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I am trying to understand some code where a number is converted to a currency format. Thus, if you have 16.9 it converts to $16.90. The problem with the code is if you have an amount over $1,000, it just returns $1, an amount over $2,000 returns $2, etc. Amounts in the hundreds show up fine.
Here is the function:
var _formatCurrency = function(amount) {
return "$" + parseFloat(amount).toFixed(2).replace(/(\d)(?=(\d{3})+\.)/g, '$1,')
};
(The reason the semicolon is after the bracket is because this function is in itself a statement in another function. That function is not relevant to this discussion.)
I found out that the person who originally put the code in there found it somewhere but didn't fully understand it and didn't test this particular scenario. I myself have not dealt much with regular expressions. I am not only trying to fix it, but to understand how it is working as it is now.
Here's what I've found out. The code between the backslash after the open parenthesis and the backslash before the g is the pattern. The g means global search. The \d means digit, and the (?=\d{3})+\. appears to mean find 3 digits plus a decimal point. I'm not sure I have that right, though, because if that was correct shouldn't it ignore numbers like 5.4? That works fine. Also, I'm not sure what the '$1,' is for. It looks to me like it is supposed to be placed where the digits are, but wouldn't that change all the numbers to $1? Also, why is there a comma after the 1?
Regarding your comment
I was hoping to just edit the regex so it would work properly.
The regex you are currently using is obviously not working for you so I think you should consider alternatives even if they are not too similar, and
Trying to keep the code change as small as possible
Understandable but sometimes it is better to use a code that is a little bit bigger and MORE READABLE than to go with compact and hieroglyphical.
Back to business:
I'm assuming you are getting a string as an argument and this string is composed only of digits and may or may not have a dot before the last 1 or 2 digts. Something like
//input //intended output
1 $1.00
20 $20.00
34.2 $34.20
23.1 $23.10
62516.16 $62,516.16
15.26 $15.26
4654656 $4,654,656.00
0.3 $0.30
I will let you do a pre-check of (assumed) non-valids like 1. | 2.2. | .6 | 4.8.1 | 4.856 | etc.
Proposed solution:
var _formatCurrency = function(amount) {
amount = "$" + amount.replace(/(\d)(?=(\d{3})+(\.(\d){0,2})*$)/g, '$1,');
if(amount.indexOf('.') === -1)
return amount + '.00';
var decimals = amount.split('.')[1];
return decimals.length < 2 ? amount + '0' : amount;
};
Regex break down:
(\d): Matches one digit. Parentheses group things for referencing when needed.
(?=(\d{3})+(\.(\d){0,2})*$). Now this guy. From end to beginning:
$: Matches the end of the string. This is what allows you to match from the end instead of the beginning which is very handy for adding the commas.
(\.(\d){0,2})*: This part processes the dot and decimals. The \. matches the dot. (\d){0,2} matches 0, 1 or 2 digits (the decimals). The * implies that this whole group can be empty.
?=(\d{3})+: \d{3} matches 3 digits exactly. + means at least one occurrence. Finally ?= matches a group after the main expression without including it in the result. In this case it takes three digits at a time (from the end remember?) and leaves them out of the result for when replacing.
g: Match and replace globally, the whole string.
Replacing with $1,: This is how captured groups are referenced for replacing, in this case the wanted group is number 1. Since the pattern will match every digit in the position 3n+1 (starting from the end or the dot) and catch it in the group number 1 ((\d)), then replacing that catch with $1, will effectively add a comma after each capture.
Try it and please feedback.
Also if you haven't already you should (and SO has not provided me with a format to stress this enough) really really look into this site as suggested by Taplar
The pattern is invalid, and your understanding of the function is incorrect. This function formats a number in a standard US currency, and here is how it works:
The parseFloat() function converts a string value to a decimal number.
The toFixed(2) function rounds the decimal number to 2 digits after the decimal point.
The replace() function is used here to add the thousands spearators (i.e. a comma after every 3 digits). The pattern is incorrect, so here is a suggested fix /(\d)(?=(\d{3})+\.)/g and this is how it works:
The (\d) captures a digit.
The (?=(\d{3})+\.) is called a look-ahead and it ensures that the captured digit above has one set of 3 digits (\d{3}) or more + followed by the decimal point \. after it followed by a decimal point.
The g flag/modifier is to apply the pattern globally, that is on the entire amount.
