How to convert an integer into an array of digits
I'd go with
var arr = n.toString(10).replace(/\D/g, '0').split('').map(Number);
You can omit the replace
if you are sure that n
has no decimals.
I'd do this, to avoid using strings when you don't need them:
var n = 12345;
var arr = [];
while(n>0){arr.unshift(n%10);n=n/10|0;}
**** 2019 Answer ****
This single line will do the trick:
Array.from(String(12345), Number);
Example
const numToSeparate = 12345;
const arrayOfDigits = Array.from(String(numToSeparate), Number);
console.log(arrayOfDigits); //[1,2,3,4,5]
Explanation
1- String(numToSeparate)
will convert the number 12345 into a string, returning '12345'
2- The Array.from()
method creates a new Array instance from an array-like or iterable object, the string '12345' is an iterable object, so it will create an Array from it.
3- In the process of creating this new array, the Array.from()
method will first pass any iterable element (ex: '1', '2') to the callback we declare as a second parameter (which is the Number
function in this case). This is possible because an String is an "array-like" object.
To make it simpler, we could've declared the callback as:
Array.from(String(numToSeparate), n => Number(n)
4- The Number
function will take any string character and will convert it into a number eg: Number('1')
; will return 1
.
5- These numbers will be added one by one to a new array and finally this array of numbers will be returned.
Summary
The code line Array.from(String(numToSeparate), Number);
will convert the number into a string, take each character of that string, convert it into a number and put in a new array. Finally, this new array of numbers will be returned.
var n = 12345;
var arr = ('' + n).split('').map(function(digit) {return +digit;});
The map function, though, is only supported by recent browsers.