how to use parseInt in code example

Example 1: parseint

// parseInt
parseInt("10");//------------ 10
parseInt("10.00");//--------- 10
parseInt("10.33")//--------- 10
parseInt("34 45 66")//------ 34
parseInt("   60   ")//------ 60
parseInt("40 years")//------ 40
parseInt("He was 40")//----- NaN
parseInt("10", 10)//-------- 10
parseInt("010")//----------- 10
parseInt("10", 8)//--------- 8
parseInt("0x10")//---------- 16
parseInt("10", 16)//-------- 16
// parseFloat
parseFloat("10")//-----------10
parseFloat("10.00")//--------10
parseFloat("10.33")//--------10.33
parseFloat("34 45 66")//-----34
parseFloat(" 60 ")//---------60
parseFloat("40 years")//-----40
parseFloat("He was 40");//----NaN
/ mm.mirzaei /

Example 2: javascript pareseint

parseInt(string, radix);

console.log(parseInt(' 0xF', 16));
// expected output: 1500

console.log(parseInt('321', 2));
// expected output: 0

console.log(parseInt('321', 10));
// expected output: 321

/* 
 * @param string Required. The value to parse. If this argument is not
 * a string, then it is converted to one using the ToString abstract
 * operation. Leading whitespace in this argument is ignored.
 *
 * radix
 * @param radix Optional. An integer between 2 and 36 that represents
 * the radix (the base in mathematical numeral systems) of the string.
 * Be careful—this does not default to 10!
 * @see https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/parseInt#Description
 * for what happens when radix is not provided
 */

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Java Example