pretty-bytes
Convert bytes to a human readable string:
1337
→1.34 kB
Useful for displaying file sizes for humans.
Note that it uses base-10 (e.g. kilobyte). Read about the difference between kilobyte and kibibyte.
Install
npm install pretty-bytes
Usage
import prettyBytes from 'pretty-bytes';
prettyBytes(1337);
//=> '1.34 kB'
prettyBytes(100);
//=> '100 B'
// Display with units of bits
prettyBytes(1337, {bits: true});
//=> '1.34 kbit'
// Display file size differences
prettyBytes(42, {signed: true});
//=> '+42 B'
// Localized output using German locale
prettyBytes(1337, {locale: 'de'});
//=> '1,34 kB'
// Fixed width for alignment (useful for progress bars and tables)
prettyBytes(1337, {fixedWidth: 8});
//=> ' 1.34 kB'
API
prettyBytes(number, options?)
number
Type: number | bigint
The number to format.
options
Type: object
signed
Type: boolean
\
Default: false
Include plus sign for positive numbers. If the difference is exactly zero a space character will be prepended instead for better alignment.
bits
Type: boolean
\
Default: false
Format the number as bits instead of bytes. This can be useful when, for example, referring to bit rate.
import prettyBytes from 'pretty-bytes';
prettyBytes(1337, {bits: true});
//=> '1.34 kbit'
binary
Type: boolean
\
Default: false
Format the number using the Binary Prefix instead of the SI Prefix. This can be useful for presenting memory amounts. However, this should not be used for presenting file sizes.
import prettyBytes from 'pretty-bytes';
prettyBytes(1000, {binary: true});
//=> '1000 B'
prettyBytes(1024, {binary: true});
//=> '1 KiB'
locale
Type: boolean | string | string[]
\
Default: false
- If
false
: Output won't be localized. - If
true
: Localize the output using the system/browser locale. - If
string
: Expects a BCP 47 language tag (For example:en
,de
, …) - If
string[]
: Expects a list of BCP 47 language tags (For example:en
,de
, …)
[!IMPORTANT] Only the number and decimal separator are localized. The unit title is not and will not be localized.
minimumFractionDigits
Type: number
\
Default: undefined
The minimum number of fraction digits to display.
If neither minimumFractionDigits
nor maximumFractionDigits
is set, the default behavior is to round to 3 significant digits.
[!NOTE] When
minimumFractionDigits
ormaximumFractionDigits
is specified, values are truncated instead of rounded to provide more intuitive results for file sizes.
import prettyBytes from 'pretty-bytes';
// Show the number with at least 3 fractional digits
prettyBytes(1900, {minimumFractionDigits: 3});
//=> '1.900 kB'
prettyBytes(1900);
//=> '1.9 kB'
maximumFractionDigits
Type: number
\
Default: undefined
The maximum number of fraction digits to display.
If neither minimumFractionDigits
nor maximumFractionDigits
is set, the default behavior is to round to 3 significant digits.
[!NOTE] When
minimumFractionDigits
ormaximumFractionDigits
is specified, values are truncated instead of rounded to provide more intuitive results for file sizes.
import prettyBytes from 'pretty-bytes';
// Show the number with at most 1 fractional digit
prettyBytes(1920, {maximumFractionDigits: 1});
//=> '1.9 kB'
prettyBytes(1920);
//=> '1.92 kB'
space
Type: boolean
\
Default: true
Put a space between the number and unit.
import prettyBytes from 'pretty-bytes';
prettyBytes(1920, {space: false});
//=> '1.92kB'
prettyBytes(1920);
//=> '1.92 kB'
nonBreakingSpace
Type: boolean
\
Default: false
Use a non-breaking space instead of a regular space to prevent the unit from wrapping to a new line.
Has no effect when space
is false
.
fixedWidth
Type: number
\
Default: undefined
Pad the output to a fixed width by right-aligning it.
Useful for creating aligned columns in tables or progress bars.
If the output is longer than the specified width, no padding is applied.
Must be a non-negative integer. Throws a TypeError
for invalid values.
import prettyBytes from 'pretty-bytes';
prettyBytes(1337, {fixedWidth: 10});
//=> ' 1.34 kB'
prettyBytes(100_000, {fixedWidth: 10});
//=> ' 100 kB'
// Useful for progress bars and tables
[1000, 10_000, 100_000].map(bytes => prettyBytes(bytes, {fixedWidth: 8}));
//=> [' 1 kB', ' 10 kB', ' 100 kB']
FAQ
Why kB and not KB?
k
is the standardized SI prefix for kilo.
Related
- pretty-bytes-cli - CLI for this module
- pretty-ms - Convert milliseconds to a human readable string