2044

I am using jQuery. How do I get the path of the current URL and assign it to a variable?

Example URL:

http://localhost/menuname.de?foo=bar&number=0
2
  • 4
    I think the question should be restored to asking for jQuery, since there is an answer for that, regardless of whether jQuery is required to accomplish the task.
    – goodeye
    Jun 3, 2014 at 1:25
  • 4
    @goodeye No, there is no jQuery way to get the location; as of the jQuery bug tracker: »It may have worked but it was never supported or documented. Simply use document.location.href which is faster, simpler, and easier to understand.« In other words, some folks used jQuery to get the location, but they relied on a bug, rather than feature. See: bugs.jquery.com/ticket/7858
    – feeela
    Jul 15, 2015 at 14:05

31 Answers 31

2791

To get the path, you can use:

var pathname = window.location.pathname; // Returns path only (/path/example.html)
var url      = window.location.href;     // Returns full URL (https://example.com/path/example.html)
var origin   = window.location.origin;   // Returns base URL (https://example.com)
8
  • 82
    Properties of the location object: developer.mozilla.org/en/DOM/window.location
    – bentford
    May 6, 2010 at 23:28
  • 103
    Far from killing it, jQuery's given Javascript a new life. Do new C#/Java programmers understand pointers? No. Do they need to? Not really, newer abstractions are powerful enough for it not to matter..
    – flesh
    Jan 11, 2011 at 22:10
  • 205
    "How do I XYZ in jQuery" and the answer being plain javascript is pretty common. You may know how to do something in plain javascript; however, due to browser inconsistencies you may prefer to do it the "jQuery" way. I remember pre-jQuery or framework I would first check browser and then do what I wanted a handful of ways. So is jQuery killing plain js... yes, thank god, but it is also making it usable.
    – Parris
    Jan 20, 2011 at 21:14
  • 9
    this doesn't work for the full url. for example. for "mail.google.com/mail/u/0/#mbox/13005b79fe72f448" this will only return /mail/u/0
    – dwaynemac
    May 19, 2011 at 18:53
  • 12
    Ummm,... window.location.pathname only gets the URL up the "?" and doesn't get the query params as asked in the question. Dec 28, 2012 at 19:05
838

In pure jQuery style:

$(location).attr('href');

The location object also has other properties, like host, hash, protocol, and pathname.

5
  • 57
    Apparently, using $(location) in jQuery is unsupported and advised against: bugs.jquery.com/ticket/7858
    – Peter
    Aug 24, 2011 at 14:41
  • 10
    @Peter Bug closed as invalid.
    – Kevin Ji
    Dec 19, 2011 at 19:40
  • 23
    @mc10: The "invalid" part applies to the request to support $(location); this should NOT be used.
    – Peter
    Dec 30, 2011 at 10:31
  • 7
    This answer is not needed, and question and answer can be updated to not use jquery. Reasons can be found here bugs.jquery.com/ticket/7858#comment:4
    – Vishwanath
    Jan 19, 2012 at 5:31
  • 11
    @HaralanDobrev: You shouldn't be able to do .attr() on location. (1) It's not an element, so $(location) is shady at best, and (2) even if it worked, you should be using .prop() to get properties. .attr() is for HTML attributes.
    – cHao
    May 20, 2013 at 6:09
511
http://www.refulz.com:8082/index.php#tab2?foo=789

Property    Result
------------------------------------------
host        www.refulz.com:8082
hostname    www.refulz.com
port        8082
protocol    http:
pathname    index.php
href        http://www.refulz.com:8082/index.php#tab2
hash        #tab2
search      ?foo=789

var x = $(location).attr('<property>');

This will work only if you have jQuery. For example:

<html>
<script src="http://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.2.6/jquery.min.js"></script>
<script>
  $(location).attr('href');      // http://www.refulz.com:8082/index.php#tab2
  $(location).attr('pathname');  // index.php
</script>
</html>
3
  • 15
    It's the same explanation that the one before, but with all the element of the object. Great Answer. Sep 28, 2013 at 8:09
  • 7
    Should be /index.php instead of index.php for the pathname.
    – Andrea
    Feb 1, 2016 at 14:28
  • 5
    According to bugs.jquery.com/ticket/7858 this is working only by accident. Also, attr is supposed to only be used on DOM objects, for things which can be set by using HTML attributes.
    – MauganRa
    Apr 6, 2017 at 10:44
77

If you need the hash parameters present in the URL, window.location.href may be a better choice.

window.location.pathname
=> /search

window.location.href 
 => www.website.com/search#race_type=1
2
  • 3
    If someone needs only hash tag than can call window.location.href
    – Amit Patel
    Feb 21, 2011 at 6:47
  • 18
    I think @AmitPatel means window.location.hash
    – ptim
    Oct 30, 2012 at 18:21
59

You'll want to use JavaScript's built-in window.location object.

3
  • 3
    this will not return items after '?' in location.
    – Majid
    Jun 19, 2013 at 8:42
  • @majidgeek works for me in Firefox, Chrome, and IE. Can you provide a test case of this breaking?
    – Barney
    Sep 5, 2013 at 11:00
  • 4
    can confirm at least in the console that window.location.pathname does not retrieve anything after the ?
    – worc
    Mar 4, 2014 at 21:07
46

Add this function in JavaScript, and it will return the absolute path of the current path.

function getAbsolutePath() {
    var loc = window.location;
    var pathName = loc.pathname.substring(0, loc.pathname.lastIndexOf('/') + 1);
    return loc.href.substring(0, loc.href.length - ((loc.pathname + loc.search + loc.hash).length - pathName.length));
}
1
  • 1
    This helped great for a script where I lazily had some hard coded base URLs. I prefer not having the trailing '/' on the root and inserting it in the path, so I just made second line var pathName = loc.pathname.substring(0, loc.pathname.lastIndexOf('/'));
    – cogdog
    Oct 21, 2016 at 18:30
41

window.location is an object in javascript. it returns following data

window.location.host          #returns host
window.location.hostname      #returns hostname
window.location.path          #return path
window.location.href          #returns full current url
window.location.port          #returns the port
window.location.protocol      #returns the protocol

in jquery you can use

$(location).attr('host');        #returns host
$(location).attr('hostname');    #returns hostname
$(location).attr('path');        #returns path
$(location).attr('href');        #returns href
$(location).attr('port');        #returns port
$(location).attr('protocol');    #returns protocol
1
  • 1
    what about windo.location.origin ? Dec 4, 2019 at 12:11
31

This is a more complicated issue than many may think. Several browsers support built-in JavaScript location objects and associated parameters/methods accessible through window.location or document.location. However, different flavors of Internet Explorer (6,7) don't support these methods in the same way, (window.location.href? window.location.replace() not supported) so you have to access them differently by writing conditional code all the time to hand-hold Internet Explorer.

So, if you have jQuery available and loaded, you might as well use jQuery (location), as the others mentioned because it resolves these issues. If however, you are doing-for an example-some client-side geolocation redirection via JavaScript (that is, using Google Maps API and location object methods), then you may not want to load the entire jQuery library and write your conditional code that checks every version of Internet Explorer/Firefox/etc.

Internet Explorer makes the front-end coding cat unhappy, but jQuery is a plate of milk.

1
  • Additionaly: bugs.jquery.com/ticket/8138. In jQuery 1.8.0 source there is comment: // #8138, IE may throw an exception when accessing // a field from window.location if document.domain has been set. Nov 30, 2012 at 9:17
29

For the host name only, use:

window.location.hostname
24

This will also work:

var currentURL = window.location.href;
1
  • This gives the full URL which most people looks for.
    – aiternal
    Sep 29, 2013 at 17:38
24

java-script provides many methods to retrieve current URL which is displayed in browser's address bar.

Test URL :

http://
stackoverflow.com/questions/5515310/get-current-url-with-jquery/32942762
?
rq=1&page=2&tab=active&answertab=votes
#
32942762
resourceAddress.hash();
console.log('URL Object ', webAddress);
console.log('Parameters ', param_values);

Function:

var webAddress = {};
var param_values = {};
var protocol = '';
var resourceAddress = {

    fullAddress : function () {
        var addressBar = window.location.href;
        if ( addressBar != '' && addressBar != 'undefined') {
            webAddress[ 'href' ] = addressBar;
        }
    },
    protocol_identifier : function () { resourceAddress.fullAddress();

        protocol = window.location.protocol.replace(':', '');
        if ( protocol != '' && protocol != 'undefined') {
            webAddress[ 'protocol' ] = protocol;
        }
    },
    domain : function () {      resourceAddress.protocol_identifier();

        var domain = window.location.hostname;
        if ( domain != '' && domain != 'undefined' && typeOfVar(domain) === 'string') {
            webAddress[ 'domain' ] = domain;
            var port = window.location.port;
            if ( (port == '' || port == 'undefined') && typeOfVar(port) === 'string') {
                if(protocol == 'http') port = '80';
                if(protocol == 'https') port = '443';           
            }
            webAddress[ 'port' ] = port;
        }
    },
    pathname : function () {        resourceAddress.domain();

        var resourcePath = window.location.pathname;
        if ( resourcePath != '' && resourcePath != 'undefined') {
            webAddress[ 'resourcePath' ] = resourcePath;
        }
    },
    params : function () {      resourceAddress.pathname();

        var v_args = location.search.substring(1).split("&");

        if ( v_args != '' && v_args != 'undefined')
        for (var i = 0; i < v_args.length; i++) {
            var pair = v_args[i].split("=");

            if ( typeOfVar( pair ) === 'array' ) {
                param_values[ decodeURIComponent( pair[0] ) ] = decodeURIComponent( pair[1] );
            }
        }
        webAddress[ 'params' ] = param_values;
    },
    hash : function () {        resourceAddress.params();

        var fragment = window.location.hash.substring(1);
        if ( fragment != '' && fragment != 'undefined')
            webAddress[ 'hash' ] = fragment;        
    }
};
function typeOfVar (obj) {
      return {}.toString.call(obj).split(' ')[1].slice(0, -1).toLowerCase();
}
  • protocol « Web-browsers use Internet Protocol by following some rules for communication between WebHosted Applications and Web Client(Browser). (http = 80, https (SSL) = 443, ftp = 21, etc.)

EX: With default port numbers

<protocol>//<hostname>:<port>/<pathname><search><hash>
https://en.wikipedia.org:443/wiki/Pretty_Good_Privacy
http://stackoverflow.com:80/
  • (//) « Host is the name given to an end-point(machine on which resource lives) on the Internet. www.stackoverflow.com - DNS IP Address of an Application (OR) localhost:8080 - localhost

Domain names are which you register by the rules and procedures of the Domain Name System(DNS) tree. DNS servers of someone who manages your domain with IP-Address for addressing purposes. In DNS server hierarchy the Root name of an stackoverlfow.com is com.

gTLDs      - com « stackoverflow (OR) in « co « google

Local system you have to maintain domain's which are not PUBLIC in Host Files. localhost.yash.com « localhsot - subdomain(web-server), yash.com - maindomain(Proxy-Server). myLocalApplication.com 172.89.23.777

  • (/) « The path gives info about the specific resource within the host that the Web client wants to access
  • (?) « An optional query is to pass a sequence of attribute–value pairs separated by a delimiter(&).
  • (#) « An optional fragment is often an id attribute of a specific element, and web browsers will scroll this element into view.

