--- title: DataView.prototype.getFloat32() short-title: getFloat32() slug: Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/DataView/getFloat32 page-type: javascript-instance-method browser-compat: javascript.builtins.DataView.getFloat32 sidebar: jsref --- The **`getFloat32()`** method of {{jsxref("DataView")}} instances reads 4 bytes starting at the specified byte offset of this `DataView` and interprets them as a 32-bit floating point number. There is no alignment constraint; multi-byte values may be fetched from any offset within bounds. {{InteractiveExample("JavaScript Demo: DataView.prototype.getFloat32()")}} ```js interactive-example // Create an ArrayBuffer with a size in bytes const buffer = new ArrayBuffer(16); const view = new DataView(buffer); view.setFloat32(1, Math.PI); console.log(view.getFloat32(1)); // Expected output: 3.1415927410125732 ``` ## Syntax ```js-nolint getFloat32(byteOffset) getFloat32(byteOffset, littleEndian) ``` ### Parameters - `byteOffset` - : The offset, in bytes, from the start of the view to read the data from. - `littleEndian` {{optional_inline}} - : Indicates whether the data is stored in [little- or big-endian](/en-US/docs/Glossary/Endianness) format. If `false` or `undefined`, a big-endian value is read. ### Return value A floating point number from `-3.4e38` to `3.4e38`. ### Exceptions - {{jsxref("RangeError")}} - : Thrown if the `byteOffset` is set such that it would read beyond the end of the view. ## Examples ### Using getFloat32() ```js const { buffer } = new Uint8Array([0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9]); const dataview = new DataView(buffer); console.log(dataview.getFloat32(1)); // 2.387939260590663e-38 ``` ## Specifications {{Specifications}} ## Browser compatibility {{Compat}} ## See also - [JavaScript typed arrays](/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Guide/Typed_arrays) guide - {{jsxref("DataView")}} - {{jsxref("ArrayBuffer")}} - {{jsxref("Float32Array")}}