Package Exports
- url-slug
- url-slug/dist/index.js
- url-slug/lib/index.js
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 (url-slug) to support the "exports" field. If that is not possible, create a JSPM override to customize the exports field for this package.
Readme
url-slug

- Less than 1kB minified and gzipped;
- Uses default JavaScript APIs, no dependencies;
- SEO friendly;
- RFC 3986 compliant, compatible with URL hosts, paths, queries and fragments;
- Supports custom dictionaries to replace characters;
- Easily revert slugs.
Installation
npm install url-slugUsage
import urlSlug from 'url-slug'
urlSlug('Sir James Paul McCartney MBE is an English singer-songwriter')
// sir-james-paul-mc-cartney-mbe-is-an-english-singer-songwriterurlSlug(string[, options]), convert(string[, options])
Returns string value converted to a slug.
string
A sentence to be slugified.
options
| Name | Description | Default |
|---|---|---|
| camelCase | Split on camel case occurrences | true |
| dictionary | Chars to be replaced | {} |
| separator | Character or string used to separate the slug fragments | '-' |
| transformer | A built-in transformer or a custom function (false to keep the string unchanged) |
LOWERCASE_TRANSFORMER |
Examples
import * as urlSlug from 'url-slug'
urlSlug.convert('Comfortably Numb', {
transformer: urlSlug.UPPERCASE_TRANSFORMER
})
// COMFORTABLY-NUMB
urlSlug.convert('á é í ó ú Á É Í Ó Ú ç Ç ª º ¹ ² ½ ¼', {
separator: '_',
transformer: false
})
// a_e_i_o_u_A_E_I_O_U_c_C_a_o_1_2_1_2_1_4
urlSlug.convert('Red, red wine, stay close to me…', {
separator: '',
transformer: urlSlug.TITLECASE_TRANSFORMER
})
// RedRedWineStayCloseToMe
urlSlug.convert('Schwarzweiß', {
dictionary: { 'ß': 'ss', 'z': 'z ' }
})
// schwarz-weissrevert(slug[, options])
Returns the slug value converted to a regular sentence.
slug
A slug to be reverted to a sentence.
options
| Name | Description | Default |
|---|---|---|
| camelCase | Split on camel case occurrences | false |
| separator | Character or string to split the slug (null accounts to automatic splitting) |
null |
| transformer | A built-in transformer or a custom function (false to keep the string unchanged) |
false |
Examples
import { revert, TITLECASE_TRANSFORMER } from 'url-slug'
revert('Replace-every_separator.allowed~andSplitCamelCaseToo', {
camelCase: true
})
// Replace every separator allowed and Split Camel Case Too
revert('this-slug-needs-a-title_case', {
separator: '-',
transformer: TITLECASE_TRANSFORMER
})
// This Slug Needs A Title_caseCustom transformers
Custom transformers are expressed by a function that receives two arguments,
fragments, an array with matching words from a sentence or a slug, and
separator, which will be the separator string set in convert() options. When
revert() calls the transformer, the separator argument will always be a
space character (' ') — the separator option will be used to split the slug.
Transformers should always return a string.
Examples
import { convert, revert } from 'url-slug'
convert('O’Neill is an American surfboard, surfwear and equipment brand', {
transformer: fragments => fragments.join('x').toUpperCase()
})
// OxNEILLxISxANxAMERICANxSURFBOARDxSURFWEARxANDxEQUIPMENTxBRAND
revert('WEIrd_SNAke_CAse', {
separator: '_',
transformer: (fragments, separator) => fragments.map(fragment => (
fragment.slice(0, -2).toLowerCase() + fragment.slice(-2).toUpperCase()
)).join(separator)
})
// weiRD snaKE caSEBuilt-in transformers
LOWERCASE_TRANSFORMER
Converts the result to lowercase. E.g.: // SOME WORDS >> some words
SENTENCECASE_TRANSFORMER
Converts the result to sentence case. E.g.: // sOME WORDS >> Some words
UPPERCASE_TRANSFORMER
Converts the result to uppercase. E.g.: // some words >> SOME WORDS
TITLECASE_TRANSFORMER
Converts the result to title case. E.g.: // sOME wORDS >> Some Words
Accepted separator characters
Any character defined as unreserved or sub-delims in RFC 3986, or an empty
string, can be used as separator. When the separator is an empty string, the
revert() method will split the slug only on camel case occurrences — if
camelCase option is set to true, otherwise it will return an untouched
string. The following characters are valid:
-, ., _, ~, ^, -, ., _, ~, !, $, &, ', (, ), *,
+, ,, ; or =
dictionary option considerations
It must be an object, with keys set as single characters and values as strings of any length:
import { convert } from 'url-slug'
convert('♥øß', {
dictionary: {
'♥': 'love',
'ø': 'o',
'ß': 'ss',
//...
}
})
// loveossTo add separators before or after a specific character, add a space before or after the dictionary definition:
import { convert } from 'url-slug'
convert('♥øß', {
dictionary: {
'♥': 'love',
'ø': ' o', // A space was added before
'ß': 'ss',
//...
}
})
// love-oss
convert('♥øß', {
dictionary: {
'♥': 'love',
'ø': ' o ', // A space was added before and after
'ß': 'ss',
//...
}
})
// love-o-ss
convert('♥øß', {
dictionary: {
'♥': 'love',
'ø': 'o ', // A space was added after
'ß': 'ss',
//...
}
})
// loveo-ssPolyfill
This module uses String.prototype.normalize() to convert strings to slugs. If
you need to support old browsers (e.g. Internet Explorer), you can use a
polyfill like unorm.