The replacement $1, replaces the pattern with the first captured group $1, which is in our case the digit (\d) (so technically replacing the digit with itself to make sure we don't lose the digit in the replacement) followed by a comma ,. So like I said, this is just to add the thousands separator.
Here are some tests with the suggested fix. Note that it works fine with numbers and strings:
var _formatCurrency = function(amount) {
return "$" + parseFloat(amount).toFixed(2).replace(/(\d)(?=(\d{3})+\.)/g, '$1,');
};
console.log(_formatCurrency('1'));
console.log(_formatCurrency('100'));
console.log(_formatCurrency('1000'));
console.log(_formatCurrency('1000000.559'));
console.log(_formatCurrency('10000000000.559'));
console.log(_formatCurrency(1));
console.log(_formatCurrency(100));
console.log(_formatCurrency(1000));
console.log(_formatCurrency(1000000.559));
console.log(_formatCurrency(10000000000.559));
Okay, I want to apologize to everyone who answered. I did some further tracing and found out the JSON call which was bringing in the amount did in fact have a comma in it, so it is just parsing that first digit. I was looking in the wrong place in the code when I thought there was no comma in there already. I do appreciate everyone's input and hope you won't think too bad of me for not catching that before this whole exercise. If nothing else, at least I now know how that regex operates so I can make use of it in the future. Now I just have to go about removing that comma.
Have a great day!
Assuming that you are working with USD only, then this should work for you as an alternative to Regular Expressions. I have also included a few tests to verify that it is working properly.
var test1 = '16.9';
var test2 = '2000.5';
var test3 = '300000.23';
var test4 = '3000000.23';
function stringToUSD(inputString) {
const splitValues = inputString.split('.');
const wholeNumber = splitValues[0].split('')
.map(val => parseInt(val))
.reverse()
.map((val, idx, arr) => idx !== 0 && (idx + 1) % 3 === 0 && arr[idx + 1] !== undefined ? `,${val}` : val)
.reverse()
.join('');
return parseFloat(`${wholeNumber}.${splitValues[1]}`).toFixed(2);
}
console.log(stringToUSD(test1));
console.log(stringToUSD(test2));
console.log(stringToUSD(test3));
console.log(stringToUSD(test4));
I'm using the following code to negate the characters in the regexp. By checking the inverse, I can determine if the value entered is correctly formatted. Essentially, any digit can be allowed but only one decimal point (placed anywhere in the string.) The way I have it now, it catches all numerals, but allows for multiple decimal points (creating invalid floats.) How can I adjust this to catch more than one decimal points (since I only want to allow for one)?
var regex = new RegExp(/[^0-9\.]/g);
var containsNonNumeric = this.value.match(regex);
if(containsNonNumeric){
this.value = this.value.replace(regex,'');
return false;
}
Here is what I'm expecting to happen:
First, valid input would be any number of numerals with the possibility of only one decimal point. The current behavior: The user enters characters one by one, if they are valid characters they will show up. If the character is invalid (e.g. the letter A) the field will replace that character with ''(essentially behaving like a backspace immediately after filling the character in. What I need is the same behavior for the addition of one too many decimal points.
As I understand your question the code below might be what you are looking for:
var validatedStr=str.replace(/[^0-9.]|\.(?=.*\.)/g, "");
It replaces all characters other then numbers and dot (.), then it replaces all dots followed by any number of 0-9 characters followed by dot.
EDIT based on first comment - the solution above erases all dots but the last, the author wants to erase all but the first one:
Since JS does not support "look behind", the solution might be to reverse string before regex, then reverse it again or to use this regex:
var counter=0;
var validatedStr=str.replace(/[^0-9.]|\./g, function($0){
if( $0 == "." && !(counter++) ) // dot found and counter is not incremented
return "."; // that means we met first dot and we want to keep it
return ""; // if we find anything else, let's erase it
});
JFTR: counter++ only executes if the first part of condition is true, so it works even for strings beginning with letters
Building upon the original regex from #Jan Legner with a pair of string reversals to work around the look behind behavior. Succeeds at keeping the first decimal point.
