Creates the inverse of transliterated string to a regex. What? Basically, a regex that is diacritic insensitive
Sometimes the user will search for blasé, but your database is dumb and doesn't understand collations and diacritic insensitiveness, but it can compare stuff using regex, so there ya go.
Suppose you have the word résumé but written improperly in the database as resume. The user is clever, and types it correctly into the search box. Gets nothing. How to search for all the weird cases people mistype stuff when comes to accents?
import { toRegex, toString } from 'diacritic-regex';
toRegex()('résumé') // => /r[eEÉéÈèÊêëË]s[úùÚÙüÜuU]m[eEÉéÈèÊêëË]/i;
toRegex({flags: 'mu'})('résumé') // => /r[eEÉéÈèÊêëË]s[úùÚÙüÜuU]m[eEÉéÈèÊêëË]/mu;
toRegex({
flags: '',
mappings: {
'e': 'eéÉ'
}
})('résumé') // => /r[eéÉ]s[úùÚÙüÜuU]m[eéÉ]/;
toString({
mappings: {
'*': ['\\S+'] // literals, won't try to wrap in []'s,
'u': ['u']
}
})('résumé*') // => 'r[eEÉéÈèÊêëË]sum[eEÉéÈèÊêëË]\S+'
If you want to change the mappings for all instances:
import { mappings } from 'diacritic-regex'
mappings['*'] = ['[\\S\\s]+']
Be aware of RegExp.prototype.exec with g
flag being stateful
The i
flag is appended to the RegExp flags if you don't pass any flags to toRegex
Work in node and the browser, but needs polyfills for Array.reduce
, Array.map
and Object.keys
depending on how old your target browser is
MIT