Convert a string to a valid safe filename
On Unix-like systems, /
is reserved. On Windows, <>:"/\|?*
along with trailing periods are reserved.
npm install filenamify
import filenamify from 'filenamify';
filenamify('<foo/bar>');
//=> '!foo!bar!'
filenamify('foo:"bar"', {replacement: '🐴'});
//=> 'foo🐴bar🐴'
Convert a string to a valid filename.
Convert the filename in a path a valid filename and return the augmented path.
import {filenamifyPath} from 'filenamify';
filenamifyPath('foo:bar');
//=> 'foo!bar'
Type: object
Type: string
Default: '!'
String to use as replacement for reserved filename characters.
Cannot contain: <
>
:
"
/
\
|
?
*
Type: number
Default: 100
Truncate the filename to the given length.
Only the base of the filename is truncated, preserving the extension. If the extension itself is longer than maxLength
, you will get a string that is longer than maxLength
, so you need to check for that if you allow arbitrary extensions.
Systems generally allow up to 255 characters, but we default to 100 for usability reasons.
You can also import filenamify/browser
, which only imports filenamify
and not filenamifyPath
, which relies on path
being available or polyfilled. Importing filenamify
this way is therefore useful when it is shipped using webpack
or similar tools, and if filenamifyPath
is not needed.
import filenamify from 'filenamify/browser';
filenamify('<foo/bar>');
//=> '!foo!bar!'
- filenamify-cli - CLI for this module
- filenamify-url - Convert a URL to a valid filename
- valid-filename - Check if a string is a valid filename
- unused-filename - Get a unused filename by appending a number if it exists
- slugify - Slugify a string