he
he (for “HTML entities”) is a robust HTML entity encoder/decoder written in JavaScript. It supports all standardized named character references as per HTML, handles ambiguous ampersands and other edge cases just like a browser would, has an extensive test suite, and — contrary to many other JavaScript solutions — he handles astral Unicode symbols just fine. An online demo is available.
Installation
Via npm:
npm install he
Via Bower:
bower install he
Via Component:
component install mathiasbynens/he
In a browser:
<script src="he.js"></script>
In Narwhal, Node.js, and RingoJS:
var he = require('he');
In Rhino:
load('he.js');
Using an AMD loader like RequireJS:
require(
{
'paths': {
'he': 'path/to/he'
}
},
['he'],
function(he) {
console.log(he);
}
);
API
he.version
A string representing the semantic version number.
he.encode(text, options)
This function takes a string of text and encodes (by default) any symbols that aren’t printable ASCII symbols and &
, <
, >
, "
, '
, and `
, replacing them with character references.
he.encode('foo © bar ≠ baz 𝌆 qux');
As long as the input string contains allowed code points only, the return value of this function is always valid HTML. Any (invalid) code points that cannot be represented using a character reference in the input are not encoded.
he.encode('foo \0 bar');
The options
object is optional. It recognizes the following properties:
useNamedReferences
The default value for the useNamedReferences
option is false
. This means that encode()
will not use any named character references (e.g. ©
) in the output — hexadecimal escapes (e.g. ©
) will be used instead. Set it to true
to enable the use of named references.
Note that if compatibility with older browsers is a concern, this option should remain disabled.
he.encode('foo © bar ≠ baz 𝌆 qux');
he.encode('foo © bar ≠ baz 𝌆 qux', {
'useNamedReferences': false
});
he.encode('foo © bar ≠ baz 𝌆 qux', {
'useNamedReferences': true
});
encodeEverything
The default value for the encodeEverything
option is false
. This means that encode()
will not use any character references for printable ASCII symbols that don’t need escaping. Set it to true
to encode every symbol in the input string.
he.encode('foo © bar ≠ baz 𝌆 qux');
he.encode('foo © bar ≠ baz 𝌆 qux', {
'encodeEverything': true
});
he.encode('foo © bar ≠ baz 𝌆 qux', {
'encodeEverything': true,
'useNamedReferences': true
});
strict
The default value for the strict
option is false
. This means that encode()
will encode any HTML text content you feed it, even if it contains any symbols that cause parse errors. To throw an error when such invalid HTML is encountered, set the strict
option to true
. This option makes it possible to use he as part of HTML parsers and HTML validators.
he.encode('\x01');
he.encode('\x01', {
'strict': false
});
he.encode('\x01', {
'strict': true
});
Overriding default encode
options globally
The global default setting can be overridden by modifying the he.encode.options
object. This saves you from passing in an options
object for every call to encode
if you want to use the non-default setting.
he.encode.options.useNamedReferences;
he.encode.options.useNamedReferences = true;
he.encode('foo © bar ≠ baz 𝌆 qux');
he.decode(html, options)
This function takes a string of HTML and decodes any named and numerical character references in it using the algorithm described in section 12.2.4.69 of the HTML spec.
he.decode('foo © bar ≠ baz 𝌆 qux');
The options
object is optional. It recognizes the following properties:
isAttributeValue
The default value for the isAttributeValue
option is false
. This means that decode()
will decode the string as if it were used in a text context in an HTML document. HTML has different rules for parsing character references in attribute values — set this option to true
to treat the input string as if it were used as an attribute value.
he.decode('foo&bar');
he.decode('foo&bar', {
'isAttributeValue': false
});
he.decode('foo&bar', {
'isAttributeValue': true
});
strict
The default value for the strict
option is false
. This means that decode()
will decode any HTML text content you feed it, even if it contains any entities that cause parse errors. To throw an error when such invalid HTML is encountered, set the strict
option to true
. This option makes it possible to use he as part of HTML parsers and HTML validators.
he.decode('foo&bar');
he.decode('foo&bar', {
'strict': false
});
he.decode('foo&bar', {
'strict': true
});
Overriding default decode
options globally
The global default settings for the decode
function can be overridden by modifying the he.decode.options
object. This saves you from passing in an options
object for every call to decode
if you want to use a non-default setting.
he.decode.options.isAttributeValue;
he.decode.options.isAttributeValue = true;
he.decode('foo&bar');
he.escape(text)
This function takes a string of text and escapes it for use in text contexts in XML or HTML documents. Only the following characters are escaped: &
, <
, >
, "
, '
, and `
.
he.escape('<img src=\'x\' onerror="prompt(1)">');
he.unescape(html, options)
he.unescape
is an alias for he.decode
. It takes a string of HTML and decodes any named and numerical character references in it.
Using the he
binary
To use the he
binary in your shell, simply install he globally using npm:
npm install -g he
After that you will be able to encode/decode HTML entities from the command line:
$ he --encode 'föo ♥ bår 𝌆 baz'
f&
$ he --encode --use-named-refs 'föo ♥ bår 𝌆 baz'
föo ♥ bår &
$ he --decode 'föo ♥ bår 𝌆 baz'
föo ♥ bår 𝌆 baz
Read a local text file, encode it for use in an HTML text context, and save the result to a new file:
$ he --encode < foo.txt > foo-escaped.html
Or do the same with an online text file:
$ curl -sL "http://git.io/HnfEaw" | he --encode > escaped.html
Or, the opposite — read a local file containing a snippet of HTML in a text context, decode it back to plain text, and save the result to a new file:
$ he --decode < foo-escaped.html > foo.txt
Or do the same with an online HTML snippet:
$ curl -sL "http://git.io/HnfEaw" | he --decode > decoded.txt
See he --help
for the full list of options.
Support
he has been tested in at least Chrome 27-29, Firefox 3-22, Safari 4-6, Opera 10-12, IE 6-10, Node.js v0.10.0, Narwhal 0.3.2, RingoJS 0.8-0.9, PhantomJS 1.9.0, and Rhino 1.7RC4.
Unit tests & code coverage
After cloning this repository, run npm install
to install the dependencies needed for he development and testing. You may want to install Istanbul globally using npm install istanbul -g
.
Once that’s done, you can run the unit tests in Node using npm test
or node tests/tests.js
. To run the tests in Rhino, Ringo, Narwhal, and web browsers as well, use grunt test
.
To generate the code coverage report, use grunt cover
.
Acknowledgements
Thanks to Simon Pieters (@zcorpan) for the many suggestions.
Author
License
he is available under the MIT license.