String Kit
A string manipulation toolbox, featuring a string formater (inspired by printf), a variable inspector
(output featuring ANSI color and HTML) and various escape function (shell argument, regexp, html, etc).
- License: MIT
- Current status: beta
- Platform: Node.js only (browser support is planned)
Install
Use Node Package Manager:
npm install string-kit
Reference
.format( formatString , ... )
- formatString
String
a string containing some sprintf()
-like formating - ...
mixed
a variable list of arguments to insert into the formatString
This function is inspired by the C
's sprintf()
function.
Basicly, if formatString
includes format specifiers (subsequences beginning with %), the additional arguments
following formatString
are formatted and inserted in the resulting string replacing their respective specifiers.
Also it diverges from C
in quite a few places.
Basic usage:
var format = require( 'string-kit' ).format ;
console.log( format( 'Hello %s %s, how are you?' , 'Joe' , 'Doe' ) ) ;
Specifiers:
- %% write a single %
- %s string
- %f float
- %d or %i integer
- %u unsigned integer
- %U unsigned positive integer (>0)
- %h unsigned hexadecimal
- %x unsigned hexadecimal, force pair of symbols (e.g. 'f' -> '0f')
- %o unsigned octal
- %b unsigned binary
- %J JSON.stringify()
- %D drop, the argument does not produce anything but is eaten anyway
- %[ filter function existing in the this context, e.g. %[filter:%a%a]
- %a argument for a filter function
Few examples:
var format = require( 'string-kit' ).format ;
console.log( format( 'This company regains %d%% of market share.' , 36 ) ) ;
console.log( format( '11/8=%f' , 11/8 ) ) ;
console.log( format( 'Hexa %h %x' , 11 , 11 ) ) ;
We can insert a number between the % sign and the letter of the specifier, this way, rather than using the next
argument, it uses the Nth argument, this is the absolute position:
console.log( format( '%2s%1s%3s' , 'A' , 'B' , 'C' ) ) ;
Also, the internal pointer is moved anyway, so the Nth format specifier still use the Nth argument if it doesn't
specify any position:
console.log( format( '%2s%s%s' , 'A' , 'B' , 'C' ) ) ;
If the number is preceded by a plus or a minus sign, the relative position is used rather than the absolute position.
console.log( format( '%+1s%-1s%s' , 'A' , 'B' , 'C' ) ) ;
Use case: language.
var hello = {
en: 'Hello %s %s!' ,
jp: 'Konnichiwa %2s %1s!'
} ;
console.log( format( hello[ lang ] , firstName , lastName ) ) ;
The mysterious %[
format specifier is used when we want custom formatter.
Firstly we need to build an object containing one or many functions.
Then, format()
should be used with call()
, to pass the functions collection as the this context.
The %[
is followed by the function's name, followed by a :
, followed by a variable list of arguments using %a
.
It is still possible to use relative and absolute positionning.
The whole format specifier is finished when a ]
is encountered.
Example:
var filters = {
fxy: function( a , b ) { return '' + ( a * a + b ) ; }
} ;
console.log( format.call( filters , '%s%[fxy:%a%a]' , 'f(x,y)=' , 5 , 3 ) ) ;
console.log( format.call( filters , '%s%[fxy:%+1a%-1a]' , 'f(x,y)=' , 5 , 3 ) ) ;
.format.count( formatString )
- formatString
String
a string containing some sprintf()
-like formating
It just counts the number of format specifier in the formatString
.
.inspect( [options] , variable )
- options
Object
display options, the following key are possible:
- style
String
this is the style to use, the value can be:
- 'none': (default) normal output suitable for console.log() or writing into a file
- 'color': colorful output suitable for terminal
- 'html': html output
- depth: depth limit, default: 3
- nofunc: do not display functions
- funcDetails: display function's details
- proto: display object's prototype
- variable
mixed
anything we want to inspect/debug
It inspect a variable, and return a string ready to be displayed with console.log(), or even as HTML output.
It produces a slightly better output than node's util.inspect()
, with more options to control what should be displayed.
Since options
come first, it is possible to use bind()
to create some custom variable inspector.
For example:
var colorInspect = require( 'string-kit' ).inspect.bind( undefined , { style: 'color' } ) ;
Escape functions collection
.escape.shellArg( str )
- str
String
the string to filter
It escapes the string so that it will be suitable as a shell command's argument.
.escape.regExp( str ) , .escape.regExpPattern( str )
- str
String
the string to filter
It escapes the string so that it will be suitable to inject it in a regular expression's pattern as a literal string.
Example of a search and replace from a user's input:
var result = data.replace(
new RegExp( stringKit.escape.regExp( userInputSearch ) , 'g' ) ,
stringKit.escape.regExpReplacement( userInputReplace )
) ;
.escape.regExpReplacement( str )
- str
String
the string to filter
It escapes the string so that it will be suitable as a literal string for a regular expression's replacement.
