$ npm install htmlfy
HTML formatter yo! Prettify, minify and more!
htmlfy
is a fork of html-formatter. Most of the processing logic has been preserved, and full credit for that goes to the original author. I've made the following major enhancements.
npm install htmlfy
Most projects will only need to use prettify
and/or minify
.
Turn single-line or ugly HTML into highly formatted HTML. This is a wrapper for all other functions, and then it adds indentation.
import { prettify } from 'htmlfy'
const html = `<main class="hello there world"><div>Welcome to htmlfy! </div></main>`
console.log(prettify(html))
/*
<main class="hello there world">
<div>
Welcome to htmlfy!
</div>
</main>
*/
Turn well-formatted or ugly HTML into a single-line of HTML.
import { minify } from 'htmlfy'
const html =
`<main class="hello there world">
<div>
Welcome to htmlfy!
</div>
</main>`
console.log(minify(html))
/*
<main class="hello there world"><div>Welcome to htmlfy!</div></main>
*/
This is done when using prettify, but you can use it in a one-off scenario if needed.
Ensure void elements are "self-closing".
import { closify } from 'htmlfy'
const html = `<br><input type="text">`
console.log(closify(html))
/*
<br /><input type="text" />
*/
This is done when using prettify, but you can use it in a one-off scenario if needed.
Enforce entity characters for textarea content. This also performs basic minification on textareas before setting entities. When running this function as a standalone, you'll likely want to pass minify
as true
for full minification of the textarea. The minification does not process any other tags.
import { entify } from 'htmlfy'
const html = `<main class="hello there world"><div>Welcome to htmlfy! </div></main><textarea >
Did you know that 3 > 2?
This is another paragraph.
</textarea><textarea class=" more stuff "> </textarea>`
console.log(entify(html, true))
/*
<main class="hello there world"><div>Welcome to htmlfy! </div></main><textarea>Did you know that 3 > 2? This is another paragraph.</textarea><textarea class="more stuff"></textarea>
*/
If needed, you can use a default import for htmlfy
.
import * as htmlfy from 'htmlfy'
console.log(htmlfy.prettify('<main><div>Hello World</div></main'))
Although meant to be an ESM module, you can import using require
.
const { prettify } = require('htmlfy')
These configuration options can only be passed to prettify
.
Default config:
{
strict: false,
tab_size: 2
}
If set to true
, removes comments and ensures void elements are not self-closing.
import { prettify } from 'htmlfy'
const html = `<main><br /><div><!-- Hello World --></div></main>`
console.log(prettify(html, { strict: true }))
/*
<main>
<br>
<div></div>
</main>
*/
Determines the number of spaces, per tab, for indentation.
import { prettify } from 'htmlfy'
const html = `<main class="hello there world"><div>Welcome to htmlfy! </div></main>`
console.log(prettify(html, { tab_size: 4 }))
/*
<main class="hello there world">
<div>
Welcome to htmlfy!
</div>
</main>
*/
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