Low-level link (text, URLs, emails, phone numbers, user tags) parsing library in Dart.
Required Dart >=2.12 (has null-safety support).
Install by adding this package to your pubspec.yaml
:
dependencies:
linkify: ^5.0.0
import 'package:linkify/linkify.dart';
linkify("Made by https://cretezy.com person@example.com");
// Output: [TextElement: 'Made by ', UrlElement: 'https://cretezy.com' (cretezy.com), TextElement: ' ', EmailElement: 'person@example.com' (person@example.com)]
You can pass LinkifyOptions
to the linkify
method to change the humanization of URLs (turning https://example.com
to example.com
):
linkify("https://cretezy.com");
// [UrlElement: 'https://cretezy.com' (cretezy.com)]
linkify("https://cretezy.com", options: LinkifyOptions(humanize: false));
// [UrlElement: 'https://cretezy.com' (https://cretezy.com)]
humanize
: Removes http/https from shown URLsremoveWww
: Removeswww.
from shown URLslooseUrl
: Enables loose URL parsing (should parse most URLs such asabc.com/xyz
)defaultToHttps
: When used with [looseUrl], default tohttps
instead ofhttp
excludeLastPeriod
: Excludes.
at end of URLs
You can pass linkifiers to linkify
as such:
linkify("@cretezy", linkifiers: [UserTagLinkifier()]);
Available linkifiers:
EmailLinkifier
UrlLinkifier
PhoneNumberLinkifier
UserTagLinkifier
You can write custom linkifiers for phone numbers or other types of links. Look at the URL linkifier for an example.
This is the flow:
- Calls
parse
in the linkifier with a list ofLinkifyElement
. This starts as[TextElement(text)]
- Your parsers then splits each element into it's parts. For example,
[TextElement("Hello https://example.com")]
would become[TextElement("Hello "), UrlElement("https://example.com")]
- Each parsers is ran in order of how they are passed to the main
linkify
function. By default, this is URL and email linkifiers