Can anyone point me to some code to determine if a number in JavaScript is even or odd?
Use the below code:
function isOdd(num) { return num % 2;}
console.log("1 is " + isOdd(1));
console.log("2 is " + isOdd(2));
console.log("3 is " + isOdd(3));
console.log("4 is " + isOdd(4));
1 represents an odd number, while 0 represents an even number.
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102Note that this will return
0
or1
(orNaN
if you feed it something that isn't a number and can't be coerced into one), which will work fine for most situations. But if you want a realtrue
orfalse
:return (num % 2) == 1;
– T.J. Crowder Feb 16 '11 at 12:20 -
3yea good note about the NaN. But usually, you want javascript to be truthy or falsey, which is why i wrote it the way i did. – Chii Feb 16 '11 at 12:24
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10Just to clarify, the modulo operator (%) gives the remainder of a division. So 3%2 would be 3/2, leaving 1 as a remainder, therefore 3%2 will return 1. – Abuh Feb 16 '11 at 12:24
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6Further to what T.J. said, this will return a fraction if
num
isn't an integer. Which will still work if you compareisOdd(1.5)==true
(because a fractional value is not equal totrue
), but it would be better if the function returnedtrue
orfalse
as implied by the name "isOdd". – nnnnnn Aug 13 '12 at 2:02 -
8
Use the bitwise AND
operator.
function oddOrEven(x) {
return ( x & 1 ) ? "odd" : "even";
}
function checkNumber(argNumber) {
document.getElementById("result").innerHTML = "Number " + argNumber + " is " + oddOrEven(argNumber);
}
checkNumber(17);
<div id="result" style="font-size:150%;text-shadow: 1px 1px 2px #CE5937;" ></div>
If you don't want a string return value, but rather a boolean one, use this:
var isOdd = function(x) { return x & 1; };
var isEven = function(x) { return !( x & 1 ); };
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5+1, you're answer definitely beats mine, not to mention that you have the only answer that does not use
X % Y
! – s0d4pop Aug 12 '12 at 22:52 -
4I'm not sure if my test is accurate, but the bitwise AND seems to be 40 times slower than the modulo operator for a fixed number and 2 times slower for a random number: jsperf.com/odd-or-even – Blender Aug 12 '12 at 22:59
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8Note that this will return "odd" or "even" for numbers that are not either (e.g., 3.14). – nnnnnn Aug 12 '12 at 23:02
-
2
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7@Gnuey Every number is comprised of a series of bits. All odd numbers have the least-significant (rightmost) bit set to 1, all even numbers 0. The
x & 1
checks if the last bit is set in the number (because 1 Is a number with all bits set to 1 except for the least significant bit): If it is, the number is odd, otherwise even. – 0x499602D2 Aug 30 '13 at 13:01
You could do something like this:
function isEven(value){
if (value%2 == 0)
return true;
else
return false;
}
-
9It doesn't seem like you know what a boolean is.
if (condition) { answer=true; } else { answer=false; }
is just a needlessly wordy version ofanswer = (bool) condition;
. Reduce your function tofunction isEven(value) { return (bool) (value%2 == 0); }
and we'll all be happy. – awm Feb 16 '11 at 12:28 -
14
-
6@awm - It seems like you don't know JavaScript. You can't cast to boolean with
(bool)
(that'll give an error) and in any case you don't need to:return value%2 == 0;
will do the job since the==
operator returns a boolean. – nnnnnn Aug 13 '12 at 1:55 -
2Wow, did I really write that? Yes, that's obviously wrong; should be something like
answer = !!(condition)
. The point I was trying to make, of course is that you can justreturn value%2==0
and don't need to bother with the conditional. – awm Aug 13 '12 at 4:53 -
function isEven(x) { return (x%2)==0; }
function isOdd(x) { return !isEven(x); }
Do I have to make an array really large that has a lot of even numbers
No. Use modulus (%). It gives you the remainder of the two numbers you are dividing.
Ex. 2 % 2 = 0 because 2/2 = 1 with 0 remainder.
Ex2. 3 % 2 = 1 because 3/2 = 1 with 1 remainder.
Ex3. -7 % 2 = -1 because -7/2 = -3 with -1 remainder.
This means if you mod any number x by 2, you get either 0 or 1 or -1. 0 would mean it's even. Anything else would mean it's odd.
