JavaScript parseInt is giving me wrong number, what I'm doing wrong?












0















So, for parseInt('10152547376283911', 10) I'm expecting 10152547376283911, but I'm getting 10152547376283912.



What I'm doing wrong?










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  • 1





    Your number is outside of the range of ints that can be accurately expressed as a floating point number

    – david
    Aug 10 '14 at 23:27











  • possible duplicate of What is JavaScript's Max Int? What's the highest Integer value a Number can go to without losing precision?

    – Jeremy J Starcher
    Aug 10 '14 at 23:27
















0















So, for parseInt('10152547376283911', 10) I'm expecting 10152547376283911, but I'm getting 10152547376283912.



What I'm doing wrong?










share|improve this question


















  • 1





    Your number is outside of the range of ints that can be accurately expressed as a floating point number

    – david
    Aug 10 '14 at 23:27











  • possible duplicate of What is JavaScript's Max Int? What's the highest Integer value a Number can go to without losing precision?

    – Jeremy J Starcher
    Aug 10 '14 at 23:27














0












0








0








So, for parseInt('10152547376283911', 10) I'm expecting 10152547376283911, but I'm getting 10152547376283912.



What I'm doing wrong?










share|improve this question














So, for parseInt('10152547376283911', 10) I'm expecting 10152547376283911, but I'm getting 10152547376283912.



What I'm doing wrong?







javascript parseint






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asked Aug 10 '14 at 23:24









LILkillaBEELILkillaBEE

1121516




1121516








  • 1





    Your number is outside of the range of ints that can be accurately expressed as a floating point number

    – david
    Aug 10 '14 at 23:27











  • possible duplicate of What is JavaScript's Max Int? What's the highest Integer value a Number can go to without losing precision?

    – Jeremy J Starcher
    Aug 10 '14 at 23:27














  • 1





    Your number is outside of the range of ints that can be accurately expressed as a floating point number

    – david
    Aug 10 '14 at 23:27











  • possible duplicate of What is JavaScript's Max Int? What's the highest Integer value a Number can go to without losing precision?

    – Jeremy J Starcher
    Aug 10 '14 at 23:27








1




1





Your number is outside of the range of ints that can be accurately expressed as a floating point number

– david
Aug 10 '14 at 23:27





Your number is outside of the range of ints that can be accurately expressed as a floating point number

– david
Aug 10 '14 at 23:27













possible duplicate of What is JavaScript's Max Int? What's the highest Integer value a Number can go to without losing precision?

– Jeremy J Starcher
Aug 10 '14 at 23:27





possible duplicate of What is JavaScript's Max Int? What's the highest Integer value a Number can go to without losing precision?

– Jeremy J Starcher
Aug 10 '14 at 23:27












1 Answer
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Javascript native numbers do not have enough precision (significant digits) to hold the number you are expecting. See the question What JavaScript library can I use to manipulate big integers? for suggestions on how to deal with this problem.



Depending on your application, you may actually be able to use strings instead of numbers (for example, if your number represents something like a physical part number). You would only need a bigint library if you intend to do arithmetic on your numbers.






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    1 Answer
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    1 Answer
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    active

    oldest

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    active

    oldest

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    3














    Javascript native numbers do not have enough precision (significant digits) to hold the number you are expecting. See the question What JavaScript library can I use to manipulate big integers? for suggestions on how to deal with this problem.



    Depending on your application, you may actually be able to use strings instead of numbers (for example, if your number represents something like a physical part number). You would only need a bigint library if you intend to do arithmetic on your numbers.






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      3














      Javascript native numbers do not have enough precision (significant digits) to hold the number you are expecting. See the question What JavaScript library can I use to manipulate big integers? for suggestions on how to deal with this problem.



      Depending on your application, you may actually be able to use strings instead of numbers (for example, if your number represents something like a physical part number). You would only need a bigint library if you intend to do arithmetic on your numbers.






      share|improve this answer


























        3












        3








        3







        Javascript native numbers do not have enough precision (significant digits) to hold the number you are expecting. See the question What JavaScript library can I use to manipulate big integers? for suggestions on how to deal with this problem.



        Depending on your application, you may actually be able to use strings instead of numbers (for example, if your number represents something like a physical part number). You would only need a bigint library if you intend to do arithmetic on your numbers.






        share|improve this answer













        Javascript native numbers do not have enough precision (significant digits) to hold the number you are expecting. See the question What JavaScript library can I use to manipulate big integers? for suggestions on how to deal with this problem.



        Depending on your application, you may actually be able to use strings instead of numbers (for example, if your number represents something like a physical part number). You would only need a bigint library if you intend to do arithmetic on your numbers.







        share|improve this answer












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        answered Aug 10 '14 at 23:27









        Greg HewgillGreg Hewgill

        666k14310091164




        666k14310091164






























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