query-string
Parse and stringify URL query strings
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Install
$ npm install query-string
Usage
const queryString = require('query-string');
console.log(location.search);
const parsed = queryString.parse(location.search);
console.log(parsed);
console.log(location.hash);
const parsedHash = queryString.parse(location.hash);
console.log(parsedHash);
parsed.foo = 'unicorn';
parsed.ilike = 'pizza';
const stringified = queryString.stringify(parsed);
location.search = stringified;
console.log(location.search);
API
.parse(string, [options])
Parse a query string into an object. Leading ?
or #
are ignored, so you can pass location.search
or location.hash
directly.
The returned object is created with Object.create(null)
and thus does not have a prototype
.
URI components are decoded with decode-uri-component
.
arrayFormat
Type: string
Default: 'none'
Supports both index
for an indexed array representation or bracket
for a bracketed array representation.
bracket
: stands for parsing correctly arrays with bracket representation on the query string, such as:
queryString.parse('foo[]=1&foo[]=2&foo[]=3', {arrayFormat: 'bracket'});
index
: stands for parsing taking the index into account, such as:
queryString.parse('foo[0]=1&foo[1]=2&foo[3]=3', {arrayFormat: 'index'});
none
: is the default option and removes any bracket representation, such as:
queryString.parse('foo=1&foo=2&foo=3');
.stringify(object, [options])
Stringify an object into a query string, sorting the keys.
strict
Type: boolean
Default: true
Strictly encode URI components with strict-uri-encode. It uses encodeURIComponent
if set to false. You probably don't care about this option.
encode
Type: boolean
Default: true
URL encode the keys and values.
arrayFormat
Type: string
Default: 'none'
Supports both index
for an indexed array representation or bracket
for a bracketed array representation.
bracket
: stands for parsing correctly arrays with bracket representation on the query string, such as:
queryString.stringify({foo: [1,2,3]}, {arrayFormat: 'bracket'});
index
: stands for parsing taking the index into account, such as:
queryString.stringify({foo: [1,2,3]}, {arrayFormat: 'index'});
none
: is the default option and removes any bracket representation, such as:
queryString.stringify({foo: [1,2,3]});
sort
Type: Function
boolean
Supports both Function
as a custom sorting function or false
to disable sorting.
const order = ['c', 'a', 'b'];
queryString.stringify({ a: 1, b: 2, c: 3}, {
sort: (m, n) => order.indexOf(m) >= order.indexOf(n)
});
queryString.stringify({ b: 1, c: 2, a: 3}, {sort: false});
If omitted, keys are sorted using Array#sort
, which means, converting them to strings and comparing strings in Unicode code point order.
Extract a query string from a URL that can be passed into .parse()
.
.parseUrl(string, [options])
Extract the URL and the query string as an object.
The options
are the same as for .parse()
.
Returns an object with a url
and query
property.
queryString.parseUrl('https://foo.bar?foo=bar');
Nesting
This module intentionally doesn't support nesting as it's not spec'd and varies between implementations, which causes a lot of edge cases.
You're much better off just converting the object to a JSON string:
queryString.stringify({
foo: 'bar',
nested: JSON.stringify({
unicorn: 'cake'
})
});
However, there is support for multiple instances of the same key:
queryString.parse('likes=cake&name=bob&likes=icecream');
queryString.stringify({color: ['taupe', 'chartreuse'], id: '515'});
Falsy values
Sometimes you want to unset a key, or maybe just make it present without assigning a value to it. Here is how falsy values are stringified:
queryString.stringify({foo: false});
queryString.stringify({foo: null});
queryString.stringify({foo: undefined});
License
MIT © Sindre Sorhus