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num is an arbitrary size fixed precision library written in pure javascript. Why? Because once you write one library you want to write all the libraries.
Looking for just integers? Check out int
npm install num
var num = require('num');
var foo = num('0.1').add('0.2');
// did it work?
console.log(foo.toString());
//'0.3' hell yea
Besides the num function, all of the other methods operate on the objects returned by num
construct a new decimal
valid values are integers, numbers, or strings
add {value} to our number and return a new num
subtract {value} from our number and return a new num
multiply our num by {value} and return a new num
divide our num by {value} and return a new num
return a new num that is the negative
return new num that is the absolute value
return a new num that is the absolute value
compare our value to {value}
return 0 if self and value are equal, -1 if self < value, 1 if self > value
return true if self < value
return true if self <= value
return true if self > value
return true if self >= value
return true if self == value
return true if self != value
FAQs
arbitrary precision integer and decimal library in javascript
We found that num demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
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