Package Exports
- addressparser
This package does not declare an exports field, so the exports above have been automatically detected and optimized by JSPM instead. If any package subpath is missing, it is recommended to post an issue to the original package (addressparser) to support the "exports" field. If that is not possible, create a JSPM override to customize the exports field for this package.
Readme
addressparser
Parse e-mail address fields. Input can be a single address ("andris@kreata.ee"
), a formatted address ("Andris Reinman <andris@kreata.ee>"
), comma separated list of addresses ("andris@kreata.ee, andris.reinman@kreata.ee"
), an address group ("disclosed-recipients:andris@kreata.ee;"
) or a mix of all the formats.
In addition to comma the semicolon is treated as the list delimiter as well (except when used in the group syntax), so a value "andris@kreata.ee; andris.reinman@kreata.ee"
is identical to "andris@kreata.ee, andris.reinman@kreata.ee"
.
Installation
Install with npm
npm install addressparser
Usage
Include the module
var addressparser = require('addressparser');
Parse some address strings with addressparser(field)
var addresses = addressparser('andris <andris@tr.ee>');
console.log(addresses); // [{name: "andris", address:"andris@tr.ee"}]
And when using groups
addressparser('Composers:"Bach, Sebastian" <sebu@example.com>, mozart@example.com (Mozzie);');
the result would be
[
{
name: "Composers",
group: [
{
address: "sebu@example.com",
name: "Bach, Sebastian"
},
{
address: "mozart@example.com",
name: "Mozzie"
}
]
}
]
Be prepared though that groups might be nested.
Notes
This module does not decode any mime-word or punycode encoded strings, it is only a basic parser for parsing the base data, you need to decode the encoded parts later by yourself
License
MIT