A simple utility to quickly replace text in one or more files or globs. Works synchronously or asynchronously with either promises or callbacks. Make a single replacement or multiple replacements at once.
Hey there 👋🏼, thank you for using
replace-in-file
!
Sorry for the interruption, but as you probably know, I don’t get paid for maintaining this package, and I also haven't put up a donation thingy of any kind.
However, I am trying to grow our start-up Hello Club internationally, and would really appreciate it if you could have a quick look on our website to see what we're all about. 👀
As the name implies, we offer an all-in-one club and membership management solution complete with booking system, automated membership renewals, online payments and integrated access and light control.
Clubs that have switched to Hello Club have been saving so much time managing their members and finances, and the members themselves really enjoy using it, with overwhelmingly positive feedback.
Check us out if you belong to any kind of club or if you know someone who helps run a club!
Thank you so much for your time, now go and replace some data in your files! 🎉
- Installation
- Basic usage
- Advanced usage
- Replace a single file or glob
- Replace multiple files or globs
- Replace first occurrence only
- Replace all occurrences
- Multiple values with the same replacement
- Custom regular expressions
- Multiple values with different replacements
- Using callbacks for
from
- Using callbacks for
to
- Ignore a single file or glob
- Ignore multiple files or globs
- Allow empty/invalid paths
- Disable globs
- Specify glob configuration
- Making replacements on network drives
- Specify character encoding
- Dry run
- CLI usage
- A note on using globs with the CLI
- Version information
- License
# Using npm, installing to local project
npm i --save replace-in-file
# Using npm, installing globally for global cli usage
npm i -g replace-in-file
# Using yarn
yarn add replace-in-file
//Load the library and specify options
const replace = require('replace-in-file');
const options = {
files: 'path/to/file',
from: /foo/g,
to: 'bar',
};
try {
const results = await replace(options)
console.log('Replacement results:', results);
}
catch (error) {
console.error('Error occurred:', error);
}
replace(options)
.then(results => {
console.log('Replacement results:', results);
})
.catch(error => {
console.error('Error occurred:', error);
});
replace(options, (error, results) => {
if (error) {
return console.error('Error occurred:', error);
}
console.log('Replacement results:', results);
});
try {
const results = replace.sync(options);
console.log('Replacement results:', results);
}
catch (error) {
console.error('Error occurred:', error);
}
The return value of the library is an array of replacement results against each file that was processed. This includes files in which no replacements were made.
Each result contains the following values:
file
: The path to the file that was processedhasChanged
: Flag to indicate if the file was changed or not
const results = replace.sync({
files: 'path/to/files/*.html',
from: /foo/g,
to: 'bar',
});
console.log(results);
// [
// {
// file: 'path/to/files/file1.html',
// hasChanged: true,
// },
// {
// file: 'path/to/files/file2.html',
// hasChanged: true,
// },
// {
// file: 'path/to/files/file3.html',
// hasChanged: false,
// },
// ]
To get an array of changed files, simply map the results as follows:
const changedFiles = results
.filter(result => result.hasChanged)
.map(result => result.file);
By setting the countMatches
configuration flag to true
, the number of matches and replacements per file will be counted and present in the results array.
numMatches
: Indicates the number of times a match was found in the filenumReplacements
: Indicates the number of times a replacement was made in the file
Note that the number of matches can be higher than the number of replacements if a match and replacement are the same string.
const results = replace.sync({
files: 'path/to/files/*.html',
from: /foo/g,
to: 'bar',
countMatches: true,
});
console.log(results);
// [
// {
// file: 'path/to/files/file1.html',
// hasChanged: true,
// numMatches: 3,
// numReplacements: 3,
// },
// {
// file: 'path/to/files/file2.html',
// hasChanged: true,
// numMatches: 1,
// numReplacements: 1,
// },
// {
// file: 'path/to/files/file3.html',
// hasChanged: false,
// numMatches: 0,
// numReplacements: 0,
// },
// ]
const options = {
files: 'path/to/file',
};
const options = {
files: [
'path/to/file',
'path/to/other/file',
'path/to/files/*.html',
'another/**/*.path',
],
};
const options = {
from: 'foo',
to: 'bar',
};
Please note that the value specified in the from
parameter is passed straight to the native String replace method. As such, if you pass a string as the from
parameter, it will only replace the first occurrence.
