# regexparam [![Build Status](https://badgen.now.sh/travis/lukeed/regexparam)](https://travis-ci.org/lukeed/regexparam) > A tiny (308B) utility that converts route patterns into RegExp. Limited alternative to [`path-to-regexp`](https://github.com/pillarjs/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`](https://github.com/pillarjs/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. Similarly, and most importantly, `regexparam` **only** handles basic pathing operators: * Static (`/foo`, `/foo/bar`) * Parameter (`/:title`, `/books/:title`, `/books/:genre/:title`) * Parameter w/ Suffix (`/movies/:title.mp4`, `/movies/:title.(mp4|mov)`) * Optional Parameters (`/:title?`, `/books/:title?`, `/books/:genre/:title?`) * Wildcards (`*`, `/books/*`, `/books/:genre/*`) This module exposes two module definitions: * **CommonJS**: `dist/regexparam.js` * **ESModule**: `dist/regexparam.mjs` ## Install ``` $ npm install --save regexparam ``` ## Usage ```js const regexparam = require('regexparam'); // Example param-assignment 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; } // Parameter, with Optional Parameter // --- let foo = regexparam('/books/:genre/:title?') // foo.pattern => /^\/books\/([^\/]+?)(?:\/([^\/]+?))?\/?$/i // foo.keys => ['genre', 'title'] foo.pattern.test('/books/horror'); //=> true foo.pattern.test('/books/horror/goosebumps'); //=> true exec('/books/horror', foo); //=> { genre: 'horror', title: null } exec('/books/horror/goosebumps', foo); //=> { genre: 'horror', title: 'goosebumps' } // Parameter, with suffix // --- let bar = regexparam('/movies/:title.(mp4|mov)'); // bar.pattern => /^\/movies\/([^\/]+?)\.(mp4|mov)\/?$/i // bar.keys => ['title'] bar.pattern.test('/movies/narnia'); //=> false bar.pattern.test('/movies/narnia.mp3'); //=> false bar.pattern.test('/movies/narnia.mp4'); //=> true exec('/movies/narnia.mp4', bar); //=> { title: 'narnia' } // Wildcard // --- let baz = regexparam('users/*'); // baz.pattern => /^\/users\/(.*)\/?$/i // baz.keys => ['wild'] baz.pattern.test('/users'); //=> false baz.pattern.test('/users/lukeed'); //=> true exec('/users/lukeed/repos/new', baz); //=> { wild: 'lukeed/repos/new' } ``` > **Important:** When matching/testing against a generated RegExp, your path **must** begin with a leading slash (`"/"`)! ## Regular Expressions For fine-tuned control, you may pass a `RegExp` value directly to `regexparam` as its only parameter. In these situations, `regexparam` **does not** parse nor manipulate your pattern in any way! Because of this, `regexparam` has no "insight" on your route, and instead trusts your input fully. In code, this means that the return value's `keys` is always equal to `false` and the `pattern` is identical to your input value. This also means that you must manage and parse your own `keys`~!
You may use [named capture groups](https://javascript.info/regexp-groups#named-groups) or traverse the matched segments manually the "old-fashioned" way: > **Important:** Please check your target browsers' and target [Node.js runtimes' support](https://node.green/#ES2018-features--RegExp-named-capture-groups)! ```js // Named capture group const named = regexparam(/^\/posts[/](?[0-9]{4})[/](?[0-9]{2})[/](?[^\/]+)/i); const { groups } = named.pattern.exec('/posts/2019/05/hello-world'); console.log(groups); //=> { year: '2019', month: '05', title: 'hello-world' } // Widely supported / "Old-fashioned" const named = regexparam(/^\/posts[/]([0-9]{4})[/]([0-9]{2})[/]([^\/]+)/i); const [url, year, month, title] = named.pattern.exec('/posts/2019/05/hello-world'); console.log(year, month, title); //=> 2019 05 hello-world ``` ## API There are two API variants: 1) When passing a `String` input, the `loose` parameter is able to affect the output. [View API](#regexparamstr-loose) 2) When passing a `RegExp` value, that must be `regexparam`'s _only_ argument.<br> Your pattern is saved as written, so `loose` is ignored entirely. [View API](#regexparamrgx) ### regexparam(str, loose) Returns: `Object` Returns a `{ keys, pattern }` object, where `pattern` is a generated `RegExp` instance and `keys` is a list of extracted parameter names. #### 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. #### loose Type: `Boolean`<br> Default: `false` Should the `RegExp` match URLs that are longer than the [`str`](#str) pattern itself?<br> By default, the generated `RegExp` will test that the URL begins and _ends with_ the pattern. ```js const rgx = require('regexparam'); rgx('/users').pattern.test('/users/lukeed'); //=> false rgx('/users', true).pattern.test('/users/lukeed'); //=> true rgx('/users/:name').pattern.test('/users/lukeed/repos'); //=> false rgx('/users/:name', true).pattern.test('/users/lukeed/repos'); //=> true ``` ### regexparam(rgx) Returns: `Object` Returns a `{ keys, pattern }` object, where pattern is _identical_ to your `rgx` and `keys` is `false`, always. #### rgx Type: `RegExp` Your RegExp pattern. > **Important:** This pattern is used _as is_! No parsing or interpreting is done on your behalf. ## Related - [trouter](https://github.com/lukeed/trouter) - A server-side HTTP router that extends from this module. - [matchit](https://github.com/lukeed/matchit) - Similar (650B) library, but relies on String comparison instead of `RegExp`s. ## License MIT © [Luke Edwards](https://lukeed.com)