JavaScript String charCodeAt()
Examples
Get the Unicode of the first character in a string:
let text = "HELLO WORLD";
let code = text.charCodeAt(0);
Try it Yourself »
Get the Unicode of the second:
let text = "HELLO WORLD";
let code = text.charCodeAt(1);
Try it Yourself »
More examples below.
Definition and Usage
The charCodeAt()
method returns the Unicode of the character
at a specified index (position) in a string.
The index of the first character is 0, the second is 1, ....
The index of the last character is string length - 1 (See Examples below).
See also the charAt()
method.
See Also:
charCodeAt() vs codePointAt()
charCodeAt()
is UTF-16, codePointAt()
is Unicode.
charCodeAt()
returns a number between 0 and 65535.
Both methods return an integer representing the UTF-16 code of a character,
but only codePointAt()
can return the full value of a Unicode value greather 0xFFFF (65535).
For more information about Unicode Character Sets, visit our Unicode Reference.
Syntax
string.charCodeAt(index)
Parameters
Parameter | Description |
index | Optional. A number. The index (position) of a character. Default value = 0. |
Return Value
Type | Description |
A number | The Unicode of the character at the specified index. NaN if the index is invalid. |
More Examples
Get the Unicode of the last character in a string:
let text = "HELLO WORLD";
let code = text.charCodeAt(text.length-1);
Try it Yourself »
Get the Unicode of the 15th character:
let text = "HELLO WORLD";
let code = text.charCodeAt(15);
Try it Yourself »
Browser Support
charCodeAt()
is an ECMAScript1 (ES1) feature.
ES1 (JavaScript 1997) is fully supported in all browsers:
Chrome | IE | Edge | Firefox | Safari | Opera |
Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |