arr[0] + '';
   dec = arr.length>1?'.'+arr[1]:'';

   return int.replace(/(\d)(?=(\d{3})+$)/g,"$1,") + dec;
}
4
  • Thx for editing Gordon, I think I went the minmalistic route at first, but then decided to use the three letter naming, to format neatly.
    – vol7ron
    Sep 14, 2011 at 4:09
  • Isn't int a reserved word in JS? Even SO is formatting it as a keyword. Oct 23, 2012 at 20:15
  • No, int is not a keyword in JS. It may be in C, but not JS. The code highlighter gets stuck on various things, not just this.
    – vol7ron
    Oct 23, 2012 at 20:24
  • Ugh, I need to keep up with the times. int was a future reserved word in ECMAScript 3 but was removed in 5. Tested it in IE 6-8 and Chrome... looks like it's okay to use. ^_^ Carry on. Oct 24, 2012 at 2:09

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