Examples first, questions second...
Example 1) Non global match of '?sort=alpha&direction=asc'
'?sort=alpha&direction=asc'.match(/([^?&=]+)(=([^&]*))?/);
Output:
// ['sort=alpha', 'sort', '=alpha', 'alpha']
Example 2) Global match of '?sort=alpha&direction=asc'
'?sort=alpha&direction=asc'.match(/([^?&=]+)(=([^&]*))?/g);
Output:
// ['sort=alpha', 'sort', '=alpha', 'alpha']
Example 3) Global match replace of '?sort=alpha&direction=asc'
getRequestParameters: function () {
var query_string = {},
regex = new RegExp('([^?=&]+)(=([^&]*))?', 'g');
'?sort=alpha&direction=asc'.replace(regex, function(match, p1, p2, p3, offset, string) {
console.log(match, p1, p2, p3, offset, string);
query_string[p1] = p3;
});
}
Output:
// sort=alpha sort =alpha alpha 1 ?sort=alpha&direction=asc
// direction=asc direction =asc asc 12 ?sort=alpha&direction=asc
My Questions
I am not sure if I could have ever figured this one out on my own, but I never "live" with a solution and I must figure out the rhyme behind the reason. The specific matches I think understand "fully enough". I believe I know some of the answers below, but I rather not make assumptions and learn from smarter people!
- Why are 1) and 2) the same? (or are they?)
- What does the 'sort=alpha' mean in 1) and 2)?
- Why does 2) not return both sort and direction parameters?
- What is the 3) iterating over with the .replace()?
- Is there a way of capturing N parameters without .replace()?
Thanks!
update
var regex = new RegExp('([^?&=]+)(=([^&]*))?');
regex.exec('?sort=alpha&direction=asc');
// Chrome 21 - ["sort=alpha", "sort", "=alpha", "alpha"]
var regex = new RegExp('([^?&=]+)(=([^&]*))?', 'g');
regex.exec('?sort=alpha&direction=asc');
// Chrome 21 - ["sort=alpha", "sort", "=alpha", "alpha"]
'?sort=alpha&direction=asc'.match(/([^?&=]+)(=([^&]*))?/);
// Chrome 21 - ["sort=alpha", "sort", "=alpha", "alpha"]
'?sort=alpha&direction=asc'.match(/([^?&=]+)(=([^&]*))?/g);
// Chrome 21 - ["sort=alpha", "direction=asc"]
var regex = new RegExp('([^?&=]+)(=([^&]*))?', 'g');
regex.lastIndex = 11;
regex.exec('?sort=alpha&direction=asc');
// Chrome 21 - ["direction=asc", "direction", "=asc", "asc"]
In summary, Example 3) is still correct, but go to this answer for a more qualified response.
end update
References and thanks to Steven Benner:
- https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/String/match
- https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/String/replace
- http://stevenbenner.com/2010/03/javascript-regex-trick-parse-a-query-string-into-an-object/
- http://www.bloggingdeveloper.com/post/JavaScript-QueryString-ParseGet-QueryString-with-Client-Side-JavaScript.aspx (similar topic so I threw it in)