Random Word Slugs
A handy utility to create those random word slugs (e.g., generous-pink-biscuit
) you see all over the place.
Installation
Install with npm
npm i random-word-slugs
Install with yarn
yarn add random-word-slugs
Usage
The random-word-slugs
package can be used without any parameters and defaults to a three-word, kebab-cased slug. Currently, the default configuration has 30,021,543 unique slug combinations.
import { generateSlug } from "random-word-slugs";
const slug = generateSlug();
console.log(slug);
// "elegant-green-coat"
The generateSlug
function takes up to two arguments. The first argument is the numberOfWords
in the slug (defaulting to three) and the second argument is the package options
. The following example makes use of both parameters and provides an option to title-case the output:
const slug = generateSlug(4, { format: "title" });
console.log(slug);
// "Elegant Happy Green Coat"
Available Options
The options
object can have any partial set of the following key/value pairs:
{
format: "kebab" | "camel" | "sentence" | "lower" | "title",
partsOfSpeech: ("adjective" | "noun")[],
categories: {
adjective: ("color" | "appearance" | etc...)[],
noun: ("people" | "animals" | etc...)[]
}
}
Note that, if provided, partsOfSpeech
must be an array the same length as the number of words you're requesting. If using Typescript, the compiler will check this for you.
An example of a completed options
object might look like this for a three-word slug:
const options = {
format: "camel",
partsOfSpeech: ["adjective", "noun", "adjective"],
categories: {
adjective: ["color", "appearance"],
noun: ["animals"],
},
};
Based on these options, our output might look something like blueBearTall
.
Typescript Support for Options
The package exposes a RandomWordOptions<N>
type, with N
being the number of words in the slug. If you want to use this type to specify an options object, it might look something like this (although a Partial
options object is certainly allowed and probably more common):
import { RandomWordOptions } from "random-word-slugs";
const options: RandomWordOptions<3> = {
format: "title",
categories: {
noun: ["animals", "place"],
adjective: ["color", "personality"],
},
partsOfSpeech: ["adjective", "noun", "adjective"],
};
Importantly, the generic 3
here will enforce partsOfSpeech
being a three-element tuple.
Categories
The categories
option allows you to generate your random slug from a subset of categories. Perhaps you only want colorful animals! You can specify one or many categories for the adjectives and nouns that comprise your random slug. The following is a list of categories currently in the repository:
Adjective Categories:
- appearance
- color
- condition
- personality
- quantity
- shapes
- size
- sounds
- taste
- time
- touch
Noun Categories:
- animals
- business
- education
- family
- food
- health
- media
- people
- place
- profession
- religion
- science
- sports
- technology
- thing
- time
- transportation
Assessing the Combinatorics
When using the package, you might be curious about how many different slug combinations exist. The package exposes a function to help with this called totalUniqueSlugs
. This function can be used without arguments and will assume a three-slug adjective-adjective-noun
format:
import { totalUniqueSlugs } from "random-word-slugs";
const totalSlugs = totalUniqueSlugs();
console.log(totalSlugs);
// 100000
Note: The 100000
number shown here is just an example and not a representation of the total number of slugs in the package at any moment (that evolves as words are added).
You can also assess the combinatoric space if you have a different number of words, word ordering, or a subset of categories. In the following example, we'll assume a four-word slug, in the order adjective-noun-adjective-noun
, with only color adjectives and animal nouns:
import { totalUniqueSlugs } from "random-word-slugs";
const totalSlugs = totalUniqueSlugs(4, {
partsOfSpeech: ["adjective", "noun", "adjective", "noun"],
categories: {
adjective: ["color"],
noun: ["animals"],
},
});
console.log(totalSlugs);
// 1000
Again, this 1000
is just an example. Importantly, this could help you determine that you're not comfortable with this limited combinatoric space and you can choose to add additional categories.