Truncate a string straight JavaScript

2019-01-07 06:37发布

问题:

I'd like to truncate a dynamically loaded string using straight JavaScript. It's a url, so there are no spaces, and I obviously don't care about word boundaries, just characters.

Here's what I got:

var pathname = document.referrer; //wont work if accessing file:// paths
document.getElementById("foo").innerHTML = "<a href='" + pathname +"'>" + pathname +"</a>"

回答1:

Use the substring method:

var length = 3;
var myString = "ABCDEFG";
var myTruncatedString = myString.substring(0,length);
// The value of myTruncatedString is "ABC"

So in your case:

var length = 3;  // set to the number of characters you want to keep
var pathname = document.referrer;
var trimmedPathname = pathname.substring(0, Math.min(length,pathname.length));

document.getElementById("foo").innerHTML =
     "<a href='" + pathname +"'>" + trimmedPathname + "</a>"


回答2:

yes, substring. You don't need to do a Math.min; substring with a longer index than the length of the string ends at the original length.

But!

document.getElementById("foo").innerHTML = "<a href='" + pathname +"'>" + pathname +"</a>"

This is a mistake. What if document.referrer had an apostrophe in? Or various other characters that have special meaning in HTML. In the worst case, attacker code in the referrer could inject JavaScript into your page, which is a XSS security hole.

Whilst it's possible to escape the characters in pathname manually to stop this happening, it's a bit of a pain. You're better off using DOM methods than fiddling with innerHTML strings.

if (document.referrer) {
    var trimmed= document.referrer.substring(0, 64);
    var link= document.createElement('a');
    link.href= document.referrer;
    link.appendChild(document.createTextNode(trimmed));
    document.getElementById('foo').appendChild(link);
}


回答3:

Thought I would give Sugar.js a mention. It has a truncate method that is pretty smart.

From the documentation:

Truncates a string. Unless split is true, truncate will not split words up, and instead discard the word where the truncation occurred.

Example:

'just sittin on the dock of the bay'.truncate(20)

Output:

just sitting on...


回答4:

Following code truncates a string and will not split words up, and instead discard the word where the truncation occurred. Totally based on Sugar.js source.

function truncateOnWord(str, limit) {
        var trimmable = '\u0009\u000A\u000B\u000C\u000D\u0020\u00A0\u1680\u180E\u2000\u2001\u2002\u2003\u2004\u2005\u2006\u2007\u2008\u2009\u200A\u202F\u205F\u2028\u2029\u3000\uFEFF';
        var reg = new RegExp('(?=[' + trimmable + '])');
        var words = str.split(reg);
        var count = 0;
        return words.filter(function(word) {
            count += word.length;
            return count <= limit;
        }).join('');
    }


回答5:

Yes, substring works great:

stringTruncate('Hello world', 5); //output "Hello..."
stringTruncate('Hello world', 20);//output "Hello world"

var stringTruncate = function(str, length){
  var dots = str.length > length ? '...' : '';
  return str.substring(0, length)+dots;
};


回答6:

Here's one method you can use. This is the answer for one of FreeCodeCamp Challenges:

function truncateString(str, num) {


if (str.length > num) {
return str.slice(0, num) + "...";}
 else {
 return str;}}