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escape-latex

v1.2.0

Published

Escape LaTeX special characters with Javascript

Downloads

4,570,316

Readme

escape-latex

Greenkeeper badge

Build Status

Escape LaTeX special characters with Javascript in NodeJS (>= 4.x) environment.

Usage

npm install escape-latex
var lescape = require('escape-latex');
lescape("String to be escaped here #yolo");

API

lescape((input: String), {
  preserveFormatting: Boolean,
  escapeMapFn: Function,
});

By default, escape-latex only escapes characters that would result in malformed LaTeX. These characters include # $ % & \ ^ _ { }.

This means that the final LaTeX output might not look the same as your input Javascript string. For example, multiple spaces are kept as-is, which may be truncated to 1 space by your LaTeX software.

If you want the final output string to be as similar to your input Javascript string as possible, you can set the preserveFormatting param to true, like so:

lescape("Hello   World", { preserveFormatting: true });
// Hello~~~World

Which will be converted to three non-breaking spaces by your LaTeX software.

The list of format characters that are escaped include space, \t (tab), – (en-dash), — (em-dash).

There is also the param escapeMapFn to modify the mapping of escaped characters, so you can add/modify/remove your own escapes if necessary.

It accepts a callback function that takes in the default character escapes and the formatting escapes as parameters, and returns a complete escape mapping. Here's an example:

lescape("Hello   World", {
  preseveFormatting: true,
  escapeMapFn: function(defaultEscapes, formattingEscapes) {
    formattingEscapes[" "] = "\\\\";
    return Object.assign({}, defaultEscapes, formattingEscapes);
  },
});
// Hello\\\\\\world

Testing

npm test

Notes

  • If you are updating from escape-latex < 1.0.0, the en-dash and em-dash are no longer escaped by default. Please use preserveFormatting to turn them on if necessary.

License

MIT