This can be solved with a small snippet of code:
function isEven(value) {
return !(value % 2)
}
Hope this helps :)
With bitwise, codegolfing:
var isEven=n=>(n&1)?"odd":"even";
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& bitwise only exactly works on numbers up to 2^32. % works on numbers up to 2^53. – Rewind Feb 21 at 22:55
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Yes, @Rewind it's only useful for some codegolfing challenges, not for writing production code – Katia Punter Feb 26 at 14:06
Like many languages, Javascript has a modulus operator %
, that finds the remainder of division. If there is no remainder after division by 2, a number is even:
// this expression is true if "number" is even, false otherwise
(number % 2 == 0)
This is a very common idiom for testing for even integers.
-
3However, modulus can be tricky/undefined for negative values .. be sure to consult the appropriate language specification. – user166390 Aug 12 '12 at 22:54
Use my extensions :
Number.prototype.isEven=function(){
return this % 2===0;
};
Number.prototype.isOdd=function(){
return !this.isEven();
}
then
var a=5;
a.isEven();
==False
a.isOdd();
==True
if you are not sure if it is a Number , test it by the following branching :
if(a.isOdd){
a.isOdd();
}
UPDATE :
if you would not use variable :
(5).isOdd()
Performance :
It turns out that Procedural paradigm is better than OOP paradigm . By the way , i performed profiling in this FIDDLE . However , OOP way is still prettiest .
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Thanks dude, for this logic, in interviewee someone asked this kind of logic, could not answer, now i got it, thanks.. but is there any benefit in performance by following this method? we could have written isEven(x); etc. – Shoib Mohammed A Dec 28 '15 at 9:43
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@ShoibMohammedA : Comparison has been done ! jsfiddle.net/abdennour/jL2uyksa/3 – Abdennour TOUMI Dec 28 '15 at 11:34
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-1 don't extend native prototype functions. (stackoverflow.com/questions/14034180/…) – tfmontague May 28 '16 at 1:32
A simple function you can pass around. Uses the modulo operator %
:
var is_even = function(x) {
return !(x % 2);
}
is_even(3)
false
is_even(6)
true
-
1If your results in the ternary operator are either 'true' or 'false', you really don't need the ternary operator. Here, you could/should just do:
return !(x % 2);
– dom_watson Jun 14 '17 at 8:36
<script>
function even_odd(){
var num = document.getElementById('number').value;
if ( num % 2){
document.getElementById('result').innerHTML = "Entered Number is Odd";
}
else{
document.getElementById('result').innerHTML = "Entered Number is Even";
}
}
</script>
</head>
<body>
<center>
<div id="error"></div>
<center>
<h2> Find Given Number is Even or Odd </h2>
<p>Enter a value</p>
<input type="text" id="number" />
<button onclick="even_odd();">Check</button><br />
<div id="result"><b></b></div>
</center>
</center>
</body>
in ES6:
const isOdd = num => num % 2 == 1;
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3When adding an answer to an eight year old question with 26 existing answers it really is useful to explain what new aspect of the question your answer addresses, and if the passage of time and new versions impacts the answer. A code only answer can almost always be improved by the addition of some explanation and in this case some example calls showing usage. – Jason Aller Jan 13 '20 at 16:06
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2the title is 'How to determine if a number is odd in JavaScript' and there was no ES6 solution posted for what is asked. – Darryl Mendonez Jan 14 '20 at 14:55
Subtract 2 to it recursively until you reach either -1 or 0 (only works for positive integers obviously) :)
-
-
And it takes a hell of a time when n=2^52, and an infinite amount for n>2^53 – rioV8 Aug 3 '18 at 14:12
if (X % 2 === 0){
} else {
}
Replace X with your number (can come from a variable). The If statement runs when the number is even, the Else when it is odd.
If you just want to know if any given number is odd:
if (X % 2 !== 0){
}
Again, replace X with a number or variable.
You can use a for statement and a conditional to determine if a number or series of numbers is odd:
for (var i=1; i<=5; i++)
if (i%2 !== 0) {
console.log(i)
}
This will print every odd number between 1 and 5.