Modified with an attempt to cover negatives as well. Can't handle negative signs that are out of place and special cases that should logically return zero.
let keep_first_decimal = function(s) {
return s.toString().split('').reverse().join('').replace(/[^-?0-9.]|\.(?=.*\.)/g, '').split('').reverse().join('') * 1;
};
//filters as expected
console.log(keep_first_decimal("123.45.67"));
console.log(keep_first_decimal(123));
console.log(keep_first_decimal(123.45));
console.log(keep_first_decimal("123"));
console.log(keep_first_decimal("123.45"));
console.log(keep_first_decimal("a1b2c3d.e4f5g"));
console.log(keep_first_decimal("0.123"));
console.log(keep_first_decimal(".123"));
console.log(keep_first_decimal("0.123.45"));
console.log(keep_first_decimal("123."));
console.log(keep_first_decimal("123.0"));
console.log(keep_first_decimal("-123"));
console.log(keep_first_decimal("-123.45.67"));
console.log(keep_first_decimal("a-b123.45.67"));
console.log(keep_first_decimal("-ab123"));
console.log(keep_first_decimal(""));
//NaN, should return zero?
console.log(keep_first_decimal("."));
console.log(keep_first_decimal("-"));
//NaN, can't handle minus sign after first character
console.log(keep_first_decimal("-123.-45.67"));
console.log(keep_first_decimal("123.-45.67"));
console.log(keep_first_decimal("--123"));
console.log(keep_first_decimal("-a-b123"));
I don't get how hard it is to discern a string containing a number from other strings in JavaScript.
Number('') evaluates to 0, while '' is definitely not a number for humans.
parseFloat enforces numbers, but allow them to be tailed by abitrary text.
isNaN evaluates to false for whitespace strings.
So what is the programatically function for checking if a string is a number according to a simple and sane definition what a number is?
By using below function we can test whether a javascript string contains a number or not. In above function inplace of t, we need to pass our javascript string as a parameter, then the function will return either true or false
function hasNumbers(t)
{
var regex = /\d/g;
return regex.test(t);
}
If you want something a little more complex regarding format, you could use regex, something like this:
var pattern = /^(0|[1-9][0-9]{0,2}(?:(,[0-9]{3})*|[0-9]*))(\.[0-9]+){0,1}$/;
Demo
I created this regex while answering a different question awhile back (see here). This will check that it is a number with atleast one character, cannot start with 0 unless it is 0 (or 0.[othernumbers]). Cannot have decimal unless there are digits after the decimal, may or may not have commas.. but if it does it makes sure they are 3 digits apart, etc. Could also add a -? at the beginning if you want to allow negative numbers... something like:
/^(-)?(0|[1-9][0-9]{0,2}(?:(,[0-9]{3})*|[0-9]*))(\.[0-9]+){0,1}$/;
There's this simple solution :
var ok = parseFloat(s)==s;
If you need to consider "2 " as not a number, then you might use this one :
var ok = !!(+s==s && s.length && s.trim()==s);
You can always do:
function isNumber(n)
{
if (n.trim().length === 0)
return false;
return !isNaN(n);
}
Let's try
""+(+n)===n
which enforces a very rigid canonical way of the number.
However, such number strings can be created by var n=''+some_number by JS reliable.
So this solution would reject '.01', and reject all simple numbers that JS would stringify with exponent, also reject all exponential representations that JS would display with mantissa only. But as long we stay in integer and low float number ranges, it should work with otherwise supplied numbers to.
No need to panic just use this snippet if name String Contains only numbers or text.
try below.
var pattern = /^([^0-9]*)$/;
if(!YourNiceVariable.value.match(pattern)) {//it happen while Name Contains only Charectors.}
if(YourNiceVariable.value.match(pattern)) {//it happen while Name Contains only Numbers.}
This might be insane depending on the length of your string, but you could split it into an array of individual characters and then test each character with isNaN to determine if it's a number or not.
A very short, wrong but correctable answer was just deleted. I just could comment it, besides it was very cool! So here the corrected term again:
n!=='' && +n==n'
seems good. The first term eliminates the empty string case, the second one enforces the string interpretataion of a number created by numeric interpretation of the string to match the string. As the string is not empty, any tolerated character like whitespaces are removed, so we check if they were present.
i need a regular expression for decimal/float numbers like 12 12.2 1236.32 123.333 and +12.00 or -12.00 or ...123.123... for using in javascript and jQuery.
Thank you.
