2.5 KiB
description | icon |
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Link it, link it good, link it real good (and don’t forget the href). | link |
Link
The Link extension adds support for <a>
tags to the editor. The extension is headless too, there is no actual UI to add, modify or delete links. The usage example below uses the native JavaScript prompt to show you how that could work.
In a real world application, you would probably add a more sophisticated user interface.
Pasted URLs will be transformed to links automatically.
Installation
npm install @tiptap/extension-link
Settings
HTMLAttributes
Custom HTML attributes that should be added to the rendered HTML tag.
Link.configure({
HTMLAttributes: {
class: 'my-custom-class',
},
})
openOnClick
If enabled, links will be opened on click.
Default: true
Link.configure({
openOnClick: false,
})
linkOnPaste
Adds a link to the current selection if the pasted content only contains an url.
Default: true
Link.configure({
linkOnPaste: false,
})
Commands
setLink()
Links the selected text.
editor.commands.setLink({ href: 'https://example.com' })
editor.commands.setLink({ href: 'https://example.com', target: '_blank' })
toggleLink()
Adds or removes a link from the selected text.
editor.commands.toggleLink({ href: 'https://example.com' })
editor.commands.toggleLink({ href: 'https://example.com', target: '_blank' })
unsetLink()
Removes a link.
editor.commands.unsetLink()
Keyboard shortcuts
:::warning Doesn’t have a keyboard shortcut
This extension doesn’t bind a specific keyboard shortcut. You would probably open your custom UI on Mod-k
though.
:::
Get the current value
Did you know that you can use getAttributes
to find out which attributes, for example which href, is currently set? Don’t confuse it with a command (which changes the state), it’s just a method. Here is how that could look like:
this.editor.getAttributes('link').href