Capture the domain till the ending characters $, \?, /, :
. I need a regex that captures example.com
in all of these.
example.com:3000
example.com?pass=gas
example.com/
example.com
Capture the domain till the ending characters $, \?, /, :
. I need a regex that captures example.com
in all of these.
example.com:3000
example.com?pass=gas
example.com/
example.com
If you actually have valid URLs, this will work:
var urls = [
'http://example.com:3000',
'http://example.com?pass=gas',
'http://example.com/',
'http://example.com'
];
for (x in urls) {
var a = document.createElement('a');
a.href = urls[x];
console.log(a.hostname);
}
//=> example.com
//=> example.com
//=> example.com
//=> example.com
Note, using regex for this kind of thing is silly when the language you're using has other built-in methods.
Other properties available on A
elements.
var a = document.createElement('a');
a.href = "http://example.com:3000/path/to/something?query=string#fragment"
a.protocol //=> http:
a.hostname //=> example.com
a.port //=> 3000
a.pathname //=> /path/to/something
a.search //=> ?query=string
a.hash //=> #fragment
a.host //=> example.com:3000
Upon further consideration, I looked into the Node.js docs and found this little gem: url#parse
The code above can be rewritten as:
var url = require('url');
var urls = [
'http://example.com:3000',
'http://example.com?pass=gas',
'http://example.com/',
'http://example.com'
];
for (x in urls) {
console.log(url.parse(urls[x]).hostname);
}
//=> example.com
//=> example.com
//=> example.com
//=> example.com
See the revision history of this post if you'd like to see how to solve this problem using jsdom
and nodejs
url#parse
method. Please see Edit #2 above.
Since you're using node, just use the built-in url.parse()
method; you want the resulting hostname
property:
var url=require('url');
var urls = [
'http://example.com:3000',
'http://example.com?pass=gas',
'http://example.com/',
'http://example.com'
];
urls.forEach(function(x) {
console.log(url.parse(x).hostname);
});
{ pathname: '0', path: '0', href: '0' } { pathname: '1', path: '1', href: '1' } { pathname: '2', path: '2', href: '2' } { pathname: '3', path: '3', href: '3' }
Nov 22, 2012 at 7:31
for (...in...)
to iterate over arrays.
A new challenger has appeared. According to node docs, you can also use
var url = new URL(urlString);
console.log(url.hostname);
https://nodejs.org/api/url.html#url_the_whatwg_url_api
This seems to be a more current way.
I'm using Node ^10
and this is how I extract the hostname from a URL.
var url = URL.parse('https://stackoverflow.com/q/13506460/2535178')
console.log(url.hostname)
//=> stackoverflow.com
I reccomend using the new URL class that is now included in most browsers.
var urls = [
'http://example.com:3000',
'http://example.com?pass=gas',
'http://example.com/',
'http://example.com'
];
urls.forEach(url => {
const u = new URL(url)
console.log(u.hostname)
})
/^((?:[a-z0-9-_]+\.)*[a-z0-9-_]+\.?)(?::([0-9]+))?(.*)$/i
matches are host, port, path
"http"
as a matched string while the string you say you run regexp on doesn't contain "http"
substring. You either patched the execution result or source code of your jS virtual machine to achieve this results. "stackoverflow.com/questions/13506460/how-to-extract...".match(/^((?:[a-z0-9-]+\.)*[a-z0-9-]+\.?)(?::([0-9]+))?(.*)$/i)
works perfectly fine resulting in ["stackoverflow.com/questions/13506460/how-to-extract...", "stackoverflow.com", undefined, "/questions/13506460/how-to-extract..."]
Jul 17, 2014 at 14:01
/^(?:https?:\/\/)?((?:[a-z0-9-_]+\.)*[a-z0-9-_]+\.?)(?::([0-9]+))?(.*)$/i
(works only for http and https or no URI scheme at all). Fiddle is here: jsfiddle.net/WLGmv/1
Jul 18, 2014 at 13:44