If your URLs are the URL of the page you're currently on
window.location.hash
will give you the #/user/...
and #/admin/...
parts. From that you can use call split
on the /
character to give you an array like:
["#", "user", "something", "something_more"]
From that you can just grab the [1]
index from that array. You can do this all in one line:
window.location.hash.split('/')[1]
Examples
"example.com/#/user"
-> "user"
"example.com/#/admin"
-> "admin"
"example.com/#/user/something/something_more"
-> "user"
If your URLs are just strings
If they're strings and not URLs, window.location
won't help much here. Instead we can apply split
directly to the string itself, but remember to jump the pulled index up by one to cater for the /
before the #
character.
Examples
var example = "example.com/#/user";
example.split('/')[2];
-> "user"
var example = "example.com/#/admin";
example.split('/')[2];
-> "admin"
var example = "example.com/#/user/something/something_more";
example.split('/')[2];
-> "user"
\/#\/(\w+)
............href
value of ana
element? Is it the current location (window.location
)? Is this something you have in a string variable? What have you tried, and where did you run into problems? If you are looking atwindow.location
or ana
element, there is an elegant solution.