Does anyone have suggestions for detecting url's in a set of strings?

arrayOfStrings.forEach(function(string){
  // detect url's in strings and do something swell,
  // like creating elements with links.
});

Update: I wound up using this regex for link detection… Apparently several years later.

kLINK_DETECTION_REGEX = /(([a-z]+:\/\/)?(([a-z0-9\-]+\.)+([a-z]{2}|aero|arpa|biz|com|coop|edu|gov|info|int|jobs|mil|museum|name|nato|net|org|pro|travel|local|internal))(:[0-9]{1,5})?(\/[a-z0-9_\-\.~]+)*(\/([a-z0-9_\-\.]*)(\?[a-z0-9+_\-\.%=&]*)?)?(#[a-zA-Z0-9!$&'()*+.=-_~:@/?]*)?)(\s+|$)/gi

The full helper (with optional Handlebars support) is at gist #1654670.

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2 Answers

up vote 13 down vote accepted

First you need a good regex that matches urls. This is hard to do. See here, here and here:

...almost anything is a valid URL. There are some punctuation rules for splitting it up. Absent any punctuation, you still have a valid URL.

Check the RFC carefully and see if you can construct an "invalid" URL. The rules are very flexible.

For example ::::: is a valid URL. The path is ":::::". A pretty stupid filename, but a valid filename.

Also, ///// is a valid URL. The netloc ("hostname") is "". The path is "///". Again, stupid. Also valid. This URL normalizes to "///" which is the equivalent.

Something like "bad://///worse/////" is perfectly valid. Dumb but valid.

Anyway, this answer is not meant to give you the best regex but rather a proof of how to do the string wrapping inside the text, with JavaScript.

OK so lets just use this one: /(https?:\/\/[^\s]+)/g

Again, this is a bad regex. It will have many false positives. However it's good enough for this example.

function urlify(text) {
    var urlRegex = /(https?:\/\/[^\s]+)/g;
    return text.replace(urlRegex, function(url) {
        return '<a href="' + url + '">' + url + '</a>';
    })
    // or alternatively
    // return text.replace(urlRegex, '<a href="$1">$1</a>')
}

var text = "Find me at http://www.example.com and also at http://stackoverflow.com";
var html = urlify(text);

// html now looks like:
// "Find me at <a href="http://www.example.com">http://www.example.com</a> and also at <a href="http://stackoverflow.com">http://stackoverflow.com</a>"

So in sum try:

$$('#pad dl dd').each(function(element) {
    element.innerHTML = urlify(element.innerHTML);
});
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Cool – exactly what I was looking for. RexExp's have always been beyond me. – arbales Oct 3 '09 at 8:03
thanks it worked for me also – Peeyush Sep 21 '11 at 9:25
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i know that you're probably way past the scope of this question - however, i'm sure in time someone will stumble upon the same question again and will probably have to run down quite a few times to Google to come up with a concrete solution.

Here is what i ended up using as my regex:

var urlRegex =/(\b(https?|ftp|file):\/\/[-A-Z0-9+&@#\/%?=~_|!:,.;]*[-A-Z0-9+&@#\/%=~_|])/ig;

Cresent's function works like a charm :) so in total ,that is:

function linkify(text) {  
                    var urlRegex =/(\b(https?|ftp|file):\/\/[-A-Z0-9+&@#\/%?=~_|!:,.;]*[-A-Z0-9+&@#\/%=~_|])/ig;  
                    return text.replace(urlRegex, function(url) {  
                            return '<a href="' + url + '">' + url + '</a>';  
                        })  
                }
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