query-string with es5
fork from sindresorhus/query-string
query-string
Parse and stringify URL query strings
Install
$ npm install query-string
This module targets Node.js 6 or later and the latest version of Chrome, Firefox, and Safari. If you want support for older browsers, or, if your project is using create-react-app v1, use version 5: npm install query-string@5
.
Usage
const queryString = ; console;//=> '?foo=bar' const parsed = queryString;console;//=> {foo: 'bar'} console;//=> '#token=bada55cafe' const parsedHash = queryString;console;//=> {token: 'bada55cafe'} parsedfoo = 'unicorn';parsedilike = 'pizza'; const stringified = queryString;//=> 'foo=unicorn&ilike=pizza' locationsearch = stringified;// note that `location.search` automatically prepends a question markconsole;//=> '?foo=unicorn&ilike=pizza'
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
.
options
Type: object
decode
Type: boolean
Default: true
Decode the keys and values. URL components are decoded with decode-uri-component
.
arrayFormat
Type: string
Default: 'none'
'bracket'
: Parse arrays with bracket representation:
queryString;//=> {foo: ['1', '2', '3']}
'index'
: Parse arrays with index representation:
queryString;//=> {foo: ['1', '2', '3']}
'comma'
: Parse arrays with elements separated by comma:
queryString;//=> {foo: ['1', '2', '3']}
'none'
: Parse arrays with elements using duplicate keys:
queryString;//=> {foo: ['1', '2', '3']}
sort
Type: Function | boolean
Default: true
Supports both Function
as a custom sorting function or false
to disable sorting.
parseNumbers
Type: boolean
Default: false
queryString;//=> {foo: 1}
Parse the value as a number type instead of string type if it's a number.
parseBooleans
Type: boolean
Default: false
queryString;//=> {foo: true}
Parse the value as a boolean type instead of string type if it's a boolean.
.stringify(object, [options])
Stringify an object into a query string and sorting the keys.
options
Type: object
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'
'bracket'
: Serialize arrays using bracket representation:
queryString;//=> 'foo[]=1&foo[]=2&foo[]=3'
'index'
: Serialize arrays using index representation:
queryString;//=> 'foo[0]=1&foo[1]=2&foo[2]=3'
'comma'
: Serialize arrays by separating elements with comma:
queryString;//=> 'foo=1,2,3'
'none'
: Serialize arrays by using duplicate keys:
queryString;//=> 'foo=1&foo=2&foo=3'
sort
Type: Function | boolean
Supports both Function
as a custom sorting function or false
to disable sorting.
const order = 'c' 'a' 'b'; queryString;//=> 'c=3&a=1&b=2'
queryString;//=> 'b=1&c=2&a=3'
If omitted, keys are sorted using Array#sort()
, which means, converting them to strings and comparing strings in Unicode code point order.
.extract(string)
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;//=> {url: 'https://foo.bar', query: {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;//=> 'foo=bar&nested=%7B%22unicorn%22%3A%22cake%22%7D'
However, there is support for multiple instances of the same key:
queryString;//=> {likes: ['cake', 'icecream'], name: 'bob'} queryString;//=> 'color=taupe&color=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;//=> 'foo=false' queryString;//=> 'foo' queryString;//=> ''
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