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Hi

<a class="clickme" href="test.php?id=100&status=pending&time=2009" id="p_100">Click me</a>

$('.clickme').click(function(event) {
event.preventDefault();
var stringId = $(this).attr("id");
    var mId = stringId.substring(2)
....

I can retrieve the value of id using ID of anchor element. I think I should be able to get it directly from href. So how do I retrieve value of id and status from HREF (url query string)?

I am using Jquery.

Thank you for your help.

UPDATE: Also how do I can get all of the URL value .. i.e. "test.php?id=100&blah=blah"?

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6 Answers

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This code:

function querySt(ji) {
    hu = $(".clickme").attr("href");
    gy = hu.split("&");
    for (i=0;i<gy.length;i++) {
        ft = gy[i].split("=");
        if (ft[0] == ji) {
            return ft[1];
        }
    }
}

To use it:

document.write(querySt("id"));
document.write(querySt("status"));

Answer to your 'update':

http://ilovethecode.com/Javascript/Javascript-Tutorials-How_To-Easy/Get_Query_String_Using_Javascript.shtml

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thanks for you answer .. – Wbdvlpr Jul 23 at 13:36
Ok .. so i have to find it through a for loop? I was thinking I could access it directly .. something like attr("status")!!! – Wbdvlpr Jul 23 at 13:39
Now you can, just do querySt("status"); I don't think jQuery has got a build in function for URI parsing. – Koning Baard XIV Jul 23 at 13:59
This will work for everything but the id. The key for that using this code would be "test.php?id" not "id". You need to first remove everything before the "?" then split on ampersands. – tvanfosson Jul 23 at 14:28
How about throwing in some decodeURIComponent calls in there? – Ates Goral Sep 14 at 21:35
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var stringId = $(this).attr("id"); // this will return p_100
var stringId = $(this).attr("id").split('_')[1]; // this will return 100

var attr= $(this).attr("href"); // this will return all href attribute value

UPDATE

//href="test.php?id=100&status=pending&time=2009"
var attrFromAnchor= $(this).attr("href").split('?')[1].split('&')[0].split('=')[1]; // returns 100
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thanks for your answer .. i can get value from ID of element (already done).. but I need to get it from URL of Anchor. – Wbdvlpr Jul 23 at 13:32
Take a look at my answer above, it should work. – Koning Baard XIV Jul 23 at 13:37
@Wbdvlpr check the update – Elzo Valugi Jul 23 at 15:34
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You need to substring it. If you need an example, leave a comment.

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vote up 1 vote down

There are a lot of good solutions here but I figured I'd post my own. Here's a quick little function I threw together which will parse a query string in the format from either window.location.search or from a provided search string value;

It returns a hash of id value pairs so you could reference it in the form of:

var values = getQueryParams();
values['id']
values['blah']

Here's the code:

/*
 This function assumes that the query string provided will
 contain a ? character before the query string itself.
 It will not work if the ? is not present.

 In addition, sites which don't use ? to delimit the start of the query string
 (ie. Google) won't work properly with this script.
 */
function getQueryParams( val ) {
	//Use the window.location.search if we don't have a val.
	var query = val || window.location.search;
	query = query.split('?')[1]
	var pairs = query.split('&');
	var retval = {};
	var check = [];
	for( var i = 0; i < pairs.length; i++ ) {
		check = pairs[i].split('=');
		retval[decodeURIComponent(check[0])] = decodeURIComponent(check[1]);
	}

	return retval;
}

To get the value of the query string from the URL without string parsing you can do:

window.location.search.substr(1)

If you want the name of the page before the ? you still need to do a little string parsing:

var path = window.location.pathname.replace(/^.*\/(.*)$/,'$1');
var query = path + window.location.search;
//If your URL is http://www.myserver.com/some/long/path/big_long%20file.php?some=file&equals=me
//you will get: big_long%20file.php?some=file&equals=me

Hope this helps! Cheers.

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This implementation doesn't take into account URL-encoded names and values. – Ates Goral Sep 14 at 21:36
@Ates Goral you're absolutely correct. It does not take that case into account. I've updated my solution as per your suggestion. – coderjoe Sep 17 at 18:00
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Here's a concise (yet complete) implementation for getting ALL name/value pairs from a query string:

function getQueryParams(qs) {
    qs = qs.split("+").join(" ");
    var params = {};
    var tokens;

    while (tokens = /[?&]?([^=]+)=([^&]*)/g.exec(qs)) {
        params[decodeURIComponent(tokens[1])]
            = decodeURIComponent(tokens[2]);
    }

    return params;
}

//var query = getQueryParams(document.location.search);
//alert(query.foo);
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thx .. i'll try it. – Wbdvlpr Sep 15 at 7:32
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him

is there anyway to make this pass hash parameters?

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