.escape.html( str )
- str
String
the string to filter
It escapes the string so that it will be suitable as HTML content.
Only < > &
are replaced by HTML entities.
.escape.htmlAttr( str )
- str
String
the string to filter
It escapes the string so that it will be suitable as an HTML tag attribute's value.
Only < > & "
are replaced by HTML entities.
It assumes valid HTML: the attribute's value should be into double quote, not in single quote.
.escape.htmlSpecialChars( str )
- str
String
the string to filter
It escapes all HTML special characters, < > & " '
are replaced by HTML entities.
.escape.control( str )
- str
String
the string to filter
It escapes all ASCII control characters (code lesser than or equals to 0x1F, or backspace).
Carriage return, newline and tabulation are respectively replaced by \r
, \n
and \t
.
Other characters are replaced by the unicode notation, e.g. NUL
is replaced by \x00
.
Full BDD spec generated by Mocha:
TOC
format()
should perform basic examples.
expect( format( 'Hello world' ) ).to.be( 'Hello world' ) ;
expect( format( 'Hello %s' , 'world' ) ).to.be( 'Hello world' ) ;
expect( format( 'Hello %s %s, how are you?' , 'Joe' , 'Doe' ) ).to.be( 'Hello Joe Doe, how are you?' ) ;
expect( format( 'I have %i cookies.' , 3 ) ).to.be( 'I have 3 cookies.' ) ;
expect( format( 'This company regains %d%% of market share.' , 36 ) ).to.be( 'This company regains 36% of market share.' ) ;
expect( format( '11/8=%f' , 11/8 ) ).to.be( '11/8=1.375' ) ;
expect( format( 'Binary %b %b' , 11 , 123 ) ).to.be( 'Binary 1011 1111011' ) ;
expect( format( 'Octal %o %o' , 11 , 123 ) ).to.be( 'Octal 13 173' ) ;
expect( format( 'Hexa %h %x %x' , 11 , 11 , 123 ) ).to.be( 'Hexa b 0b 7b' ) ;
expect( format( 'JSON %J' , {hello:'world',here:'is',my:{wonderful:'object'}} ) ).to.be( 'JSON {"hello":"world","here":"is","my":{"wonderful":"object"}}' ) ;
%u should format unsigned integer.
expect( format( '%u' , 123 ) ).to.be( '123' ) ;
expect( format( '%u' , 0 ) ).to.be( '0' ) ;
expect( format( '%u' , -123 ) ).to.be( '0' ) ;
expect( format( '%u' ) ).to.be( '0' ) ;
%U should format positive unsigned integer.
expect( format( '%U' , 123 ) ).to.be( '123' ) ;
expect( format( '%U' , 0 ) ).to.be( '1' ) ;
expect( format( '%U' , -123 ) ).to.be( '1' ) ;
expect( format( '%U' ) ).to.be( '1' ) ;
should perform well the argument's number feature.
expect( format( '%s%s%s' , 'A' , 'B' , 'C' ) ).to.be( 'ABC' ) ;
expect( format( '%+1s%-1s%s' , 'A' , 'B' , 'C' ) ).to.be( 'BAC' ) ;
expect( format( '%3s%s' , 'A' , 'B' , 'C' ) ).to.be( 'CBC' ) ;
format.count() should count the number of arguments found.
expect( format.count( 'blah blih blah' ) ).to.be( 0 ) ;
expect( format.count( '%i %s' ) ).to.be( 2 ) ;
when using a filter object as the this context, the %[functionName] format should use a custom function to format the input.
var filters = {
fixed: function() { return 'F' ; } ,
double: function( str ) { return '' + str + str ; } ,
fxy: function( a , b ) { return '' + ( a * a + b ) ; }
} ;
expect( format.call( filters , '%[fixed]%s%s%s' , 'A' , 'B' , 'C' ) ).to.be( 'FABC' ) ;
expect( format.call( filters , '%s%[fxy:%a%a]' , 'f(x,y)=' , 5 , 3 ) ).to.be( 'f(x,y)=28' ) ;
expect( format.call( filters , '%s%[fxy:%+1a%-1a]' , 'f(x,y)=' , 5 , 3 ) ).to.be( 'f(x,y)=14' ) ;
Escape collection
escape.control() should escape control characters.
expect( string.escape.control( 'Hello\n\t... world!' ) ).to.be( 'Hello\\n\\t... world!' ) ;
expect( string.escape.control( 'Hello\\n\\t... world!' ) ).to.be( 'Hello\\n\\t... world!' ) ;
expect( string.escape.control( 'Hello\\\n\\\t... world!' ) ).to.be( 'Hello\\\\n\\\\t... world!' ) ;
expect( string.escape.control( 'Hello\\\\n\\\\t... world!' ) ).to.be( 'Hello\\\\n\\\\t... world!' ) ;
expect( string.escape.control( 'Nasty\x00chars\x1bhere\x7f!' ) ).to.be( 'Nasty\\x00chars\\x1bhere\\x7f!' ) ;
escape.shellArg() should escape a string so that it will be suitable as a shell command's argument.
