vote up 1 vote down star

I am pulling a value via JavaScript from a textbox.

If the textbox is empty, it returns NaN.

I want to return an empty string if it's null, empty,etc.

What check do I do?

if(NAN = tb.value) ?

flag

22% accept rate
Be more specific please: what's this textbox (a text input, textarea , select list or what)? No 'textbox' value (empty or not) returns NaN by itself to my knowledge. – KooiInc Apr 27 at 13:36
Does the textbox return NaN or do you parse it to float/integer first (which would mean that parseFloat/Int) returns NaN. – Pim Jager Apr 27 at 14:21
did you mean: if(NAN == tb.value) // (two equals for comparison) – J. Aug 13 at 23:41

4 Answers

vote up 4 vote down

Hm, something is fishy here.

In what browser does an empty textbox return NaN? I've never seen that happen, and I cannot reproduce it.

The value of a text box is, in fact a string. An empty text box returns an empty string!

Oh, and to check if something is NaN, you should use:

if (isNaN(tb.value))
{
   ...
}

Note: The isNaN()-function returns true for anything that cannot be parsed as a number, except for empty strings. That means it's a good check for numeric input (much easier than regexes):

if (tb.value != "" && !isNaN(tb.value))
{
   // It's a number
   numValue = parseFloat(tb.value);
}
link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

One thing you could do is a regex check on the value of the textbox and make sure it fits the format of an accepted number, and then if it fits the format perform your process, otherwise return an empty string.

Edit: This is an example from some code I have in front of me (might not be the best regular expression):

var anum=/(^\d+$)/;

if (!anum.test(document.getElementById("<%=txtConceptOrderValue.ClientID %>").value))
{
    alert("Order Value must be a valid integer");
    document.getElementById("<%=txtConceptOrderValue.ClientID %>").focus();
    return false;
}

Edit 2: I should also note that I am using ASP.NET which is why I have the slightly funky way of accessing the textbox. In your regular JavaScript case it may not be as cluttered.

link|flag
+1, I use the very same regex, and it works fine. – karim79 Apr 27 at 13:23
That's actually modified slightly for this answer. If you check the revision history you'll see that the original piece of code was to check for decimal values. I had to modify it to work for ints :P – TheTXI Apr 27 at 13:27
vote up 0 vote down

You can also do it this way:

var number = +input.value;
if (input.value === "" || number != number)
{
    // not a number
}

NaN is equal to nothing, not even itself.

if you don't like to use + to convert from String to Number, use the normal parseInt, but remember to always give a base

var number = parseInt(input.value, 10)

otherwise "08" becomes 0 because Javascript thinks it's an octal number.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

Assuming you have a reference to the input text box:

function getInteger(input) {
  if(!input || !input.value) return "";

  var val = parseInt(input.value, 10);

  if(isNaN(val)) return "";
  else return val;
}
link|flag

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.