Find „cafe“ in „Fondation Café“
A prollyfill for String.prototype.localeIndexOf
-
a locale-aware Intl-powered version of indexOf
with zero dependencies.
Many texts out there contain accents and other diacritical characters, and when they are not strictly necessary, like in „café“, it is hard to match them against user input.
Here’s a relatable example. A website has a search field that provides suggestions, and the matched substring in each suggestion is highlighted. User has typed in „cafe“. You smartly find „café“ and display it as a suggestion. However you cannot really highlight it as a match, because the string is slightly different.
Intl.Collator
with sensitivity: base
to the rescue!
Except that it only has a compare()
method, not indexOf()
.
So you can’t use it to find substrings. Well, now you can.
localeIndexOf
can do some grinding for you. It is modeled after
String.prototype.localeCompare
and can be used in a similar fashion.
It extends the functionality of Intl.Collator.compare()
to search,
so you can even set ignorePunctuation: true
.
Version 2.0.0 introduces a breaking change: the support for CommonJS is removed, minimal Node.js version becomes 14.
npm install locale-index-of
import localeIndexOfMaker from 'locale-index-of';
const localeIndexOf = localeIndexOfMaker(Intl);
localeIndexOf('a café', 'cafe', 'de', { sensitivity: 'base' }); // = 2
or alternatively
import { prollyfill } from 'locale-index-of';
prollyfill();
'a café'.localeIndexOf('cafe', 'de', { sensitivity: 'base' }); // = 2
The default export of the module is a function. Give it the Intl
object
and get the localeIndexOf
function in return:
import localeIndexOfMaker from 'locale-index-of';
const localeIndexOf = localeIndexOfMaker(Intl);
It can take four parameters: where to search, what to look for,
and the same locales
and options
as Intl.Collator
or
String.prototype.localeCompare
.
Return value: the offset of substring
in the string
or -1
.
It can take three parameters: where to search, what to look for,
and an instance of Intl.Collator
.
Return value: the offset of substring
in the string
or -1
.
The module also exports method prototypeLocaleIndexOf
. Give it
the Intl
object and get back the localeIndexOf
function
suitable for putting on String.prototype
:
import { prototypeLocaleIndexOf } from 'locale-index-of';
String.prototype.localeIndexOf = prototypeLocaleIndexOf(Intl);
You can achieve the same effect by calling exported method prollyfill()
.
As a convenience, it will make String.prototype.localeIndexOf
fall back
to String.prototype.indexOf
when Intl
is not available.
It can take three parameters: what to look for and the same locales
and options
as Intl.Collator
or String.prototype.localeCompare
.
Return value: the offset of substring
in this
or -1
when not found.
It can take two parameters: what to look for and an instance of
Intl.Collator
.
Return value: the offset of substring
in this
or -1
when not found.
The default behavior of Intl.Collator
is to consider the whitespace punctuation.
Since the length of the matched fragment can be different from the length of
what you have looked for, this length is exposed on
indexOf.lastLength
.