expect( string.escape.shellArg( "Here's my shell's argument" ) ).to.be( "'Here'\\''s my shell'\\''s argument'" ) ;
escape.regExp() should escape a string so that it will be suitable as a literal string into a regular expression pattern.
expect( string.escape.regExp( "(This) {is} [my] ^$tring^... +doesn't+ *it*? |yes| \\no\\ /maybe/" ) )
.to.be( "\\(This\\) \\{is\\} \\[my\\] \\^\\$tring\\^\\.\\.\\. \\+doesn't\\+ \\*it\\*\\? \\|yes\\| \\\\no\\\\ \\/maybe\\/" ) ;
escape.regExpReplacement() should escape a string so that it will be suitable as a literal string into a regular expression replacement.
expect( string.escape.regExpReplacement( "$he love$ dollar$ $$$" ) ).to.be( "$$he love$$ dollar$$ $$$$$$" ) ;
expect(
'$he love$ dollar$ $$$'.replace(
new RegExp( string.escape.regExp( '$' ) , 'g' ) ,
string.escape.regExpReplacement( '$1' )
)
).to.be( "$1he love$1 dollar$1 $1$1$1" ) ;
escape.html() should escape a string so that it will be suitable as HTML content.
expect( string.escape.html( "<This> isn't \"R&D\"" ) ).to.be( "<This> isn't \"R&D\"" ) ;
escape.htmlAttr() should escape a string so that it will be suitable as an HTML tag attribute's value.
expect( string.escape.htmlAttr( "<This> isn't \"R&D\"" ) ).to.be( "<This> isn't "R&D"" ) ;
escape.htmlSpecialChars() should escape all HTML special characters.
expect( string.escape.htmlSpecialChars( "<This> isn't \"R&D\"" ) ).to.be( "<This> isn't "R&D"" ) ;
inspect()
should inspect a variable with default options accordingly.
var MyClass = function MyClass() {
this.variable = 1 ;
} ;
MyClass.prototype.report = function report() { console.log( 'Variable value:' , this.variable ) ; } ;
MyClass.staticFunc = function staticFunc() { console.log( 'Static function.' ) ; } ;
var sparseArray = [] ;
sparseArray[ 3 ] = 'three' ;
sparseArray[ 10 ] = 'ten' ;
sparseArray[ 20 ] = 'twenty' ;
sparseArray.customProperty = 'customProperty' ;
var object = {
a: 'A' ,
b: 2 ,
str: 'Woot\nWoot\rWoot\tWoot' ,
sub: {
u: undefined ,
n: null ,
t: true ,
f: false
} ,
emptyString: '' ,
emptyObject: {} ,
list: [ 'one','two','three' ] ,
emptyList: [] ,
sparseArray: sparseArray ,
hello: function hello() { console.log( 'Hello!' ) ; } ,
anonymous: function() { console.log( 'anonymous...' ) ; } ,
class: MyClass ,
instance: new MyClass() ,
buf: new Buffer( 'This is a buffer!' )
} ;
object.sub.circular = object ;
Object.defineProperties( object , {
c: { value: '3' } ,
d: {
get: function() { throw new Error( 'Should not be called by the test' ) ; } ,
set: function( value ) {}
}
} ) ;
expect( string.inspect( object ) ).to.be( '<Object> <object> {\n a: "A" <string>(1)\n b: 2 <number>\n str: "Woot\\nWoot\\rWoot\\tWoot" <string>(19)\n sub: <Object> <object> {\n u: undefined\n n: null\n t: true\n f: false\n circular: <Object> <object> [circular]\n }\n emptyString: "" <string>(0)\n emptyObject: <Object> <object> {}\n list: <Array>(3) <object> {\n [0] "one" <string>(3)\n [1] "two" <string>(3)\n [2] "three" <string>(5)\n length: 3 <number> <-conf -enum>\n }\n emptyList: <Array>(0) <object> {\n length: 0 <number> <-conf -enum>\n }\n sparseArray: <Array>(21) <object> {\n [3] "three" <string>(5)\n [10] "ten" <string>(3)\n [20] "twenty" <string>(6)\n length: 21 <number> <-conf -enum>\n customProperty: "customProperty" <string>(14)\n }\n hello: <Function> hello(0) <function>\n anonymous: <Function> (anonymous)(0) <function>\n class: <Function> MyClass(0) <function>\n instance: <MyClass> <object> {\n variable: 1 <number>\n }\n buf: <Buffer 54 68 69 73 20 69 73 20 61 20 62 75 66 66 65 72 21> <Buffer>(17)\n c: "3" <string>(1) <-conf -enum -w>\n d: <getter/setter> {\n get: <Function> (anonymous)(0) <function>\n set: <Function> (anonymous)(1) <function>\n }\n}\n' ) ;