HTMLString
is a library written in Swift that allows your program to add and remove HTML entities in Strings.
Main features | |
---|---|
🔏 | Adds entities for ASCII and UTF-8/UTF-16 encodings |
📝 | Removes more than 2100 named entities (like & ) |
🔢 | Supports removing decimal and hexadecimal entities |
🐣 | Designed to support Swift Extended Grapheme Clusters (→ 100% emoji-proof) |
✅ | Fully unit tested |
⚡ | Fast |
📚 | Documented |
🤖 | Compatible with Objective-C |
- iOS 8.0+
- macOS 10.10+
- tvOS 9.0+
- watchOS 2.0+
- Linux
Add this line to your Package.swift
:
.Package(url: "https://github.com/alexaubry/HTMLString", majorVersion: 5, minor: 0)
Add this line to your Podfile
:
pod 'HTMLString', '~> 5.0'
Add this line to your Cartfile:
github "alexaubry/HTMLString" ~> 5.0
HTMLString
allows you to add and remove HTML entities from a String.
When a character is not supported into the specified encoding, the library will replace it with a decimal entity (supported by all browsers supporting HTML 4 and later).
For instance, the
&
character will be replaced by&
.
You can choose between ASCII and Unicode escaping:
- Use the
addingASCIIEntities
property to escape for ASCII-encoded content - Use the
addingUnicodeEntities
property to escape for Unicode-compatible content
💡 Pro Tip: When your content supports UTF-8 or UTF-16, use Unicode escaping as it is faster and produces a less bloated output.
import HTMLString
let emoji = "My favorite emoji is 🙃"
let escapedEmoji = emoji.addingASCIIEntities // "My favorite emoji is 🙃"
let noNeedToEscapeThatEmoji = emoji.addingUnicodeEntities // "My favorite emoji is 🙃"
let snack = "Fish & Chips"
let escapedSnack = snack.addingASCIIEntities // "Fish & Chips"
let weAlsoNeedToEscapeThisSnack = snack.addingUnicodeEntities // "Fish & Chips"
To remove all the HTML entities from a String, use the removingHTMLEntities
property.
import HTMLString
let escapedEmoji = "My favorite emoji is 🙃"
let emoji = escapedEmoji.removingHTMLEntities // "My favorite emoji is 🙃"
let escapedSnack = "Fish & Chips"
let snack = escapedSnack.removingHTMLEntities // "Fish & Chips"
With Obj-C Mix and Match, you can import and use the HTMLString
module from in Objective-C code.
The library introduces a set of Objective-C specific APIs as categories on the NSString
type:
-[NSString stringByAddingUnicodeEntities];
: Replaces every character incompatible with HTML Unicode encoding by a decimal HTML entitiy.-[NSString stringByAddingASCIIEntities];
: Replaces every character incompatible with HTML ASCII encoding by a decimal HTML entitiy.-[NSString stringByRemovingHTMLEntities];
: Replaces every HTML entity with the matching Unicode character.
@import HTMLString;
NSString *emoji = @"My favorite emoji is 🙃";
NSString *escapedEmoji = [emoji stringByAddingASCIIEntities]; // "My favorite emoji is 🙃"
NSString *snack = @"Fish & Chips";
NSString *escapedSnack = [snack stringByAddingUnicodeEntities]; // "Fish & Chips"
@import HTMLString;
NSString *escapedEmoji = @"My favorite emoji is 🙃";
NSString *emoji = [escapedEmoji stringByRemovingHTMLEntities]; // "My favorite emoji is 🙃"
NSString *escapedSnack = @"Fish & Chips";
NSString *snack = [escapedSnack stringByRemovingHTMLEntities]; // "Fish & Chips"
- Alexis Aubry, [email protected]
- You can find me on Twitter: @_alexaubry
HTMLString is available under the MIT license. See the LICENSE file for more info.