I always had this question:
When i dont mind the exact floating numberWhich one is preferred?
parseFloat
someValue = parseFloat(el.outerWi开发者_运维技巧dth())+parseFloat(ele2.css("marginRight")),
parseInt
someValue = parseInt(el.outerWidth(), 10)+parseInt(ele2.css("marginRight"), 10),
Which method is easier for the JS engine?
It's as broad as it's long really. parseFloat
is pointless here because the values will always be integers. I'd rather save on bytes and use the unary operator +
:
someValue = (+el.outerWidth())+(+ele2.css("marginRight"));
When you're doing: el.outerWidth()
jQuery is already returning and integer, see the docs for return types. So in this case, there's no need to parse the width at all.
It should be noted, there's another overload of outerWidth(bool)
that includes the margin if you want left and right margins, you can just do this if that's the case:
someValue = el.outerWidth(true);
The best solution is of course Andy E's solution, but to answer your question:
I think parseFloat
is pointless if your number have not a floating-point, so I would use parseInt
.
The size of the variable is an important factor in those performance comparisons, but int
and float
take up the same space in the memory (4 bytes), so it dosen't really matter. In addition, parseFloat
seems to do more calculating and string-parsing than parseInt
.
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