0.7.3 • Published 5 years ago

@matters/slugify v0.7.3

Weekly downloads
10
License
MIT
Repository
github
Last release
5 years ago

slugify Build Status

Slugify a string

Useful for URLs, filenames, and IDs.

It correctly handles German umlauts, Vietnamese, Arabic, Russian, Romanian, Turkish and more.

Install

$ npm install @sindresorhus/slugify

Usage

const slugify = require('@sindresorhus/slugify');

slugify('I ♥ Dogs');
//=> 'i-love-dogs'

slugify('  Déjà Vu!  ');
//=> 'deja-vu'

slugify('fooBar 123 $#%');
//=> 'foo-bar-123'

slugify('I ♥ 🦄 & 🐶', {
	customReplacements: [
		['🐶', 'dog']
	]
});
//=> 'i-love-unicorn-and-dog'

API

slugify(input, options)

input

Type: string

options

Type: Object

separator

Type: string Default: -

slugify('BAR and baz');
//=> 'bar-and-baz'

slugify('BAR and baz', {separator: '_'});
//=> 'bar_and_baz'
lowercase

Type: boolean Default: true

Make the slug lowercase.

slugify('Déjà Vu!');
//=> 'deja-vu'

slugify('Déjà Vu!', {lowercase: false});
//=> 'Deja-Vu'
decamelize

Type: boolean Default: true

Convert camelcase to separate words. Internally it does fooBarfoo bar.

slugify('fooBar');
//=> 'foo-bar'

slugify('fooBar', {decamelize: false});
//=> 'foobar'
customReplacements

Type: Array<string[]> Default: [ ['&', ' and '], ['🦄', ' unicorn '], ['♥', ' love '] ]

Specifying this only replaces the default if you set an item with the same key, like &. The replacements are run on the original string before any other transformations.

slugify('Foo@unicorn', {
	customReplacements: [
		['@', 'at']
	]
});
//=> 'fooatunicorn'

Add a leading and trailing space to the replacement to have it separated by dashes:

slugify('foo@unicorn', {
	customReplacements: [
		['@', ' at ']
	]
});
//=> 'foo-at-unicorn'

Related

License

MIT © Sindre Sorhus