Optionally match a + or - at the beginning, followed by one or more decimal digits, optional followed by a decimal point and one or more decimal digits util the end of the string:
/^[+-]?\d+(\.\d+)?$/
RegexPal
The right expression should be as followed:
[+-]?([0-9]*[.])?[0-9]+
this apply for:
+1
+1.
+.1
+0.1
1
1.
.1
0.1
Here is Python example:
import re
#print if found
print(bool(re.search(r'[+-]?([0-9]*[.])?[0-9]+', '1.0')))
#print result
print(re.search(r'[+-]?([0-9]*[.])?[0-9]+', '1.0').group(0))
Output:
True
1.0
If you are using mac, you can test on command line:
python -c "import re; print(bool(re.search(r'[+-]?([0-9]*[.])?[0-9]+', '1.0')))"
python -c "import re; print(re.search(r'[+-]?([0-9]*[.])?[0-9]+', '1.0').group(0))"
You can check for text validation and also only one decimal point validation using isNaN
var val = $('#textbox').val();
var floatValues = /[+-]?([0-9]*[.])?[0-9]+/;
if (val.match(floatValues) && !isNaN(val)) {
// your function
}
This is an old post but it was the top search result for "regular expression for floating point" or something like that and doesn't quite answer _my_ question. Since I worked it out I will share my result so the next person who comes across this thread doesn't have to work it out for themselves.
All of the answers thus far accept a leading 0 on numbers with two (or more) digits on the left of the decimal point (e.g. 0123 instead of just 123) This isn't really valid and in some contexts is used to indicate the number is in octal (base-8) rather than the regular decimal (base-10) format.
Also these expressions accept a decimal with no leading zero (.14 instead of 0.14) or without a trailing fractional part (3. instead of 3.0). That is valid in some programing contexts (including JavaScript) but I want to disallow them (because for my purposes those are more likely to be an error than intentional).
Ignoring "scientific notation" like 1.234E7, here is an expression that meets my criteria:
/^((-)?(0|([1-9][0-9]*))(\.[0-9]+)?)$/
or if you really want to accept a leading +, then:
/^((\+|-)?(0|([1-9][0-9]*))(\.[0-9]+)?)$/
I believe that regular expression will perform a strict test for the typical integer or decimal-style floating point number.
When matched:
$1 contains the full number that matched
$2 contains the (possibly empty) leading sign (+/-)
$3 contains the value to the left of the decimal point
$5 contains the value to the right of the decimal point, including the leading .
By "strict" I mean that the number must be the only thing in the string you are testing.
If you want to extract just the float value out of a string that contains other content use this expression:
/((\b|\+|-)(0|([1-9][0-9]*))(\.[0-9]+)?)\b/
Which will find -3.14 in "negative pi is approximately -3.14." or in "(-3.14)" etc.
The numbered groups have the same meaning as above (except that $2 is now an empty string ("") when there is no leading sign, rather than null).
But be aware that it will also try to extract whatever numbers it can find. E.g., it will extract 127.0 from 127.0.0.1.
If you want something more sophisticated than that then I think you might want to look at lexical analysis instead of regular expressions. I'm guessing one could create a look-ahead-based expression that would recognize that "Pi is 3.14." contains a floating point number but Home is 127.0.0.1. does not, but it would be complex at best. If your pattern depends on the characters that come after it in non-trivial ways you're starting to venture outside of regular expressions' sweet-spot.
Paulpro and lbsweek answers led me to this:
re=/^[+-]?(?:\d*\.)?\d+$/;
>> /^[+-]?(?:\d*\.)?\d+$/
re.exec("1")
>> Array [ "1" ]
re.exec("1.5")
>> Array [ "1.5" ]
re.exec("-1")
>> Array [ "-1" ]
re.exec("-1.5")
>> Array [ "-1.5" ]
re.exec(".5")
>> Array [ ".5" ]
re.exec("")
>> null
re.exec("qsdq")
>> null
For anyone new:
I made a RegExp for the E scientific notation (without spaces).
const floatR = /^([+-]?(?:[0-9]+(?:\.[0-9]+)?|\.[0-9]+)(?:[eE][+-]?[0-9]+)?)$/;
let str = "-2.3E23";
let m = floatR.exec(str);
parseFloat(m[1]); //=> -2.3e+23
If you prefer to use Unicode numbers, you could replace all [0-9] by \d in the RegExp.
And possibly add the Unicode flag u at the end of the RegExp.
