Why is q == 0 in the following script?
<script>
var start = 1234567890123456789;
var end = 1234567890123456799;
var q = end - start;
alert(q);
</script>
I would think the result should be 10. What is the correct way to subtract these two numbers?
Because numbers in JavaScript are floating-point. They have limited precision.
When JavaScript sees a very long number, it rounds it to the nearest number it can represent as a 64-bit float. In your script, start
and end
get rounded to the same value.
alert(1234567890123456789); // says: 1234567890123456800
alert(1234567890123456799); // says: 1234567890123456800
There's no built-in way to do precise arithmetic on large integers, but you can use a BigInteger library such as this one.