README.md in truncato-0.7.5 vs README.md in truncato-0.7.7

- old
+ new

@@ -18,14 +18,15 @@ ``` The configuration options are: * `max_length`: The size, in characters, to truncate (`30` by default) -* `tail`: The string to append when the truncation occurs ('...' by default) +* `filtered_attributes`: Array of attribute names that will be removed in the truncated string. This allows you to make the truncated string shorter by excluding the content of attributes you can discard in some given context, e.g HTML `style` attribute. +* `filtered_tags`: Array of tags that will be removed in the truncated string. If a tag is excluded, all the nested tags under it will be excluded too. * `count_tags`: Boolean value indicating whether tags size should be considered when truncating (`true` by default) -* `filtered_attributes`: Array of attribute names that will be removed from the output. This allows you to make the truncated string shorter by excluding the content of attributes you can discard in some given context, e.g HTML `style` attribute. * `tail_before_final_tag`: Boolean value indicating whether to apply a tail before the final closing tag (`false` by default) * `comments`: Boolean value indicating whether to include comments in parsed results (`false` by default) +* `tail`: The string to append when the truncation occurs ('...' by default) * `count_tail`: Boolean value indicating whether to include the tail within the bounds of the provided max length (`false` by default) ## Performance Truncato was designed with performance in mind. Its main motivation was that existing libs couldn't truncate a multiple-MB document into a few-KB one in a reasonable time. It uses the [Nokogiri](http://nokogiri.org/) SAX parser.