Just executed this one in Adobe Dreamweaver..it works perfectly. i used if (isNaN(mynmb))
to check if the given Value is a number or not, and i also used Math.abs(mynmb%2) to convert negative number to positive and calculate
<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd">
<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
<head>
</head>
<body bgcolor = "#FFFFCC">
<h3 align ="center"> ODD OR EVEN </h3><table cellspacing = "2" cellpadding = "5" bgcolor="palegreen">
<form name = formtwo>
<td align = "center">
<center><BR />Enter a number:
<input type=text id="enter" name=enter maxlength="10" />
<input type=button name = b3 value = "Click Here" onClick = compute() />
<b>is<b>
<input type=text id="outtxt" name=output size="5" value="" disabled /> </b></b></center><b><b>
<BR /><BR />
</b></b></td></form>
</table>
<script type='text/javascript'>
function compute()
{
var enter = document.getElementById("enter");
var outtxt = document.getElementById("outtxt");
var mynmb = enter.value;
if (isNaN(mynmb))
{
outtxt.value = "error !!!";
alert( 'please enter a valid number');
enter.focus();
return;
}
else
{
if ( mynmb%2 == 0 ) { outtxt.value = "Even"; }
if ( Math.abs(mynmb%2) == 1 ) { outtxt.value = "Odd"; }
}
}
</script>
</body>
</html>
When you need to test if some variable is odd, you should first test if it is integer. Also, notice that when you calculate remainder on negative number, the result will be negative (-3 % 2 === -1
).
function isOdd(value) {
return typeof value === "number" && // value should be a number
isFinite(value) && // value should be finite
Math.floor(value) === value && // value should be integer
value % 2 !== 0; // value should not be even
}
If Number.isInteger is available, you may also simplify this code to:
function isOdd(value) {
return Number.isInteger(value) // value should be integer
value % 2 !== 0; // value should not be even
}
Note: here, we test value % 2 !== 0
instead of value % 2 === 1
is because of -3 % 2 === -1
. If you don't want -1
pass this test, you may need to change this line.
Here are some test cases:
isOdd(); // false
isOdd("string"); // false
isOdd(Infinity); // false
isOdd(NaN); // false
isOdd(0); // false
isOdd(1.1); // false
isOdd("1"); // false
isOdd(1); // true
isOdd(-1); // true
Using %
will help you to do this...
You can create couple of functions to do it for you... I prefer separte functions which are not attached to Number in Javascript like this which also checking if you passing number or not:
odd function:
var isOdd = function(num) {
return 'number'!==typeof num ? 'NaN' : !!(num % 2);
};
even function:
var isEven = function(num) {
return isOdd(num)==='NaN' ? isOdd(num) : !isOdd(num);
};
and call it like this:
isOdd(5); // true
isOdd(6); // false
isOdd(12); // false
isOdd(18); // false
isEven(18); // true
isEven('18'); // 'NaN'
isEven('17'); // 'NaN'
isOdd(null); // 'NaN'
isEven('100'); // true
A more functional approach in modern javascript:
const NUMBERS = "nul one two three four five six seven ocho nueve".split(" ")
const negate = f=> (...args)=> !f(...args)
const isOdd = n=> NUMBERS[n % 10].indexOf("e")!=-1
const isEven = negate(isOdd)
Many people misunderstand the meaning of odd
isOdd("str")
should be false.
Only an integer can be odd.isOdd(1.223)
andisOdd(-1.223)
should be false.
A float is not an integer.isOdd(0)
should be false.
Zero is an even integer (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parity_of_zero).isOdd(-1)
should be true.
It's an odd integer.
Solution
function isOdd(n) {
// Must be a number
if (isNaN(n)) {
return false;
}
// Number must not be a float
if ((n % 1) !== 0) {
return false;
}
// Integer must not be equal to zero
if (n === 0) {
return false;
}
// Integer must be odd
if ((n % 2) !== 0) {
return true;
}
return false;
}
JS Fiddle (if needed): https://jsfiddle.net/9dzdv593/8/
1-liner
Javascript 1-liner solution. For those who don't care about readability.
