Math.min() - JavaScript | MDN
Try it
console.log(Math.min(2, 3, 1));
// Expected output: 1
console.log(Math.min(-2, -3, -1));
// Expected output: -3
const array = [2, 3, 1];
console.log(Math.min(...array));
// Expected output: 1
Syntax
js
Math.min()
Math.min(value1)
Math.min(value1, value2)
Math.min(value1, value2, /* …, */ valueN)
Parameters
value1, …,valueN-
Zero or more numbers among which the lowest value will be selected and returned.
Return value
The smallest of the given numbers. Returns NaN if any of the parameters is or is converted into NaN. Returns Infinity if no parameters are provided.
Description
Because min() is a static method of Math, you always use it as Math.min(), rather than as a method of a Math object you created (Math is not a constructor).
Math.min.length is 2, which weakly signals that it's designed to handle at least two parameters.
Examples
Using Math.min()
This finds the min of x and y and assigns it to z:
js
const x = 10;
const y = -20;
const z = Math.min(x, y); // -20
Clipping a value with Math.min()
Math.min() is often used to clip a value so that it is always less than or
equal to a boundary. For instance, this
js
let x = f(foo);
if (x > boundary) {
x = boundary;
}
may be written as this
js
const x = Math.min(f(foo), boundary);
Math.max() can be used in a similar way to clip a value at the other end.
Specifications
| Specification |
|---|
| ECMAScript® 2027 Language Specification # sec-math.min |