0

Having the following array of numbers

[0001, 0002, 0003]

I try to print them and keep the zeros, I thought that converting the numbers to string would solve the issue, but this is not the case, here are some options that I have tried

[0001, 0002, 0003].forEach(number => console.log(''+number)) // '1', '2', '3'

I get the same result if I try any of

  • String(number)
  • number.toString()
  • number + ''

The result I expect is

// '0001', '0002', '0003'

Thanks in advance

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3 Answers 3

0

Hope you are looking for this. Convert the array of Number to array of String with leading zeros.

var size = 5;
var arr = [1,2,3,4,50];
var newArr = arr.reduce((result,v) => {
newStr = String(v);
while(newStr.length < (size || 2))
  newStr = "0" + newStr;
result.push(newStr);
return result;
},[])

console.log(newArr)

0

If the numbers in your array have a fixed length then you can use the following

function pad(num, size) {
 var s = num+"";
 while (s.length < size) s = "0" + s;
 return s;
}

pad(1,4) returns 0001

In your context :

[0001, 0002, 0003].forEach(number => console.log(pad(number,4)) //0001,0002,0003

Please keep in mind that this answer is helpful only if the integers have a fixed length.

5
  • Nice idea but I am getting wrong results when values are for example 0012, 0013, for 0012 I am getting 0010 and for 0013 I am getting 0011
    – Mario
    Sep 11, 2018 at 6:24
  • Then you have to update pad function and check that number is greater than 9 then add 2 '0' ans same as for 99 then add 1 '0' Sep 11, 2018 at 6:33
  • @user615274 Yes, I checked that. For some reason, js is returning var x= "" + 0023 as 19, I will check that and update the answer Sep 11, 2018 at 6:33
  • @ChintanKukadiya thats taken care by the while loop in the pad function. Sep 11, 2018 at 6:34
  • @hack4mer if we use like this then achieve it. function pad(num) { var size = num < 10 ? 4 : num < 100 ? 3 : 2 var s = num+""; while (s.length < size) s = "0" + s; return s; } and call like pad(9) Sep 11, 2018 at 6:55
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I think formatters like these have been on SO somewhere but in ES6 you could do it something like this:

var format = len => num =>
	((new Array(len)).fill("0").join("")+num).slice(len*-1);

console.log(
  [1,2,3,4,5].map(format(4))
);

Your main problem is that numbers are provided as octal instead of decimal so you could try the following:

var format = len => num =>
  ((new Array(len)).fill("0").join("")+Number(num).toString(8))
  .slice(len*-1);

console.log(
  [0001,0002,0003,0004,0012].map(format(8))
);

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