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Home/ Questions/Q 170875
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Asked: May 11, 20262026-05-11T12:53:13+00:00 2026-05-11T12:53:13+00:00

I want to be able to write a function which receives a number in

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I want to be able to write a function which receives a number in scientific notation as a string and splits out of it the coefficient and the exponent as separate items. I could just use a regular expression, but the incoming number may not be normalised and I’d prefer to be able to normalise and then break the parts out.

A colleague has got part way of an solution using VB6 but it’s not quite there, as the transcript below shows.

cliVe> a = 1e6 cliVe> ? 'coeff: ' & o.spt(a) & ' exponent: ' & o.ept(a) coeff: 10 exponent: 5  

should have been 1 and 6

cliVe> a = 1.1e6 cliVe> ? 'coeff: ' & o.spt(a) & ' exponent: ' & o.ept(a) coeff: 1.1 exponent: 6 

correct

cliVe> a = 123345.6e-7 cliVe> ? 'coeff: ' & o.spt(a) & ' exponent: ' & o.ept(a) coeff: 1.233456 exponent: -2 

correct

cliVe> a = -123345.6e-7 cliVe> ? 'coeff: ' & o.spt(a) & ' exponent: ' & o.ept(a) coeff: 1.233456 exponent: -2 

should be -1.233456 and -2

cliVe> a = -123345.6e+7 cliVe> ? 'coeff: ' & o.spt(a) & ' exponent: ' & o.ept(a) coeff: 1.233456 exponent: 12 

correct

Any ideas? By the way, Clive is a CLI based on VBScript and can be found on my weblog.

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1 Answer

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  1. 2026-05-11T12:53:14+00:00Added an answer on May 11, 2026 at 12:53 pm

    Google on "scientific notation regexp" shows a number of matches, including this one (don’t use it!!!!) which uses

    *** warning: questionable *** /[-+]?[0-9]*\.?[0-9]+([eE][-+]?[0-9]+)?/ 

    which includes cases such as -.5e7 and +00000e33 (both of which you may not want to allow).

    Instead, I would highly recommend you use the syntax on Doug Crockford’s JSON website which explicitly documents what constitutes a number in JSON. Here’s the corresponding syntax diagram taken from that page:

    alt text
    (source: json.org)

    If you look at line 456 of his json2.js script (safe conversion to/from JSON in javascript), you’ll see this portion of a regexp:

    /-?\d+(?:\.\d*)?(?:[eE][+\-]?\d+)?/ 

    which, ironically, doesn’t match his syntax diagram…. (looks like I should file a bug) I believe a regexp that does implement that syntax diagram is this one:

    /-?(?:0|[1-9]\d*)(?:\.\d+)?(?:[eE][+\-]?\d+)?/ 

    and if you want to allow an initial + as well, you get:

    /[+\-]?(?:0|[1-9]\d*)(?:\.\d+)?(?:[eE][+\-]?\d+)?/ 

    Add capturing parentheses to your liking.

    I would also highly recommend you flesh out a bunch of test cases, to ensure you include those possibilities you want to include (or not include), such as:

    allowed: +3 3.2e23 -4.70e+9 -.2E-4 -7.6603  not allowed: +0003   (leading zeros) 37.e88  (dot before the e) 

    Good luck!

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