For a better understanding of the pattern see https://regexper.com/.
And for making RegExp, I can suggest https://regex101.com/.
EDIT: found another site for viewing RegExp in color: https://jex.im/regulex/.
EDIT 2: although op asks for RegExp specifically you can check a string in JS directly:
const isNum = (num)=>!Number.isNaN(Number(num));
isNum("123.12345678E+3");//=> true
isNum("80F");//=> false
converting the string to a number (or NaN) with Number()
then checking if it is NOT NaN with !Number.isNaN()
If you want it to work with e, use this expression:
[+-]?[0-9]+([.][0-9]+)?([eE][+-]?[0-9]+)?
Here is a JavaScript example:
var re = /^[+-]?[0-9]+([.][0-9]+)?([eE][+-]?[0-9]+)?$/;
console.log(re.test('1'));
console.log(re.test('1.5'));
console.log(re.test('-1'));
console.log(re.test('-1.5'));
console.log(re.test('1E-100'));
console.log(re.test('1E+100'));
console.log(re.test('.5'));
console.log(re.test('foo'));
Here is my js method , handling 0s at the head of string
1- ^0[0-9]+\.?[0-9]*$ : will find numbers starting with 0 and followed by numbers bigger than zero before the decimal seperator , mainly ".". I put this to distinguish strings containing numbers , for example, "0.111" from "01.111".
2- ([1-9]{1}[0-9]\.?[0-9]) : if there is string starting with 0 then the part which is bigger than 0 will be taken into account. parentheses are used here because I wanted to capture only parts conforming to regex.
3- ([0-9]\.?[0-9]): to capture only the decimal part of the string.
In Javascript , st.match(regex), will return array in which first element contains conformed part. I used this method in the input element's onChange event , by this if the user enters something that violates the regex than violating part is not shown in element's value at all but if there is a part that conforms to regex , then it stays in the element's value.
const floatRegexCheck = (st) => {
const regx1 = new RegExp("^0[0-9]+\\.?[0-9]*$"); // for finding numbers starting with 0
let regx2 = new RegExp("([1-9]{1}[0-9]*\\.?[0-9]*)"); //if regx1 matches then this will remove 0s at the head.
if (!st.match(regx1)) {
regx2 = new RegExp("([0-9]*\\.?[0-9]*)"); //if number does not contain 0 at the head of string then standard decimal formatting takes place
}
st = st.match(regx2);
if (st?.length > 0) {
st = st[0];
}
return st;
}
Here is a more rigorous answer
^[+-]?0(?![0-9]).[0-9]*(?![.])$|^[+-]?[1-9]{1}[0-9]*.[0-9]*$|^[+-]?.[0-9]+$
The following values will match (+- sign are also work)
.11234
0.1143424
11.21
1.
The following values will not match
00.1
1.0.00
12.2350.0.0.0.0.
.
....
How it works
The (?! regex) means NOT operation
let's break down the regex by | operator which is same as logical OR operator
^[+-]?0(?![0-9]).[0-9]*(?![.])$
This regex is to check the value starts from 0
First Check + and - sign with 0 or 1 time ^[+-]
Then check if it has leading zero 0
If it has,then the value next to it must not be zero because we don't want to see 00.123 (?![0-9])
Then check the dot exactly one time and check the fraction part with unlimited times of digits .[0-9]*
Last, if it has a dot follow by fraction part, we discard it.(?![.])$
Now see the second part
^[+-]?[1-9]{1}[0-9]*.[0-9]*$
^[+-]? same as above
If it starts from non zero, match the first digit exactly one time and unlimited time follow by it [1-9]{1}[0-9]* e.g. 12.3 , 1.2, 105.6
Match the dot one time and unlimited digit follow it .[0-9]*$
Now see the third part
^[+-]?.{1}[0-9]+$
This will check the value starts from . e.g. .12, .34565
^[+-]? same as above
Match dot one time and one or more digits follow by it .[0-9]+$
I have strings which contains thousand separators, however no string-to-number function wants to consume it correctly (using JavaScript). I'm thinking about "preparing" the string by stripping all thousand separators, leaving anything else untoched and letting Number/parseInt/parseFloat functions (I'm satisfied with their behavious otherwise) to decide the rest. But it seems what i have no idea which RegExp can do that!
Better ideas are welcome too!