const isOdd = n => !(isNaN(n) && ((n % 1) !== 0) && (n === 0)) && ((n % 2) !== 0) ? true : false;
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You can accelerate the solution yet. i.e., in the final statements you can just return !!(n % 2) , this will optionally make it work with signed numbers (i.e., when n % 2 returns 0, it's false, but when -1 or 1 returned, this would return true). Your solution is actually returning false for odd numbers since it's checking if the modulus return is 0, but should check for 1, and 1 would fail for negative numbers, thus return !!(n % 2) is safer. And anyways, {} (block statement) doesn't cause minification issues and is not present in the discussion. – Klaider Feb 7 '17 at 17:05
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@TheProHands - Thanks for the notes. (1) The issue was that the Modulus Version had a typo; it should have been
(n % 2) !== 0
instead of(n % 2) === 0
. (2) My advice is to avoid!!(n % 2)
, because (a) it has slower performance than(n % 2) !== 0
(jsperf.com/notnot-vs-strict-not), (b) it's a hack - it coerces a falsey value0
intofalse
, and (c) it's obscure (high-level programming languages shouldn't read like Pascal at the sake of performance - that's the compiler's job). (3) Yes, missing{}
block statements do result in several issues (as updated in my answer). – tfmontague Feb 8 '17 at 11:17 -
I never avoid block statements because I care about readability, but I'm trying to tell that seeking block statements doesn't result in issues, only in the code maintainace. I.e., using sequence expressions merged with expression statement instead of block statement might make the code unreadable and ugly, i.e.:
if (0) call1(), assign = 0, call2()
, but a single statement isn't bad:if (0) return; if (0) ;; if (0); break; if (0) continue;
, and anyways I prefer to continue using break-line block statements when I've long-inline conditions. – Klaider Feb 8 '17 at 12:04 -
1type/null checks like your
isNaN(n)
are silly - sure you covered theNaN
case, butisOdd(null)
,isOdd(undefined)
,isOdd({x:1})
all returnfalse
which I consider to be an error; unless of course you're only specifying that your function has correct behaviour over a given domain: only Number-type inputs. In which case, just drop theisNaN
check and force the user to call it with the correct type. Defensive programming is awful. Then your function is simplified toisOdd = x => Math.floor(x) === x && x & 1 === 1
– returning explicittrue
orfalse
values is not necessary – Thank you Mar 31 '17 at 8:34 -
null
,undefined
and objects{}
are not odd integers, and therefore the function returnsfalse
- not sure why you consider that an error. TheisNaN
check is for performance (not for defense), it lets the function exit prematurely without performing the other checks. – tfmontague May 11 '19 at 19:20
Every odd number when divided by two leaves remainder as 1 and every even number when divided by zero leaves a zero as remainder. Hence we can use this code
function checker(number) {
return number%2==0?even:odd;
}
How about this...
var num = 3 //instead get your value here
var aa = ["Even", "Odd"];
alert(aa[num % 2]);
This is what I did
//Array of numbers
var numbers = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10,32,23,643,67,5876,6345,34,3453];
//Array of even numbers
var evenNumbers = [];
//Array of odd numbers
var oddNumbers = [];
function classifyNumbers(arr){
//go through the numbers one by one
for(var i=0; i<=arr.length-1; i++){
if (arr[i] % 2 == 0 ){
//Push the number to the evenNumbers array
evenNumbers.push(arr[i]);
} else {
//Push the number to the oddNumbers array
oddNumbers.push(arr[i]);
}
}
}
classifyNumbers(numbers);
console.log('Even numbers: ' + evenNumbers);
console.log('Odd numbers: ' + oddNumbers);
For some reason I had to make sure the length of the array is less by one. When I don't do that, I get "undefined" in the last element of the oddNumbers array.
-
2It's because the condition is set to less to or equal "<=" to the length of the array. I removed the equal sign and is the result was as desired. – Zakher Masri Mar 16 '15 at 14:27
I'd implement this to return a boolean:
function isOdd (n) {
return !!(n % 2);
// or ((n % 2) !== 0).
}
It'll work on both unsigned and signed numbers. When the modulus return -1
or 1
it'll get translated to true
.
Non-modulus solution:
var is_finite = isFinite;
var is_nan = isNaN;
function isOdd (discriminant) {
if (is_nan(discriminant) && !is_finite(discriminant)) {
return false;
}
// Unsigned numbers
if (discriminant >= 0) {
while (discriminant >= 1) discriminant -= 2;
// Signed numbers
} else {
if (discriminant === -1) return true;
while (discriminant <= -1) discriminant += 2;
}
return !!discriminant;
}
By using ternary operator, you we can find the odd even numbers:
var num = 2;
result = (num % 2 == 0) ? 'even' : 'odd'
console.log(result);
this works for arrays:
function evenOrOdd(numbers) {
const evenNumbers = [];
const oddNumbers = [];
numbers.forEach(number => {
if (number % 2 === 0) {
evenNumbers.push(number);
} else {
oddNumbers.push(number);
}
});
console.log("Even: " + evenNumbers + "\nOdd: " + oddNumbers);
}
evenOrOdd([1, 4, 9, 21, 41, 92]);
this should log out: 4,92 1,9,21,41
for just a number:
function evenOrOdd(number) {
if (number % 2 === 0) {
return "even";
}
return "odd";
}
console.log(evenOrOdd(4));
this should output even to the console
%
operator than&
, and 2. While&
is theoretically faster, it really doesn't matter. – kojiro Aug 12 '12 at 23:11