regexparam
A tiny (299B) utility that converts route patterns into RegExp. Limited alternative to path-to-regexp
🙇
With regexparam
, you may turn a pathing string (eg, /users/:id
) into a regular expression.
An object with shape of { keys, pattern }
is returned, where pattern
is the RegExp
and keys
is an array of your parameter name(s) in the order that they appeared.
Unlike path-to-regexp
, this module does not create a keys
dictionary, nor mutate an existing variable. Also, this only ships a parser, which only accept strings. Simiarly, and most importantly, regexparam
only handles basic pathing operators:
- Static (
/foo
, /foo/bar
) - Parameter (
/:title
, /books/:title
, /books/:genre/:title
) - Optional Parameters (
/:title?
, /books/:title?
, /books/:genre/:title?
) - Wildcards (
*
, /books/*
, /books/:genre/*
)
Lastly, please note that while this route-parser is not slow, you should use matchit
or trouter
if performance is of critical importance. This is epsecially true for backend/server scenarios!
This module exposes two module definitions:
- ES Module:
dist/regexparam.es.js
- CommonJS:
dist/regexparam.js
Install
$ npm install --save regexparam
Usage
const regexparam = require('regexparam');
let foo = regexparam('users/*');
let bar = regexparam('/books/:genre/:title?')
bar.pattern.test('/books/horror');
bar.pattern.test('/books/horror/goosebumps');
function exec(path, result) {
let i=0, out={};
let matches = result.pattern.exec(path);
while (i < result.keys.length) {
out[ result.keys[i] ] = matches[++i] || null;
}
return out;
}
exec('/books/horror', bar);
exec('/books/horror/goosebumps', bar);
Important: When matching/testing against a generated RegExp, your path must begin with a leading slash ("/"
)!
API
regexparam(str)
Returns: Object
str
Type: String
The route/pathing string to convert.
Note: It does not matter if your str
begins with a /
-- it will be added if missing.
License
MIT © Luke Edwards