We can also convert String to String array by using the toArray() method of the List class. It takes a list of type String as the input and converts each entity into a string array.
A quick one for modern browsers:
'14 2'.split(' ').map(Number);
// [14, 2]`
You can .split()
to get an array of strings, then loop through to convert them to numbers, like this:
var myArray = "14 2".split(" ");
for(var i=0; i<myArray.length; i++) { myArray[i] = +myArray[i]; }
//use myArray, it's an array of numbers
The +myArray[i]
is just a quick way to do the number conversion, if you're sure they're integers you can just do:
for(var i=0; i<myArray.length; i++) { myArray[i] = parseInt(myArray[i], 10); }
SO...older thread, I know, but...
@RoccoMusolino had a nice catch; here's an alternative:
TL;DR:
const intArray = [...("5 6 7 69 foo 0".split(' ').filter(i => /\d/g.test(i)))]
WRONG: "5 6 note this foo".split(" ").map(Number).filter(Boolean); // [5, 6]
There is a subtle flaw in the more elegant solutions listed here, specifically @amillara and @Marcus' otherwise beautiful answers.
The problem occurs when an element of the string array isn't integer-like, perhaps in a case without validation on an input. For a contrived example...
The problem:
var effedIntArray = "5 6 7 69 foo".split(' ').map(Number); // [5, 6, 7, 69, NaN]
Since you obviously want a PURE int array, that's a problem. Honestly, I didn't catch this until I copy-pasted SO code into my script... :/
The (slightly-less-baller) fix:
var intArray = "5 6 7 69 foo".split(" ").map(Number).filter(Boolean); // [5, 6, 7, 69]
So, now even when you have crap int string, your output is a pure integer array. The others are really sexy in most cases, but I did want to offer my mostly rambly w'actually. It is still a one-liner though, to my credit...
Hope it saves someone time!
var result = "14 2".split(" ").map(function(x){return parseInt(x)});
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