User input from HTML form fields is generally provided to JavaScript as a string. We’ve lived with that fact for decades but sometimes developers need to extract numbers from that string. There are multiple ways to get those numbers but let’s rely on regular expressions to extract those numbers!
To employ a regular expression to get a number within a string, we can use \d+:
const string = "x12345david"; const [match] = string.match(/(\d+)/); match; // 12345
Regular expressions are capable of really powerful operations within JavaScript; this practice is one of the easier operations. Converting the number using a Number() wrapper will give you the number as a Number type.


Serving Fonts from CDN
For maximum performance, we all know we must put our assets on CDN (another domain). Along with those assets are custom web fonts. Unfortunately custom web fonts via CDN (or any cross-domain font request) don’t work in Firefox or Internet Explorer (correctly so, by spec) though…


Using MooTools For Opacity
Although it’s possible to achieve opacity using CSS, the hacks involved aren’t pretty. If you’re using the MooTools JavaScript library, opacity is as easy as using an element’s “set” method. The following MooTools snippet takes every image with the “opacity” class and sets…

