build-url-ts
A library that builds a URL, including its path, query parameters and fragment identifier. Works in node and in the browser.
This is a fork from https://github.com/steverydz/build-url to add typescript support for the library
Installation
To install with npm:
npm install build-url-ts --save
Usage
import buildUrl from 'build-url-ts';
buildUrl('http://example.com', {
path: 'about',
hash: 'contact',
queryParams: {
foo: bar,
bar: ['foo', 'bar']
}
});
Options
The buildUrl
function accepts two arguments. The first is a URL e.g. http://example.com
. The second is an object where you can specify the path
, hash
, lowerCase
, and an object of queryParams
:
buildUrl('http://example.com', {
path: 'about',
hash: 'contact',
queryParams: {
foo: 'bar',
bar: 'baz'
}
});
// returns http://example.com/about?foo=bar&bar=baz#contact
If you pass an array to the queryParams
object, it will be transformed to a comma separated list:
buildUrl('http://example.com', {
queryParams: {
foo: 'bar',
bar: ['one', 'two', 'three']
}
});
// returns http://example.com?foo=bar&bar=one,two,three
If you want to change the path
, hash
and queryParams
case to all lowercase then pass lowerCase
as true in arguments, default value of this will be false
:
buildUrl('http://example.com', {
path: 'AbouT',
hash: 'ConTacT',
lowerCase: true,
queryParams: {
foo: 'bAr',
bar: ['oNe', 'TWO', 'thrEE', 123]
}
});
// returns http://example.com/about?foo=bar&bar=one,two,three,123#contact
If you pass an array to the queryParams
object, and want that they should not be comma separated use disableCSV
:
buildUrl('http://example.com', {
disableCSV: true,
queryParams: {
foo: 'bar',
bar: ['one', 'two', 'three']
}
});
// returns http://example.com?foo=bar&bar=one&bar=two&bar=three
If you only want the query string, path, hash, or any combination of the three you can skip the URL parameter or pass in an empty string or null:
buildUrl('', {
queryParams: {
foo: 'bar',
bar: 'baz'
}
});
// returns ?foo=bar&bar=baz
buildUrl(null, {
queryParams: {
foo: 'bar',
bar: 'baz'
}
});
// returns ?foo=bar&bar=baz
buildUrl({
queryParams: {
foo: 'bar',
bar: 'baz'
}
});
Any null values in the queryParams
object will be treated as empty strings:
buildUrl('http://example.com', {
queryParams: {
foo: 'bar',
bar: null
}
});
// returns http://example.com?foo=bar&bar=
License
This is licensed under an MIT License. See details