107

I want to limit a number between two values, I know that in PHP you can do this:

$number = min(max(intval($number), 1), 20);
// this will make $number 1 if it's lower than 1, and 20 if it's higher than 20

How can I do this in javascript, without having to write multiple if statements and stuff like that? Thanks.

9 Answers 9

225

like this

var number = Math.min(Math.max(parseInt(number), 1), 20);

#Live Demo:

function limitNumberWithinRange(num, min, max){
  const MIN = min ?? 1;
  const MAX = max ?? 20;
  const parsed = parseInt(num)
  return Math.min(Math.max(parsed, MIN), MAX)
}

alert(
  limitNumberWithinRange(  prompt("enter a number")   )
)

9
  • do Javascript has as intval(num) function. Cause I know only parseInt(num)?
    – Harry Joy
    Apr 30, 2011 at 15:34
  • I dont know about php sorry I edited that I consider it as User defined function Apr 30, 2011 at 15:36
  • 7
    Don't use parseInt unless you know what you are doing, e.g. parseInt(1e300) === 1. Just use Math.min(Math.max(number, 1), 20).
    – Oriol
    Feb 5, 2016 at 23:51
  • 1
    @Sandwich Let's pay attention to Math.max(number, 1). It's the maximum value among number and 1. So it's number when number > 1, and it's 1 when number <= 1. i.e. it is always greater than or equals to 1, no matter what number is, as long as number is numeric(Math.max can return NaN when number is not numeric.); the Math.max sets the minimum limit to 1. And the Math.min sets the maximum limit to 20 in the same way. Aug 5, 2016 at 19:10
  • 2
    @Sandwich Remember, Math.min and Math.max are not Math.setMinimumLimit and Math.setMaximumLimit. Don't be confused. Aug 5, 2016 at 19:16
37

You have at least two options:

You can use a pair of conditional operators (? :):

number = number > 100 ? 100 : number < 0 ? 0 : number;

Or you can combine Math.max and Math.min:

number = Math.min(100, Math.max(0, number));

In both cases, it's relatively easy to confuse yourself, so you might consider having a utility function if you do this in multiple places:

function clamp(val, min, max) {
    return val > max ? max : val < min ? min : val;
}

Then:

number = clamp(number, 0, 100);
18

Use lodash's clamp method:

_.clamp(22, 1, 20) // Outputs 20

0
16

Needs no further explanation:

function clamp(value, min, max) {
    return Math.min(Math.max(value, min), max);
}
3
  • Would this work for negative numbers aswell such as transform -xdeg?
    – Ryan Stone
    Oct 29, 2020 at 10:41
  • @RyanStone what do you mean by "transform -xdeg"? It does work for negative values as well, yes. You can call clamp(-5, -1, 1) and it will return -1.
    – Neuron
    Oct 29, 2020 at 11:04
  • was meaning to use it in Css Transform:rotateX(); which takes in negative values.. Via Javascript
    – Ryan Stone
    Oct 29, 2020 at 17:42
10

Quote from this answer:

Update for ECMAScript 2017:

Math.clamp(x, lower, upper)

But note that as of today, it's a Stage 1 proposal. Until it gets widely supported, you can use a polyfill.

2

One Liners

const clamp = (num, min, max) => num > max ? max : num < min ? min : num
const minmax = (num, min, max) => Math.min(Math.max(num, min), max)

Benchmark

Browser clamp() minmax() Result
Chrome 976,066,844 ops/s 971,704,488 ops/s clamp() 0.45% faster
Firefox 872,108,437 ops/s 1,358,476,166 ops/s minmax() 35.8% faster
Edge 958,554,747 ops/s 936,113,887 ops/s clamp() 2.34% faster

JsBench https://jsbench.me/qhl99e1thl/1

In case of firefox minmax() is much faster in compare to others. Though in chrome and Edge clamp() is faster than minmax() but difference is ignorable. So, my opinion is to use minmax() according to the benchmark.

1

Use Math.min and Math.max.

1

I will share my robust function to enforce whole numbers (because of the integer tag), it has features like optional min/max parameters and -0 protection:

function toInt(val, min, max){
    val=(val*1 || 0);
    val=(val<0 ? Math.ceil(val) : Math.floor(val));

    min*=1;
    max*=1;

    min=((Number.isNaN(min) ? -Infinity : min) || 0);
    max=((Number.isNaN(max) ? Infinity : max) || 0);

    return Math.min(Math.max(val, min), max);
}

Some quick notes:

  • The (... || 0) behind the scenes is dealing with -0 to change it to 0, which is almost always what you want.
  • The min and max parameters are optional. When blank or invalid values are passed, they will turn into -Infinity and Infinity so they silently don't interfere with Math.min() and Math.max().
  • You can change Number.isNaN(x) ECMAScript-6 to x!==x (results in true only for NaN) for more compatibility with really old browsers, but this is simply not necessarily anymore.
0

You could easily just extend Math by adding your own method...

ES6

Math.minmax = (value, min, max) => Math.min(Math.max(value, min), max);

ES5

Math.minmax = function(value, min, max){
    return Math.min(Math.max(value, min), max);
}
1
  • 4
    PLEASE do not do this. extending built-in objects in this way credibly damages the standardization process. Just use a function. Mar 14, 2023 at 13:10

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