DEV Community

Cover image for A Better Way to Work With Number and Date Inputs in JS
Steve Sewell for Builder.io

Posted on • Updated on • Originally published at builder.io

A Better Way to Work With Number and Date Inputs in JS

valueAsNumber

You may have written some code like this before:

export function NumberInput() {
  const [number, setNumber] = useState(0)

  return (
    <input
      type="number"
      value={number}
      onChange={(e) => {
        const num = parseFloat(e.target.value)
        setNumber(num)
      }}
    />
  )
}
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

This is fine and dandy, but there is actually a better way we can be reading the number value.

I’m talking about this part:

// 🚩 Unnecessary parsing!
const num = parseFloat(e.target.value)
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

That’s right. Since all the way back in the days of IE10 we’ve had a better way to get and set number values:

// 🤯
const num = e.target.valueAsNumber
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

So a nicer solution to the above could instead look like:

export function NumberInput() {
  const [number, setNumber] = useState(0)

  return (
    <input
      type="number"
      value={number}
      onChange={(e) => {
        // ✅
        const num = e.target.valueAsNumber
        setNumber(num)
      }}
    />
  )
}
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

And of course, you don’t need React to use this. This is just standard JavaScript that works with any framework.

You could likewise query a DOM node and use it as well:

const myInput = document.querySelector('input.my-input')
const number = myInput.valueAsNumber
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

And, importantly, you can write to it as well!

myInput.valueAsNumber = 123.456
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

A minor gotcha

The type of valuseAsNumber will ***always*** be a number. So this means that if there is no current value set for the input, you will get NaN as the value.

And don’t forget…

typeof NaN // 'number'
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

Yeah, one of those little JavaScript fun parts. So be sure to check if your valueAsNumber is NaN before writing it to places that expect actual numbers

const number = myInput.valueAsNumber
if (!isNaN(number)) {
  // We actually have, like, a *number* number
}
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

valueAsDate

But wait, there’s more!

For date inputs, we also get a handy valueAsDate property as well:

export function DateInput() {
  const [date, setDate] = useState(null)

  return (
    <input
      type="date"
      value={date}
      onChange={(e) => {
        // ✅
        const date = e.target.valueAsDate
        setDate(date)
      }}
    />
  )
}
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

Beautiful.

And for those who don’t like React (or Qwik, which looks like React but has way better performance), you can of course do this with any plain ole HTML and JavaScript too:

const myDateInput = document.querySelector('input.my-date-input')
const date = myDateInput.valueAsDate
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

And, as expected, you can write to it as well

myDateInput.valueAsDate = new Date(0)
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

No gotchas this time

Thankfully, for valueAsDate, when the input is empty, we simply get null.

So you can simply check for if the value is truthy

const date = myDateInput.valueAsDate
if (date) {
  // We've got a date!
}
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

Browser Support

Yeah, this is not a new thing at all. Even if this may be your first time learning about these properties, they’ve existed for many years, even since the dinosaur days of IE 10.

Image description

Source: MDN

Conclusion

Now that we know how, we actually treat number and date inputs as proper number and date values, using the valueAsNumber and valueAsDate properties, respectively.

About Me

Hi! I'm Steve, CEO of Builder.io.

We make a way to drag + drop with your components to create pages and other CMS content on your site or app, visually.

You may find it interesting or useful:

Gif of Builder.io

Top comments (0)