How can I strip the HTML from a string in JavaScript?
4 Answers
cleanText = strInputCode.replace(/<\/?[^>]+(>|$)/g, "");
Distilled from this website (web.achive).
This regex looks for <
, an optional slash /
, one or more characters that are not >
, then either >
or $
(the end of the line)
Examples:
'<div>Hello</div>' ==> 'Hello'
^^^^^ ^^^^^^
'Unterminated Tag <b' ==> 'Unterminated Tag '
^^
But it is not bulletproof:
'If you are < 13 you cannot register' ==> 'If you are '
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
'<div data="score > 42">Hello</div>' ==> ' 42">Hello'
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^
If someone is trying to break your application, this regex will not protect you. It should only be used if you already know the format of your input. As other knowledgable and mostly sane people have pointed out, to safely strip tags, you must use a parser.
If you do not have acccess to a convenient parser like the DOM, and you cannot trust your input to be in the right format, you may be better off using a package like sanitize-html, and also other sanitizers are available.
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40
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135@f.ardelian people who make a hobby out of breaking the ill-use of regular expressions for parsing general HTML are great. It is a great hobby.– ZiggyMay 7, 2013 at 18:39
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17@f.ardelian no! Really! Every time I read one of these comment threads I get a little thrill. "Ho ho ho," I think "<img alt=\"a>b\" src=\"a_b.gif\" />, so clever!"– ZiggyMay 8, 2013 at 5:28
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35@f.ardelian That would be buggy html, it had to be <img alt="a>b" .– peterhJan 26, 2015 at 11:55
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15
Using the browser's parser is the probably the best bet in current browsers. The following will work, with the following caveats:
- Your HTML is valid within a
<div>
element. HTML contained within<body>
or<html>
or<head>
tags is not valid within a<div>
and may therefore not be parsed correctly. textContent
(the DOM standard property) andinnerText
(non-standard) properties are not identical. For example,textContent
will include text within a<script>
element whileinnerText
will not (in most browsers). This only affects IE <=8, which is the only major browser not to supporttextContent
.- The HTML does not contain
<script>
elements. - The HTML is not
null
- The HTML comes from a trusted source. Using this with arbitrary HTML allows arbitrary untrusted JavaScript to be executed. This example is from a comment by Mike Samuel on the duplicate question:
<img onerror='alert(\"could run arbitrary JS here\")' src=bogus>
Code:
var html = "<p>Some HTML</p>";
var div = document.createElement("div");
div.innerHTML = html;
var text = div.textContent || div.innerText || "";
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6Doesn't work when the string contains something like <script>alert('hi');</script>. Then it crashes with "illegal token at" etc..– TillAug 19, 2012 at 1:04
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2Good caveats. In case it is not already clear I wanted to add that Firefox will crash on
div.innerHTML = html
if the value ofhtml
isNULL
. Worse, it won't properly report the error (instead says parent function hasTypeError
). Chrome/IE do not crash. Jan 24, 2013 at 22:20 -
5SECURITY ISSUE ... This could be vulnerable as you're setting div.innerHTML ... i'm sure you don't wanted to get some unwanted script executed. ... manual cleanup would be cool. Aug 9, 2016 at 11:44
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4Elegant solution, but isn't universal. It doesn't work if you use it on node server because of the document dependency– HarijoeApr 14, 2017 at 10:17
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1<p>test</p><p>test</p> gives testtest, should have spave or newline between– eomeroffJan 20, 2020 at 10:36
var html = "<p>Hello, <b>World</b>";
var div = document.createElement("div");
div.innerHTML = html;
alert(div.innerText); // Hello, World
That pretty much the best way of doing it, you're letting the browser do what it does best -- parse HTML.
Edit: As noted in the comments below, this is not the most cross-browser solution. The most cross-browser solution would be to recursively go through all the children of the element and concatenate all text nodes that you find. However, if you're using jQuery, it already does it for you:
alert($("<p>Hello, <b>World</b></p>").text());
Check out the text method.
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4
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9A concise jQuery could look like:
var html = "<b>test</b>"; var text = $("<div/>").html(html).text();
Using$("<div/>")
lets you reuse the same element and less memory for consecutive calls or for loops.– SukimaJan 4, 2012 at 21:14 -
3Same problem, crash it with: $(...).html('<script>alert("hi");</script>').text();– TillAug 19, 2012 at 1:05
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1and check out the text method for
var txt = "<p>my line</p><p>my other line</p>some other text"; alert($(txt).text();
where you don't proxy the string within a dom node. 3 lines in, 2 lines out.– frumbertOct 17, 2012 at 2:49 -
1The jQuery solution is the best for all of us (most of us, I guess) who already use it almost everywhere. Just keep in mind that if the string is in a variable, you will have to insert it in an element, e.g.
let text = $(`<div>${html_fragment}</div>`)
. Dec 7, 2020 at 16:21
I know this question has an accepted answer, but I feel that it doesn't work in all cases.
For completeness and since I spent too much time on this, here is what we did: we ended up using a function from php.js (which is a pretty nice library for those more familiar with PHP but also doing a little JavaScript every now and then):
http://phpjs.org/functions/strip_tags:535
It seemed to be the only piece of JavaScript code which successfully dealt with all the different kinds of input I stuffed into my application. That is, without breaking it – see my comments about the <script />
tag above.
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2^ this, definitely better than the accepted answer for Chrome 30.0 and above– ebtOct 4, 2013 at 20:03
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Works nicely on server-side without DOM support, e.g. Google Apps Script.– MogsdadDec 3, 2014 at 16:08
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1If you use the allowed param you are vulnerable to XSS:
stripTags('<p onclick="alert(1)">mytext</p>', '<p>')
returns<p onclick="alert(1)">mytext</p>
Feb 20, 2016 at 1:23 -
2