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  • License BSD

Make strings url safe (with no dependencies)

Package Exports

  • slugg

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 (slugg) to support the "exports" field. If that is not possible, create a JSPM override to customize the exports field for this package.

Readme

Slugg

Make strings url-safe.

  • Comprehensive tests
  • No dependencies
  • Not in coffee-script (lol)
  • Coerces foreign symbols to their english equivalent
  • Doesn't try to do anything fancy with symbols (just removes them)
  • Works in browser (window.slugg) and AMD/CommonJS-flavoured module loaders
npm install slugg

Usage:

slug(string, [separator, toStrip])

var slug = require('slugg')

slug('My fantastic blog post')
//-> 'my-fantastic-blog-post'

slug('Today I found £5')
//-> 'today-i-found-5'

slug('I ♥ you')
//-> 'i-you'

If you want a separator other than '-', pass it in as the second argument:

slug('Kevin Spacey', ' ')
//-> 'kevin spacey'

By default, slugg will strip (i.e. remove and not replace) any sort of quotemark: '"’‘”“.

If you want to control which characters are stripped, pass a regex as the last option that will match the chars you want to replace, eg:

slug('Mum\'s cooking', /'/g)
//-> 'mums-cooking'

Remember to use the g flag if you want all the matches stripped (not just the first).

After version 1.1.0, a new syntax has been introduced:

slug(string, [options])

If you want a separator other than '-', pass it in as the separator option:

slug('Kevin Spacey', { separator: ' ' })
//-> 'kevin spacey'

If you want to control which characters are stripped, pass a regex as the toStrip option that will match the chars you want to replace, eg:

slug('Mum\'s cooking', { toStrip: /'/g })
//-> 'mums-cooking'

Remember to use the g flag if you want all the matches stripped (not just the first).

By default, slugg will convert your string to lower case. If you want to disable it just pass the toLowerCase option as false, eg:

slug('Slugg rocks!', { toLowerCase: false })
//-> 'Slugg-rocks'