JavaScript Number isFinite()
Examples
Is 123 finite?
Number.isFinite(123)
Try it Yourself »
Number.isFinite("123")
Try it Yourself »
Definition and Usage
The Number.isFinite() method returns
true if a number is a finite number.
Infinite (not finite) numbers are Infinity,
-Infinity, or NaN
Otherwise it returns false.
See Also:
Difference Between isFinite() and Number.isFinite()
isFinite() returns true if a value is a finite number.
Number.isFinite() returns true if a number is a finite number.
In other words:
isFinite() converts the value to a number before testing it.
Examples
// This returns true
isFinite(123)
Try it Yourself »
// This returns false
Number.isFinite("123")
Try it Yourself »
Syntax
Number.isFinite(value)
Parameters
| Parameter | Description |
| value | Required. The value to be tested. |
Return Value
| Type | Description |
| A boolean | true if the value is a finite Number, otherwise false. |
More Examples
Number.isFinite(+1.23)
Number.isFinite(-1.23)
Number.isFinite('2005/12/12')
Try it Yourself »
Number.isFinite(5-2)
Number.isFinite(5/2)
Number.isFinite(0)
Number.isFinite(0/0)
Number.isFinite(Infinity)
Number.isFinite(-Infinity)
Number.isFinite(NaN)
Try it Yourself »
Browser Support
Number.isFinite() is an ECMAScript6 (ES6) feature.
ES6 (JavaScript 2015) is supported in all modern browsers:
| Chrome | Edge | Firefox | Safari | Opera |
| Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
Number.isFinite() is not supported in Internet Explorer 11 (or earlier).