angularjs newline filter with no other html

JavascriptHtmlAngularjsSanitization

Javascript Problem Overview


I'm trying to convert newline characters (\n) to html br's.
As per this discussion in the Google Group, here's what I've got:

myApp.filter('newlines', function () {
	return function(text) {
		return text.replace(/\n/g, '<br/>');
	}
});

The discussion there also advises to use the following in the view:

{{ dataFromModel | newline | html }}

This seems to be using the old html filter, whereas now we're supposed to use the ng-bind-html attribute.


Regardless, this poses a problem: I don't want any HTML from the original string (dataFromModel) to be rendered as HTML; only the br's.

For example, given the following string:

> While 7 > 5
> I still don't want html & stuff in here...

I'd want it to output:

While 7 &gt; 5<br>I still don't want html &amp; stuff in here...

Is there any way to accomplish this?

Javascript Solutions


Solution 1 - Javascript

Maybe you can achieve this only with html, a <preformated text> way ? It will avoid from using filters or do any kind of processing.

All you have to do is display the text within an element that has this CSS:

<p style="white-space: pre;">{{ MyMultiLineText}}</p>

This will parse and display \n as new lines. Works great for me.

Here, a jsFiddle example.

Solution 2 - Javascript

Instead of messing with new directives, I decided to just use 2 filters:

App.filter('newlines', function () {
	return function(text) {
		return text.replace(/\n/g, '<br/>');
	}
})
.filter('noHTML', function () {
	return function(text) {
		return text
				.replace(/&/g, '&amp;')
				.replace(/>/g, '&gt;')
				.replace(/</g, '&lt;');
	}
});

Then, in my view, I pipe one into the other:

<span ng-bind-html-unsafe="dataFromModel | noHTML | newlines"></span>

Solution 3 - Javascript

A simpler way to do this is to make a filter that splits the text at each \n into a list, and then to use `ng-repeat.

The filter:

App.filter('newlines', function() {
  return function(text) {
    return text.split(/\n/g);
  };
});

and in the html:

<span ng-repeat="line in (text | newlines) track by $index">
	<p> {{line}}</p>
	<br>
</span>

Solution 4 - Javascript

If you do not want to destroy the layout with endless strings, use pre-line:

<p style="white-space: pre-line;">{{ MyMultiLineText}}</p>

Solution 5 - Javascript

I'm not aware if Angular has a service to strip html, but it seems you need to remove html before passing your newlines custom filter. The way I would do it is through a custom no-html directive, which would be passed a scope property and the name of a filter to apply after removing the html

<div no-html="data" post-filter="newlines"></div>

Here's the implementation

app.directive('noHtml', function($filter){
  return function(scope, element, attrs){
    var html = scope[attrs.noHtml];
    var text = angular.element("<div>").html(html).text();
    
    // post filter
    var filter = attrs.postFilter;
    var result = $filter(filter)(text);

    // apending html
    element.html(result);
  };
});

The important bit is the text variable. Here I create an intermediate DOM element and append it the HTML using the html method and then retrieve only the text with the text method. Both methods are provided by Angular's lite version of jQuery.

The following part is applying the newline filter, which is done using the $filter service.

Check the plunker here: http://plnkr.co/edit/SEtHH5eUgFEtC92Czq7T?p=preview

Solution 6 - Javascript

An update to the filter with ng-bind-html currently would be:

myApp.filter('newlines', function () {
  return function(text) {
    return text.replace(/(&#13;)?&#10;/g, '<br/>');
  }
});

and the noHTML filter is no longer required.

white-space solution is having low browser support: http://caniuse.com/#search=tab-size

Solution 7 - Javascript

Bit late to the party on this but I would suggest a small improvement to check for undefined / null strings.

Something like:

.filter('newlines', function () {
    return function(text) {
        return (text) ? text.replace(/(&#13;)?&#10;/g, '<br/>') : text;
    };
})

Or (bit tighter)

.filter('newlines', function () {
    return function(text) {
        return (text instanceof String || typeof text === "string") ? text.replace(/(&#13;)?&#10;/g, '<br/>') : text;
    };
})

Attributions

All content for this solution is sourced from the original question on Stackoverflow.

The content on this page is licensed under the Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-SA 4.0) license.

Content TypeOriginal AuthorOriginal Content on Stackoverflow
QuestionMegaHitView Question on Stackoverflow
Solution 1 - JavascriptDevin SpikowskiView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 2 - JavascriptMegaHitView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 3 - JavascriptJJW5432View Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 4 - JavascriptSebastian ViereckView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 5 - JavascriptjaimeView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 6 - JavascriptAlex MounirView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 7 - JavascriptBen EdgeView Answer on Stackoverflow