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I am subtracting two very big numbers from each other. I then try to divide the result by 1000.0, to convert from millisec to seconds. For reasons beyond me, I am losing the decimals. Can someone explain me why?

let intervalMs = (interval.toMs - interval.fromMs) // Two big numbers
console.log(intervalMs) // Prints "43200000"
let intervalSec = intervalMs / 1000.0
console.log(intervalSec) // Prints "43200" ?!?!

I also tried "casting" the intervalMs to a number:

let intervalMs = Number(interval.toMs - interval.fromMs)

But the results are the same

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  • 2
    JavaScript only has one kind of number. Why would 43200000 / 1000 need more significant figures?
    – jonrsharpe
    Mar 18, 2022 at 10:53
  • @jonrsharpe - Not relevant to this question, but these days, JavaScript also has BigInt and in a couple of years (probably) will have some kind of "decimal" type. :-) Mar 18, 2022 at 10:59
  • "I also tried "casting" the intervalMs to a number:" That's not a cast, it's a conversion (JavaScript doesn't have casts [I think that's true for loosely-typed languages in general]). But it doesn't do anything in this case, the input value is already a number, so passing it through the Number function returns it unchanged. 1000, 1000.0, and 1000.00 are all exactly the same number value, just written with differing numbers of zeros after the decimal point. Mar 18, 2022 at 11:02
  • what is the answer you're expecting? Mar 18, 2022 at 13:41
  • I was fooled. It's not an integer. It's just printed as one... My bad. Thanks for your input guys.
    – birgersp
    Mar 18, 2022 at 14:21

1 Answer 1

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That's becase decimals equal 0, try to divide by 3003 you will get decimals.

To get 0 decimals use:

console.log(intervalSec.toFixed(10));

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