toString abstract method Null safety
The shortest string that correctly represents this number.
All doubles in the range 10^-6
(inclusive) to 10^21
(exclusive)
are converted to their decimal representation with at least one digit
after the decimal point. For all other doubles,
except for special values like NaN
or Infinity
, this method returns an
exponential representation (see toStringAsExponential).
Returns "NaN"
for double.nan, "Infinity"
for double.infinity, and
"-Infinity"
for double.negativeInfinity.
An int is converted to a decimal representation with no decimal point.
Examples:
(0.000001).toString(); // "0.000001"
(0.0000001).toString(); // "1e-7"
(111111111111111111111.0).toString(); // "111111111111111110000.0"
(100000000000000000000.0).toString(); // "100000000000000000000.0"
(1000000000000000000000.0).toString(); // "1e+21"
(1111111111111111111111.0).toString(); // "1.1111111111111111e+21"
1.toString(); // "1"
111111111111111111111.toString(); // "111111111111111110000"
100000000000000000000.toString(); // "100000000000000000000"
1000000000000000000000.toString(); // "1000000000000000000000"
1111111111111111111111.toString(); // "1111111111111111111111"
1.234e5.toString(); // 123400
1234.5e6.toString(); // 1234500000
12.345e67.toString(); // 1.2345e+68
Note: the conversion may round the output if the returned string
is accurate enough to uniquely identify the input-number.
For example the most precise representation of the double 9e59
equals
"899999999999999918767229449717619953810131273674690656206848"
, but
this method returns the shorter (but still uniquely identifying) "9e59"
.
Implementation
String toString();