written provides a set of utilities for manipulating text, with a focus on providing typographic tools rather than pure string manipulation. It can be added as a set of mixins to Underscore or used in it's own right, both in front and back end contexts.
- Capitalization
- Utilities
- Collapse
- Cases
- Tags
- Lists
- Hyphenation
- Quantify
- Written Numbers
- Quotes
- Ordinals
- Numbers
- Glyphs
- Language Support
import * as written from "https://deno.land/x/written/written.ts";
// or import singular functions
import { writtenNumber } from "https://deno.land/x/written/written.ts";
<script type="module" src=></script>
As this is a Deno fork, the original NPM version is published by @stephenhutchings from the repo stephenhutchings/written. Note that the Node version doesn't have types.
npm install written
written can be used in any environment that supports both ES Modules and TypeScript.
Some style guides prefer the numbers 12 and under to be written, so we'll include those in here. If more or fewer numbers need to be added, or those from another language, see Language Support.
Following the APA style guide (for ease and practicality) conjunctions,
articles, and short prepositions of less than four letters will be left in
lowercase when calling capitalizeAll()
.
A rule is needed to determine the correct ordinal for any number. For English, we use match in such a way that the first value in the matching array is returned, unless it is 11, 12 or 13. We use this number to determine the correct ordinal form.
Capitalize the first letter of a string.
Examples:
w.capitalize("obviously"); // Obviously
Capitalize all words in a string apart from some common lower case words. This can be tested with the internal noncaps regular expression, which are stored by language code, or by passing a regular expression of your own.
Examples:
w.capitalizeAll("this and that"); // This and That
w.capitalizeAll("the cat in the hat"); // The Cat in the Hat
enclose
wraps a string within two other strings, repeating the first if needs
be. cleanJoin
joins an array of words with falsy, non-string values removed
with some glue. Both are used internally but are offered in case of their
external value.
Examples:
w.enclose("'", "string"); // 'string'
w.cleanJoin(["this", null, "that"], " and "); // this and that
Replace all white-space in a string with a single space character
Examples:
w.collapse("this \t\t and \n that"); // this and that
Transform strings between common code cases.
Examples:
w.camelCase("some-thing"); // someThing
w.hyphenCase("some_thing"); // some-thing
w.snakeCase("someThing"); // some_thing
w.humanCase("fromA_to-Z"); // from A to Z
This helps to split "cased" words into their constituent parts...
Enclose a string inside an HTML tag.
Examples:
w.wrapInTag("Hello world!"); // <span>Hello world!</span>
w.wrapInTag("Hello world!", "em"); // <em>Hello world!</em>
w.wrapInTag( // <a href="/url" class="b" disabled="disabled">Link</a>
"Link",
"a",
{
href: "/url",
class: ["b"],
disabled: true,
},
);
Group strings into a grammatically correct list with an arbitrary limit. The final example shows all the possible options available.
Examples:
w.prettyList(["Ben", "Bob"]) // Ben and Bob
w.prettyList(["Ben", "Bob", "Bill"]) // Ben, Bob and Bill
w.prettyList(["Ben", "Bob", "Bill", "Max"], 2) // Ben, Bob and 2 more
w.prettyList(["Ben", "Bob"], 1, {more: "other"}) // Ben and 1 other
w.prettyList([ // Document 1 & two other files
{file: "Document 1"},
{file: "Document 2"},
{file: "Document 3"}
], 1, {
amp: "&"
written: true,
more: "other file",
quantify: true,
key: "file"
})
Add soft hyphens every n
characters so that the CSS attribute
hyphens: manual
will allow for nice breaks in long strings of text. This is
especially useful on mobile devices, where long strings can break the layout.
Examples:
w.hyphenate("antidisestablishmentarianism"); // antidisest%C2%ADablishm...
Add an "s" to a string when an amount is non-singular, disregarding the order of the arguments passsed. If an array or collection is passed, it’s length will be used as the numerical input.
Examples:
w.quantify("monkey", 1); // 1 monkey
w.quantify(1, "monkey"); // 1 monkey
w.quantify("monkey", 9, { written: true }); // nine monkeys
w.quantify("person", 9, { plural: "people" }); // 9 people
w.quantify([1, 2, 3], "number"); // 3 numbers
Convert numbers between one and twelve into their written counter-parts.
Examples:
w.writtenNumber(1); // one
w.writtenNumber(2, "DE"); // zwei
Wrap a string in single or double quotes or guillemets (angle quotes).
Examples:
w.quote("pastry chef", "s"); // ‘pastry chef’
w.quote("cats cradle"); // “cats cradle”
w.quote("tres chic", "a"); // «tres chic»
w.quote("Gol", "!"); // ¡Gol!
w.quote("Cómo estás", "?"); // ¿Cómo estás?
Convert a number from it's cardinal to ordinal equivalent.
Examples:
w.ordinal(1); // 1st
w.ordinal(2, { written: true }); // second
w.ordinal(3, { wrap: true }); // 3<sup>rd</sup>
w.ordinal(4, { wrap: "em" }); // 4<em>th</em>
Format a number in various ways and parse one from a string.
Examples:
w.prettyNumber(1000); // 1,000
w.prettyNumber(10.5, 2); // 10.50
w.prettyNumber(9999, " ", 2, ","); // 9 999,00
w.prettyPrice(4); // $4.00
w.prettyPrice(1200, "£"); // £1,200.00
w.prettyPrice( // €4<sup>00</sup>
4,
{
currency: "€",
wrap: "sup",
},
);
w.prettyPercent(0.5); // 50%
w.prettyPercent(1, 4); // 25%
w.prettyPercent(1, 3, 2); // 33.33%
w.parseNumber(1000); // 1000
w.parseNumber("1,000.00"); // 1000
w.parseNumber("99%"); // 0.99
w.parseNumber("some 44,000 participants"); // 44000
Provide quick access to different typographic glyphs without the need commit them to memory or look at a reference table.
Examples:
w.glyphs(); // Create map of ASCII glyphs
w.glyph("!"); // !
Set cardinal and ordinal numbers and non-caps words for different languages as appropriate. Please note that only partial support for French, German, Italian, Spanish and Swedish is currently implemented. If using in the browser, ensure that the document's charset is set to UTF-8. Pull requests which extend language support are encouraged.
To load and install a locale, do:
import * as written from "https://deno.land/x/written/written.ts";
import * as DE from "https://deno.land/x/written/lang/written.de.ts";
// there is also es,fs,it and se.
written.setLanguage(DE.dico, DE.code);
// now all your operations will be based on the DE locale.
w.writtenNumber(1); // eins
// you can also override the set locale:
w.writtenNumber(2, "EN"); // two
Pack up the written
object (with some aliases...)
dasherize
->hyphenCase
dashify
->hyphenCase
slugify
->snakeCase
underscore
->snakeCase
numerate
->quantify
count
->quantify
titleCase
->capitalizeAll