The formatToParts() method of Intl.NumberFormat instances allows locale-aware formatting of strings produced by this Intl.NumberFormat object.
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Intl.NumberFormat.prototype.formatToParts()
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Syntax
formatToParts()
formatToParts(number)
Parameters
Return value
An Array of objects containing the formatted number in parts.
Description
The formatToParts() method is useful for custom formatting of number strings. It returns an Array of objects containing the locale-specific tokens from which it possible to build custom strings while preserving the locale-specific parts. The structure the formatToParts() method returns, looks like this:
[
{ type: "integer", value: "3" },
{ type: "group", value: "." },
{ type: "integer", value: "500" },
];
Possible types are the following:
-
compact -
The exponent in
"long"or"short"form, depending on howcompactDisplay(which defaults toshort) is specified whennotationis set tocompact. -
currency -
The currency string, such as the symbols "$" and "€" or the name "Dollar", "Euro", depending on how
currencyDisplayis specified. -
decimal -
The decimal separator string (".").
-
exponentInteger -
The exponent integer value, when
notationis set toscientificorengineering. -
exponentMinusSign -
The exponent minus sign string ("-").
-
exponentSeparator -
The exponent separator, when
notationis set toscientificorengineering. -
fraction -
The fraction number.
-
group -
The group separator string (",").
-
infinity -
The
Infinitystring ("∞"). -
integer -
The integer number.
-
literal -
Any literal strings or whitespace in the formatted number.
-
minusSign -
The minus sign string ("-").
-
nan -
The
NaNstring ("NaN"). -
plusSign -
The plus sign string ("+").
-
percentSign -
The percent sign string ("%").
-
unit -
The unit string, such as the "l" or "litres", depending on how
unitDisplayis specified. -
unknown -
The string for
unknowntype results.
Examples
Comparing format and formatToParts
NumberFormat outputs localized, opaque strings that cannot be manipulated directly:
const number = 3500;
const formatter = new Intl.NumberFormat("de-DE", {
style: "currency",
currency: "EUR",
});
formatter.format(number);
// "3.500,00 €"
However, in many User Interfaces there is a desire to customize the formatting of this string. The formatToParts method enables locale-aware formatting of strings produced by NumberFormat formatters by providing you the string in parts:
formatter.formatToParts(number);
// return value:
[
{ type: "integer", value: "3" },
{ type: "group", value: "." },
{ type: "integer", value: "500" },
{ type: "decimal", value: "," },
{ type: "fraction", value: "00" },
{ type: "literal", value: " " },
{ type: "currency", value: "€" },
];
Now the information is available separately and it can be formatted and concatenated again in a customized way. For example by using Array.prototype.map(), arrow functions, a switch statement, template literals, and Array.prototype.reduce().
const numberString = formatter
.formatToParts(number)
.map(({ type, value }) => {
switch (type) {
case "currency":
return `<strong>${value}</strong>`;
default:
return value;
}
})
.reduce((string, part) => string + part);
This will make the currency bold, when using the formatToParts() method.
console.log(numberString);
// "3.500,00 <strong>€</strong>"
Specifications
Browser compatibility
| Desktop | Mobile | Server | ||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chrome | Edge | Firefox | Opera | Safari | Chrome Android | Firefox for Android | Opera Android | Safari on IOS | Samsung Internet | WebView Android | Deno | Node.js | ||
formatToParts |
64 | 12 | 58 | 51 | 13 | 64 | 58 | 47 | 13 | 9.0 | 64 | 1.8 |
10.0.0Before version 13.0.0, only the locale data foren-US is available by default. See the NumberFormat() constructor for more details.
|
|
See also
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Licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License v2.5 or later.
https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Intl/NumberFormat/formatToParts