Instead of using endless .replace()
chains,
- Create a substitutions library
- Join lib Keys into a
q
uery RegExp /(a|e|i|o|u)/
- Use
.replace()
once for fun and profit
var input = document.querySelector("input");
var h1 = document.querySelector("h1");
var lib = {
'a':'e',
'e':'i',
'i':'o',
'o':'u',
'u':'y',
};
input.addEventListener("input", function(e){
var q = new RegExp("("+ Object.keys(lib).join('|') +")", "ig");
h1.textContent = this.value.trim().replace(q, $1 => lib[$1]);
});
<input type="text">
<h1></h1>
How it works:
The String.prototype.replace()
method offers a callback function, where inside it's arguments you can provide the aliases to the regexp matches ()
← Match Group. We're interested in only the first-and-only group, used as $1
.
Inside the callback we replace the matched character occurrence with the one from our substitutions lib
rary.
To make it more understandable, here's the expanded version:
//...
input.addEventListener("input", function(e){
var characterKeys = Object.keys(lib).join('|'); // "a|e|i|o|u"
var matchGroup = "("+ characterKeys +")"; // "(a|e|i|o|u)"
var reg = new RegExp(matchGroup , "ig");
// meaning: Match any of the characters present in the group
// (the | is the options delimiter).
// Finally:
var inputVal = this.value.trim();
var replacedText = inputVal.replace( reg , function(match1) {
return lib[ match1 ];
});
h1.textContent = replacedText;
});
What the return lib[ match1 ]
does is simply:
If while regex-parsing the string, the "e"
character is encountered, return
it's library replacement, in this case lib[ "e" ] === "i"
therefore the character "i"
gets inserted at that callback point.
Also, get to know Object/keys
.split("").reverse().join("")
? ... there is no in the question