I recently needed to remove all HTML from the content of my own application.
In this case, it was to share a plain text version for meta descriptions, but it can be used for several outputs.
Today I'll show you two ways of doing this, which are not fully safe if your application accepts user inputs.
Users love to break scripts like this and especially method one can give you some vulnerabilities.
1. JavaScript removing HTML tags with innerHTML
One method is to create a temporary HTML element and get the innerText from it.
const original = `<h1>Welcome to my blog</h1>
<p>Some more content here</p><br /><img alt="a > 2" src="img.jpg" />`;
let removeHTML = input => {
let tmp = document.createElement('div');
tmp.innerHTML = input;
return tmp.textContent || tmp.innerText || '';
}
console.log(removeHTML(original));
This will result in the following:
'Welcome to my blog
Some more content here'
As you can see we removed every HTML tag including a bogus image.
2. JavaScript removing HTML tags with regex
My personal favourite for my own applications is using a regex, just a cleaner solution and I trust my own inputs to be valid HTML.
How it works:
const original = `<h1>Welcome to my blog</h1>
<p>Some more content here</p><br /><img src="img.jpg" />`;
const regex = original.replace(/<[^>]*>/g, '');
console.log(regex);
This will result in:
'Welcome to my blog
Some more content here'
As you can see, we removed the heading, paragraph, break and image.
This is because we escape all < >
formats.
It could be breached by something silly like:
const original = `<h1>Welcome to my blog</h1>
<p>Some more content here</p><br /><img alt="a > 2" src="img.jpg" />`;
I know it's not valid HTML anyhow and one should use >
for this.
But running this will result in:
'Welcome to my blog
Some more content here 2" src="img.jpg" />'
It's just something to be aware of.
You can have a play with both methods in this Codepen.
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