Skip to content

The String codePointAt() method

New Course Coming Soon:

Get Really Good at Git

Find out all about the JavaScript codePointAt() method of a string

This was introduced in ES2015 to handle Unicode characters that cannot be represented by a single 16-bit Unicode unit, but need 2 instead.

Using charCodeAt() you need to retrieve the first, and the second, and combine them. Using codePointAt() you get the whole character in one call.

For example, this chinese character ”𠮷” is composed by 2 UTF-16 (Unicode) parts:

"𠮷".charCodeAt(0).toString(16) //d842
"𠮷".charCodeAt(1).toString(16) //dfb7

If you create a new character by combining those unicode characters:

"\ud842\udfb7" //"𠮷"

You can get the same result usign codePointAt():

"𠮷".codePointAt(0) //20bb7

If you create a new character by combining those unicode characters:

"\u{20bb7}" //"𠮷"

More on Unicode and working with it in Unicode and UTF-8.

→ Get my JavaScript Beginner's Handbook
→ Read my JavaScript Tutorials on The Valley of Code
→ Read my TypeScript Tutorial on The Valley of Code

Here is how can I help you: