The String.fromCharCode()
static method returns a string created from the specified sequence of UTF-16 code units.
String.fromCharCode()
Baseline Widely available
This feature is well established and works across many devices and browser versions. It’s been available across browsers since July 2015.
Try it
Syntax
String.fromCharCode() String.fromCharCode(num1) String.fromCharCode(num1, num2) String.fromCharCode(num1, num2, /* …, */ numN)
Parameters
num1
, …,numN
-
A number between
0
and65535
(0xFFFF
) representing a UTF-16 code unit. Numbers greater than0xFFFF
are truncated to the last 16 bits. No validity checks are performed.
Return value
A string of length N
consisting of the N
specified UTF-16 code units.
Description
Because fromCharCode()
is a static method of String
, you always use it as String.fromCharCode()
, rather than as a method of a String
value you created.
Unicode code points range from 0
to 1114111
(0x10FFFF
). charCodeAt()
always returns a value that is less than 65536
, because the higher code points are represented by a pair of 16-bit surrogate pseudo-characters. Therefore, in order to produce a full character with value greater than 65535
, it is necessary to provide two code units (as if manipulating a string with two characters). For information on Unicode, see UTF-16 characters, Unicode code points, and grapheme clusters.
Because fromCharCode()
only works with 16-bit values (same as the \u
escape sequence), a surrogate pair is required in order to return a supplementary character. For example, both String.fromCharCode(0xd83c, 0xdf03)
and "\ud83c\udf03"
return code point U+1F303
"Night with Stars". While there is a mathematical relationship between the supplementary code point value (e.g. 0x1f303
) and both surrogate values that represent it (e.g., 0xd83c
and 0xdf03
), it does require an extra step to either calculate or look up the surrogate pair values every time a supplementary code point is to be used. For this reason, it's more convenient to use String.fromCodePoint()
, which allows for returning supplementary characters based on their actual code point value. For example, String.fromCodePoint(0x1f303)
returns code point U+1F303
"Night with Stars".
Examples
Using fromCharCode()
BMP characters, in UTF-16, use a single code unit:
String.fromCharCode(65, 66, 67); // returns "ABC" String.fromCharCode(0x2014); // returns "—" String.fromCharCode(0x12014); // also returns "—"; the digit 1 is truncated and ignored String.fromCharCode(8212); // also returns "—"; 8212 is the decimal form of 0x2014
Supplementary characters, in UTF-16, require two code units (i.e. a surrogate pair):
String.fromCharCode(0xd83c, 0xdf03); // Code Point U+1F303 "Night with String.fromCharCode(55356, 57091); // Stars" === "\uD83C\uDF03" String.fromCharCode(0xd834, 0xdf06, 0x61, 0xd834, 0xdf07); // "\uD834\uDF06a\uD834\uDF07"
Specifications
Browser compatibility
Desktop | Mobile | Server | |||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Chrome | Edge | Firefox | Opera | Safari | Chrome Android | Firefox for Android | Opera Android | Safari on IOS | Samsung Internet | WebView Android | Deno | Node.js | |
fromCharCode |
1 | 12 | 1 | 4 | 1 | 18 | 4 | 10.1 | 1 | 1.0 | 4.4 | 1.0 | 0.10.0 |
See also
© 2005–2024 MDN contributors.
Licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License v2.5 or later.
https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/String/fromCharCode