UPDATE:
Sorry, answers enlightened me how badly formulated question it is. What i'm triyng to achieve is: 1) to strip thousand separators only if any, but 2) to not disturb original string much so i will get NaNs in the cases of invalid numerals.
MORE UPDATE:
JavaScript is limited to English locale for parsing, so lets assume thousand separator is ',' for simplicity (naturally, it never matches decimal separator in any locale, so changing to any other locale should not pose a problem)
Now, on parsing functions:
parseFloat('1023.95BARGAIN BYTES!') // parseXXX functions just "gives up" on invalid chars and returns 1023.95
Number('1023.95BARGAIN BYTES!') // while Number constructor behaves "strictly" and will return NaN
Sometimes I use rhw loose one, sometimes strict. I want to figure out the best approach for preparing string for both functions.
On validity of numerals:
'1,023.99' is perfectly well-formed English number, and stripping all commas will lead to correct result.
'1,0,2,3.99' is broken, however generic comma stripping will give '1023.99' which is unlikely to be a correct result.
welp, I'll venture to throw my suggestion into the pot:
Note: Revised
stringWithNumbers = stringwithNumbers.replace(/(\d+),(?=\d{3}(\D|$))/g, "$1");
should turn
1,234,567.12
1,023.99
1,0,2,3.99
the dang thing costs $1,205!!
95,5,0,432
12345,0000
1,2345
into:
1234567.12
1023.99
1,0,2,3.99
the dang thing costs $1205!!
95,5,0432
12345,0000
1,2345
I hope that's useful!
EDIT:
There is an additional alteration that may be necessary, but is not without side effects:
(\b\d{1,3}),(?=\d{3}(\D|$))
This changes the "one or more" quantifier (+) for the first set of digits into a "one to three" quantifier ({1,3}) and adds a "word-boundary" assertion before it. It will prevent replacements like 1234,123 ==> 1234123. However, it will also prevent a replacement that might be desired (if it is preceded by a letter or underscore), such as A123,789 or _1,555 (which will remain unchanged).
A simple num.replace(/,/g, '') should be sufficient I think.
Depends on what your thousand separator is
myString = myString.replace(/[ ,]/g, "");
would remove spaces and commas.
This should work for you
var decimalCharacter = ".",
regex = new RegExp("[\\d" + decimalCharacter + "]+", "g"),
num = "10,0000,000,000.999";
+num.match(regex).join("");
To confirm that a numeral-string is well-formed, use:
/^(\d*|\d{1,3}(,\d{3})+)($|[^\d])/.test(numeral_string)
which will return true if the numeral-string is either (1) just a sequence of zero or more digits, or (2) a sequence of digits with a comma before each set of three digits, or (3) either of the above followed by a non-digit character and who knows what else. (Case #3 is for floats, as well as your "BARGAIN BYTES!" examples.)
Once you've confirmed that, use:
numeral_string.replace(/,/g, '')
which will return a copy of the numeral-string with all commas excised.
You can use s.replaceAll("(\\W)(?=\\d{3})","");
This regex gets all alpha-numeric character with 3 characters after it.
Strings like 4.444.444.444,00 € will be 4444444444,00 €
I have used the following in a commercial setting, and it has worked often:
numberStr = numberStr.replace(/[. ,](\d\d\d\D|\d\d\d$)/g,'$1');
In the above example, thousands can be marked with a decimal, a comma, or a space.
In some cases ( like a price of 1000,5 Euros) the above doesn't work. If you need something more robust, this should work 100% of the time:
//convert a comma or space used as the cent placeholder to a decimal
$priceStr = $priceStr.replace(/[, ](\d\d$)/,'.$1');
$priceStr = $priceStr.replace(/[, ](\d$)/,'.$1');
//capture cents
var $hasCentsRegex = /[.]\d\d?$/;
if($hasCentsRegex.test($priceStr)) {
var $matchArray = $priceStr.match(/(.*)([.]\d\d?$)/);
var $priceBeforeCents = $matchArray[1];
var $cents = $matchArray[2];
} else{
var $priceBeforeCents = $priceStr;
var $cents = "";
}
//remove decimals, commas and whitespace from the pre-cent portion
$priceBeforeCents = $priceBeforeCents.replace(/[.\s,]/g,'');
//re-create the price by adding back the cents
$priceStr = $priceBeforeCents + $cents;