Implementing String.Tweetify in MooTools

By  on  
TwitterGitter

Twitter has damn near taken over the world. Everything's Twitter. Twitter this. Twitter that. TwitterGitter. Twitter everything. I'm more used to reading Twitter-speak (short condensed sentences, #'s, @'s, etc.) now than I am plain English. And since Twitter is only going to continue to get more popular, we better get used to using it on our websites and providing users with formatted tweets. MooTools makes it easy to format tweets with links.

The MooTools JavaScript

//implement
String.implement({
	tweetify: function() {
		return this.replace(/(https?:\/\/\S+)/gi,'<a href="$1">$1</a>').replace(/(^|\s)@(\w+)/g,'$1<a href="http://twitter.com/$2">@$2</a>').replace(/(^|\s)#(\w+)/g,'$1<a href="http://search.twitter.com/search?q=%23$2">#$2</a>');
	}
});
//usage
var original = '@davidwalshblog I love your #Mootools LazyLoad plugin!  https://davidwalsh.name/lazyload';
var tweetified = original.tweetify(); //becomes: <a href="http://twitter.com/davidwalshblog">@davidwalshblog</a> I love your <a href="http://search.twitter.com/search?q=%23Mootools">#Mootools</a> LazyLoad plugin! <a href="https://davidwalsh.name/lazyload">https://davidwalsh.name/lazyload </a>

Now you can instantly tweetify any string!

Recent Features

  • By
    Create a CSS Flipping Animation

    CSS animations are a lot of fun; the beauty of them is that through many simple properties, you can create anything from an elegant fade in to a WTF-Pixar-would-be-proud effect. One CSS effect somewhere in between is the CSS flip effect, whereby there's...

  • By
    Creating Scrolling Parallax Effects with CSS

    Introduction For quite a long time now websites with the so called "parallax" effect have been really popular. In case you have not heard of this effect, it basically includes different layers of images that are moving in different directions or with different speed. This leads to a...

Incredible Demos

  • By
    Element Position Swapping Using MooTools 1.2

    We all know that MooTools 1.2 can do some pretty awesome animations. What if we want to quickly make two element swap positions without a lot of fuss? Now you can by implementing a MooTools swap() method. MooTools 1.2 Implementation MooTools 1.2 Usage To call the swap...

  • By
    Image Reflections with CSS

    Image reflection is a great way to subtly spice up an image.  The first method of creating these reflections was baking them right into the images themselves.  Within the past few years, we've introduced JavaScript strategies and CANVAS alternatives to achieve image reflections without...

Discussion

  1. I think this example is not usefull only for twittify but is a good practice to show and teach how to extend in our architecture every Object.

    Changing our prospective of OOP developer we can imagine to transform our objects and give them a bit of intelligence like languages like Ruby do, for example :)

  2. That right there is glorious. Love it.

  3. Ororok Orebuk

    You can do the same with String.prototype.tweetify=function(){ ... };

  4. How would you do this in php or jQuery?

  5. Darkimmortal

    Doesn’t extending native objects in Javascript screw things up?

    Or is that another myth?

  6. @Sean: jQuery doesn’t lend itself as well to this. I started creating a jQuery version and got frustrated and gave up. I may try again.

    @Darkimmortal: Myth. Definitely a myth.

  7. Nice thing – could be useful for a javascript “tweet this” button implementation.

  8. Here is dentify for using with identi.ca and other laconica / statusnet servers:

    String.implement({
        dentify: function(server) {
            return this.replace(/(https?:\/\/\S+)/gi,'<a href="$1">$1</a>'
                      ).replace(/(^|\s)@(\w+)/g,
                          '$1<a href="'+server+'/$2">@$2</a>'
                      ).replace(/(^|\s)#(\w+)/g,
                          '$1<a href="'+server+
                          '/search/notice?q=%23$2&search=Search">#$2</a>'
                      ).replace(/(^|\s)!(\w+)/g,
                          '$1<a href="'+server+
                          '/search/group?q=%23$2&search=Search">#$2</a>');
        }
    });
    

    You will have to give it a “server” string like “http://identi.ca”.

    I used it for my identi.ca / twitter widget

    Big THX again for this useful thing!

  9. Sorry for double posting – had to change the one line:
    (too much copy paste – forgot to put a “!” instead of “#” and killed the “%23”)
    this works correct:

        String.implement({
        dentify: function(server) {
        return this.replace(/(https?:\/\/\S+)/gi,’$1’
        ).replace(/(^|\s)@(\w+)/g,
        ‘$1@$2’
        ).replace(/(^|\s)#(\w+)/g,
        ‘$1#$2’
        ).replace(/(^|\s)!(\w+)/g,
        ‘$1!$2’);
        }
        });
  10. Good article but it would be smarter to prototype the javascript String object like Ororok said. Then you don’t need any extra javascript framework.

  11. nice trick , yesterday i was making a twitter widget profile using mootools and i got my self confused on how to make tweets wel-formatted on mootools ??
    this wat u used before

    var status = twitters[i].text.replace(/((https?|s?ftp|ssh)\:\/\/[^"\s\]*[^.,;'">\:\s\\)\]\!])/g, function(url) {
          return ''+url+'';
        }).replace(/\B@([_a-z0-9]+)/ig, function(reply) {
          return  reply.charAt(0)+''+reply.substring(1)+'';
        });
    

    Thanks.

  12. Abby Torrendon

    Hi, I just want to make a request, could you make a blank demo page of this code? I was trying to figure the codes out (kinda newbie in MooTools) and I would like to add this to my school project (my prof wants us to make a sample portfolio site). Thanks in advance.

  13. Abby Torrendon

    By the way, I’m currently using MooTools 1.2, but the code won’t mess up if I’m using the old version, right?

Wrap your code in <pre class="{language}"></pre> tags, link to a GitHub gist, JSFiddle fiddle, or CodePen pen to embed!