To replace multiple occurrences at once, you must use a regular expression for the from
parameter with the global flag enabled, e.g. /foo/g
.
const options = {
from: /foo/g,
to: 'bar',
};
These will be replaced sequentially.
const options = {
from: [/foo/g, /baz/g],
to: 'bar',
};
These will be replaced sequentially.
const options = {
from: [/foo/g, /baz/g],
to: ['bar', 'bax'],
};
Use the RegExp constructor to create any regular expression.
const str = 'foo';
const regex = new RegExp('^' + str + 'bar', 'i');
const options = {
from: regex,
to: 'bar',
};
You can also specify a callback that returns a string or a regular expression. The callback receives the name of the file in which the replacement is being performed, thereby allowing the user to tailor the search string. The following example uses a callback to produce a search string dependent on the filename:
const options = {
files: 'path/to/file',
from: (file) => new RegExp(file, 'g'),
to: 'bar',
};
As the to
parameter is passed to the native String replace method, you can also specify a callback. The following example uses a callback to convert matching strings to lowercase:
const options = {
files: 'path/to/file',
from: /SomePattern[A-Za-z-]+/g,
to: (match) => match.toLowerCase(),
};
This callback provides for an extra argument above the String replace method, which is the name of the file in which the replacement is being performed. The following example replaces the matched string with the filename:
const options = {
files: 'path/to/file',
from: /SomePattern[A-Za-z-]+/g,
to: (...args) => args.pop(),
};
const options = {
ignore: 'path/to/ignored/file',
};
const options = {
ignore: [
'path/to/ignored/file',
'path/to/other/ignored_file',
'path/to/ignored_files/*.html',
'another/**/*.ignore',
],
};
Please note that there is an open issue with Glob that causes ignored patterns to be ignored when using a ./
prefix in your files glob. To work around this, simply remove the prefix, e.g. use **/*
instead of ./**/*
.
If set to true, empty or invalid paths will fail silently and no error will be thrown. For asynchronous replacement only. Defaults to false
.
const options = {
allowEmptyPaths: true,
};
You can disable globs if needed using this flag. Use this when you run into issues with file paths like files like //SERVER/share/file.txt
. Defaults to false
.
const options = {
disableGlobs: true,
};
Specify configuration passed to the glob
call:
const options = {
glob: {
//Glob settings here
},
};
Please note that the setting nodir
will always be passed as false
.
To make replacements in files on network drives, you may need to specify the UNC path as the cwd
config option. This will then be passed to glob and prefixed to your paths accordingly. See #56 for more details.
Use a different character encoding for reading/writing files. Defaults to utf-8
.
const options = {
encoding: 'utf8',
};
To do a dry run without actually making replacements, for testing purposes. Defaults to false
.
const options = {
dry: true,
};
replace-in-file from to some/file.js,some/**/glob.js
[--configFile=replace-config.js]
[--ignore=ignore/files.js,ignore/**/glob.js]
[--encoding=utf-8]
[--disableGlobs]
[--isRegex]
[--verbose]
[--quiet]
[--dry]
Multiple files or globs can be replaced by providing a comma separated list.
The flags --disableGlobs
, --ignore
and --encoding
are supported in the CLI.
The setting allowEmptyPaths
is not supported in the CLI as the replacement is
synchronous, and this setting is only relevant for asynchronous replacement.
To list the changed files, use the --verbose
flag. Success output can be suppressed by using the --quiet
flag.
To do a dry run without making any actual changes, use --dry
.
A regular expression may be used for the from
parameter by specifying the --isRegex
flag.
The from
and to
parameters, as well as the files list, can be omitted if you provide this
information in a configuration file. You can provide a path to a configuration file
(either Javascript or JSON) with the --configFile
flag. This path will be resolved using
Node’s built in path.resolve()
, so you can pass in an absolute or relative path.
When using the CLI, the glob pattern is handled by the operating system. But if you specify the glob pattern in the configuration file, the package will use the glob module from the Node modules, and this can lead to different behaviour despite using the same pattern.
For example, the following will only look at top level files:
//config.js
module.exports = {
from: /cat/g,
to: 'dog',
};
replace-in-file ** --configFile=config.js
However, this example is recursive:
//config.js
module.exports = {
files: '**',
from: /cat/g,
to: 'dog',
};
replace-in-file --configFile=config.js
If you want to do a recursive file search as an argument you must use:
replace-in-file $(ls l {,**/}*) --configFile=config.js
From version 3.0.0 onwards, replace in file requires Node 6 or higher. If you need support for Node 4 or 5, please use version 2.x.x.
From version 5.0.0 onwards, replace in file requires Node 8 or higher. If you need support for Node 6, please use version 4.x.x.
See the Changelog for more information.
(MIT License)
Copyright 2015-2020, Adam Reis, Co-founder at Hello Club