Math.imul()
Baseline
Widely available
This feature is well established and works across many devices and browser versions. Itâs been available across browsers since â¨July 2015â©.
The Math.imul() static method returns the result of the C-like 32-bit multiplication of the two parameters.
Try it
console.log(Math.imul(3, 4));
// Expected output: 12
console.log(Math.imul(-5, 12));
// Expected output: -60
console.log(Math.imul(0xffffffff, 5));
// Expected output: -5
console.log(Math.imul(0xfffffffe, 5));
// Expected output: -10
Syntax
Math.imul(a, b)
Parameters
Return value
The result of the C-like 32-bit multiplication of the given arguments.
Description
Math.imul() allows for 32-bit integer multiplication with C-like semantics. This feature is useful for projects like Emscripten.
Because imul() is a static method of Math, you always use it as Math.imul(), rather than as a method of a Math object you created (Math is not a constructor).
If you use normal JavaScript floating point numbers in imul(), you will experience a degrade in performance. This is because of the costly conversion from a floating point to an integer for multiplication, and then converting the multiplied integer back into a floating point. However, with asm.js, which allows JIT-optimizers to more confidently use integers in JavaScript, multiplying two numbers stored internally as integers (which is only possible with asm.js) with imul() could be potentially more performant.
Examples
>Using Math.imul()
Math.imul(2, 4); // 8
Math.imul(-1, 8); // -8
Math.imul(-2, -2); // 4
Math.imul(0xffffffff, 5); // -5
Math.imul(0xfffffffe, 5); // -10
Specifications
| Specification |
|---|
| ECMAScript® 2026 Language Specification > # sec-math.imul > |