Package slug generate slug from Unicode string, URL-friendly slugify with
multiple languages support.
package main
import (
"fmt"
"github.com/gosimple/slug"
)
func main() {
text := slug.Make("Hellö Wörld хелло ворлд")
fmt.Println(text) // Will print: "hello-world-khello-vorld"
someText := slug.Make("影師")
fmt.Println(someText) // Will print: "ying-shi"
enText := slug.MakeLang("This & that", "en")
fmt.Println(enText) // Will print: "this-and-that"
deText := slug.MakeLang("Diese & Dass", "de")
fmt.Println(deText) // Will print: "diese-und-dass"
slug.Lowercase = false // Keep uppercase characters
deUppercaseText := slug.MakeLang("Diese & Dass", "de")
fmt.Println(deUppercaseText) // Will print: "Diese-und-Dass"
slug.CustomSub = map[string]string{
"water": "sand",
}
textSub := slug.Make("water is hot")
fmt.Println(textSub) // Will print: "sand-is-hot"
}This library will always returns clean output from any Unicode string containing only the following ASCII characters:
- numbers:
0-9 - small letters:
a-z - big letters:
A-Z(only if you setLowercasetofalse) - minus sign:
- - underscore:
_
Minus sign and underscore characters will never appear at the beginning or the end of the returned string.
Thanks to context-insensitive transliteration of Unicode characters to ASCII output returned string is safe for URL slugs and filenames.
https://github.com/gosimple/slug/issues
If your language is missing you could add it in languages_substitution.go
file.
In case of missing proper Unicode characters transliteration to ASCII you could add them to underlying library: https://github.com/gosimple/unidecode.
go get -u github.com/gosimple/sluggo test -run=NONE -bench=. -benchmem -count=6 ./... > old.txt
# make changes
go test -run=NONE -bench=. -benchmem -count=6 ./... > new.txt
go install golang.org/x/perf/cmd/benchstat@latest
benchstat old.txt new.txtThe source files are distributed under the Mozilla Public License, version 2.0, unless otherwise noted. Please read the FAQ if you have further questions regarding the license.