I have some vars with sentences in them, where I have to replace the apostrophe with "'"
. However, I'd like for a user to be able to tweet these out. When I add them to the tweet, it obviously just writes the ASCII code out as if it were normal English. Is there a way to convert these into proper punctuation before they're sent off to be tweeted?
1 Answer
If you are using jQuery, you could do it like this:
$('<div>').html("'").text();
If you are using plain JavaScript, you could do it like this:
var element = document.createElement('div');
element.innerHTML = "'";
element.textContent;
Here are two runnable examples:
jQuery:
console.log($('<div>').html("'").text());
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.1.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
plain JavaScript:
var element = document.createElement('div');
element.innerHTML = "'";
console.log(element.textContent);
'
. There's no reason you can't have a'
in a variable in JavaScript, and no reason you can't have a'
in HTML text literally (rather than using the character reference). But if you have a variable where you've done that, e.g.:var foo = "That's an interesting thing to do.";
you can convert it to'
viareplace
:foo = foo.replace(/'/g, "'");