The toWellFormed()
method of String values returns a string where all lone surrogates of this string are replaced with the Unicode replacement character U+FFFD.
Syntax
toWellFormed()
Parameters
None.
Return value
A new string that is a copy of this string, with all lone surrogates replaced with the Unicode replacement character U+FFFD. If str
is well formed, a new string is still returned (essentially a copy of str
).
Description
Strings in JavaScript are UTF-16 encoded. UTF-16 encoding has the concept of surrogate pairs, which is introduced in detail in the UTF-16 characters, Unicode code points, and grapheme clusters section.
toWellFormed()
iterates through the code units of this string, and replaces any lone surrogates with the Unicode replacement character U+FFFD �
. This ensures that the returned string is well-formed and can be used in functions that expect well-formed strings, such as encodeURI. Compared to a custom implementation, toWellFormed()
is more efficient, as engines can directly access the internal representation of strings.
When ill-formed strings are used in certain contexts, such as , they are automatically converted to well-formed strings using the same replacement character. When lone surrogates are rendered, they are also rendered as the replacement character (a diamond with a question mark inside).
Examples
Using toWellFormed()
const strings = [
// Lone leading surrogate
"ab\uD800",
"ab\uD800c",
// Lone trailing surrogate
"\uDFFFab",
"c\uDFFFab",
// Well-formed
"abc",
"ab\uD83D\uDE04c",
];
for (const str of strings) {
console.log(str.toWellFormed());
}
// Logs:
// "ab�"
// "ab�c"
// "�ab"
// "c�ab"
// "abc"
// "ab😄c"
Avoiding errors in encodeURI()
encodeURI throws an error if the string passed is not well-formed. This can be avoided by using toWellFormed()
to convert the string to a well-formed string first.
const illFormed = "https://example.com/search?q=\uD800";
try {
encodeURI(illFormed);
} catch (e) {
console.log(e); // URIError: URI malformed
}
console.log(encodeURI(illFormed.toWellFormed())); // "https://example.com/search?q=%EF%BF%BD"