svg-regex-replace-loader
v1.0.2
Published
A webpack loader to replace values in files using regex
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regex-replace-loader
A webpack loader that uses regex to replace values in files, or transform source into another form.
The regex-replace-loader
takes a file's content as input, runs it against a user-supplied regular expression, and makes substitutions based on the user-supplied replace value
, which can be either a string or a function that returns a value.
Example usage
Replace a specific string in a file with another.
Input
All must depart the auditorium.
All must exit through the side door.
webpack.config.js
module.exports = {
...,
module: {
rules: [{
test: /\.source.txt$/,
use: {
loader: 'regex-replace-loader',
options: {
regex: 'All', // can also be a RegExp object (required)
flags: 'g' // ignored if a RegExp is used (optional)
value: 'y\'all', // the replace value (required, can also be a function)
}
}
}]
}
}
Output
y'all must depart the auditorium.
y'all must exit through the side door.
Multiple replace stages
The regex-replace-loader
supports running multiple replace operations in stages, where the output of each stage is the input source for the next.
Input
Today's date is THE_DATE
The time is THE_TIME
webpack.config.js
module.exports = {
...,
module: {
rules: [{
test: /\.source.txt$/,
use: {
loader: 'regex-replace-loader',
options: {
stages: [{
regex: 'THE_DATE',
flags: '',
value: new Date().toDateString(),
},
{
regex: 'THE_TIME',
flags: '',
value: new Date().toTimeString(),
}]
}
}
}]
}
}
Output
Today's date is Sat Dec 09 2017
The time is 10:14:52 GMT-0800 (PST)
Typescript
Using import
instead of require
may cause issues when using Typescript to import text files. In this case, include a declarations.d.ts
file in your project:
declarations.d.ts
declare module '*.txt' {
const txt: any
export default txt
}
declare module '*.json' {
const json: any
export default json
}
declare module '*.whatever' {
const value: any
export default value
}
Then you should be able to import the file:
import text from './somefile.txt'
import json from './someinfo.json'
Options object
options: {
regex: '<search expression>' | /search expression/<flags>,
flags: 'g', // Ignored if regex is a RegExp object
value: '<replace value>' | function (match) { return 'some value' },
stages: [ {options}, {options}, ... ]
}
regex (string|RegExp)
(required) can be a string or RegExp object. For strings make sure escape characters use a double backslash, e.g., \\w+
.
flags (string)
(optional) used if regex
is a string, otherwise ignored. If g
(global) is specified either in the flags
property or in the supplied regex
, a replace operations will be performed for each match in the source.
value (string|function)
(required) the replace value.
stages (object)
(optional) a list of regex
, flags
and value
objects for performing multiple match/replace operations on the same source:
stages: [
{ regex: 'a', flags: 'gi', value: '1' },
{ regex: 'b', flags: 'gi', value: '2' },
{ regex: 'c', flags: 'gi', value: '3' }
]
Using the value
option
The options.value
parameter can be a string
or function
. While using a function is more flexible and powerful, there are some special uses when options.value
is a string.
value
as a string
When options.value
is a string, certain special replacement patterns are available.
Pattern | Inserts ------- | ------- $$ | Inserts a "$". $& | Inserts the matched substring. $` | Inserts the portion of the string that precedes the matched substring. $' | Inserts the portion of the string that follows the matched substring. $n | Where n is a positive integer less than 100, inserts the nth parenthesized submatch string, provided the first argument was a RegExp object. Note that this is 1-indexed.
Specifying a string as a parameter
For example, $&
inserts the matched substring, so setting options.value
to $&
would result in an "identity" operation.
It may be handy in some cases to use the matched substring as part of the replace value:
Input
All must depart the auditorium.
Options
options: {
regex: 'All',
flags: ''
value: "y'$&", // output the matched substring as part of the value
}
Outupt
y'All must depart the auditorium.
The $n
pattern inserts a match group:
Input
y = 2x + 3
Options
options: {
regex: /(\w) = (\d+)(\w) \+ (\d+)/,
// Replace the match with a summary of contents.
value: 'variables: $1, $3\nconstants: $2, $4',
}
Outupt
variables: y, x
constants: 2, 3
value
as a function
When options.value
is a function, the replace capabilities become more powerful.
The value
function receives a match object with the following elements:
Property/Index | Description -------------- | ----------- [0] | The full string of characters matched [1], ...[n ] | The parenthesized substring matches, if any. The number of possible parenthesized substrings is unlimited. index | The 0-based index of the match in the string. input | The original string.
value: function (match) {
match[0] // the full match
match[1] // the first capture group
match[2] // the second capture group, etc.
match['index'] // the position of the match in the input string
match['input'] // the original source input string
return match[0] // This would result in an "identity" operation,
// where the replaced value is the same as the
// original matched value
}
Input
Today's date is #{date}
The time is #{time}
Options
options: {
regex: /#\{(.+?)\}/g,
// Render variables to a template
value: function (match) {
const context = {
date: new Date().toDateString(),
time: new Date().toTimeString()
}
// If there is no variable, return the original template match.
return context[match[1]] || match[0]
}
}
Outupt
Today's date is Sat Dec 09 2017
The time is 11:51:25 GMT-0800 (PST)