Math.fround()
Baseline Widely available
This feature is well established and works across many devices and browser versions. It’s been available across browsers since July 2015.
The Math.fround()
static method returns the nearest 32-bit single precision float representation of a number.
Try it
Syntax
Math.fround(doubleFloat)
Parameters
doubleFloat
-
A number.
Return value
The nearest 32-bit single precision float representation of doubleFloat
.
Description
JavaScript uses 64-bit double floating-point numbers internally, which offer a very high precision. However, sometimes you may be working with 32-bit floating-point numbers, for example if you are reading values from a Float32Array
. This can create confusion: checking a 64-bit float and a 32-bit float for equality may fail even though the numbers are seemingly identical.
To solve this, Math.fround()
can be used to cast the 64-bit float to a 32-bit float. Internally, JavaScript continues to treat the number as a 64-bit float, it just performs a "round to even" on the 23rd bit of the mantissa, and sets all following mantissa bits to 0
. If the number is outside the range of a 32-bit float, Infinity
or -Infinity
is returned.
Because fround()
is a static method of Math
, you always use it as Math.fround()
, rather than as a method of a Math
object you created (Math
is not a constructor).
Examples
Using Math.fround()
The number 1.5 can be precisely represented in the binary numeral system, and is identical in 32-bit and 64-bit:
Math.fround(1.5); // 1.5
Math.fround(1.5) === 1.5; // true
However, the number 1.337 cannot be precisely represented in the binary numeral system, so it differs in 32-bit and 64-bit:
Math.fround(1.337); // 1.3370000123977661
Math.fround(1.337) === 1.337; // false
is too big for a 32-bit float, so Infinity
is returned:
2 ** 150; // 1.42724769270596e+45
Math.fround(2 ** 150); // Infinity
Specifications
Specification |
---|
ECMAScript Language Specification # sec-math.fround |
Browser compatibility
BCD tables only load in the browser