If parameter has an Epoch ?date=1467708674 then use.

var epochDate = 1467708674; var date = new Date( epochDate );

URL enter image description here


Authentication url with username:password, If usernaem/password contains @ symbol
like:

Username = `my_email@gmail`
Password = `Yash@777`

then You need to URL encode the @ as %40. Refer...

http://my_email%40gmail.com:Yash%[email protected]_site.com

encodeURI() (vs) encodeURIComponent() example

var testURL = "http:my_email@gmail:Yash777@//stackoverflow.com?tab=active&page=1#32942762";

var Uri = "/:@?&=,#", UriComponent = "$;+", Unescaped = "(-_.!~*')"; // Fixed
var encodeURI_Str = encodeURI(Uri) +' '+ encodeURI( UriComponent ) +' '+ encodeURI(Unescaped);
var encodeURIComponent_Str =  encodeURIComponent( Uri ) +' '+ encodeURIComponent( UriComponent ) +' '+ encodeURIComponent( Unescaped );
console.log(encodeURI_Str, '\n', encodeURIComponent_Str);
/*
 /:@?&=,# +$; (-_.!~*') 
 %2F%3A%40%3F%26%3D%2C%23 %2B%24%3B (-_.!~*')
*/
20

You can log window.location and see all the options, for just the URL use:

window.location.origin

for the whole path use:

window.location.href

there's also location.__

.host
.hostname
.protocol
.pathname
0
15

This will return the absolute URL of the current page using JavaScript/jQuery.

  • document.URL

  • $("*").context.baseURI

  • location.href

1
  • Why did you substitute $("*").context for document?
    – Kevin B
    Jan 17 at 20:12
14

All browsers support Javascript window object. It defines the window of the browser.

The global objects and functions become part of the window object automatically.

All global variables are window objects properties and all global functions are its methods.

The whole HTML document is a window property too.

So you can use window.location object to get all url related attributes.

Javascript

console.log(window.location.host);     //returns host
console.log(window.location.hostname);    //returns hostname
console.log(window.location.pathname);         //return path
console.log(window.location.href);       //returns full current url
console.log(window.location.port);         //returns the port
console.log(window.location.protocol)     //returns the protocol

JQuery

console.log("host = "+$(location).attr('host'));
console.log("hostname = "+$(location).attr('hostname'));
console.log("pathname = "+$(location).attr('pathname')); 
console.log("href = "+$(location).attr('href'));   
console.log("port = "+$(location).attr('port'));   
console.log("protocol = "+$(location).attr('protocol'));
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.1.0/jquery.min.js"></script>

0
13

I have this to strip out the GET variables.

var loc = window.location;
var currentURL = loc.protocol + '//' + loc.host + loc.pathname;
12

If there is someone who wants to concatenate the URL and hash tag, combine two functions:

var pathname = window.location.pathname + document.location.hash;
1
  • To clarify: you don't need to use jQuery at all, the javascript function above will return what the OP was asking for?
    – GHC
    May 17, 2013 at 6:08
12

You can simply get your path using js itself, window.location or location will give you the object of current URL

console.log("Origin - ",location.origin);
console.log("Entire URL - ",location.href);
console.log("Path Beyond URL - ",location.pathname);

10
 var currenturl = jQuery(location).attr('href');
10

Here is an example to get the current URL using jQuery and JavaScript:

$(document).ready(function() {

    //jQuery
    $(location).attr('href');

    //Pure JavaScript
    var pathname = window.location.pathname;

    // To show it in an alert window
    alert(window.location);
});


$.getJSON("idcheck.php?callback=?", { url:$(location).attr('href')}, function(json){
    //alert(json.message);
});
10

var path = location.pathname returns the path of the current URL (jQuery is not needed). The use of window.location is optional.

9

To get the URL of the parent window from within an iframe:

$(window.parent.location).attr('href');

NB: only works on same domain

9

window.location will give you the current URL, and you can extract whatever you want from it...

9

Use window.location.href. This will give you the complete URL.

9

By the following code you can get the current URL in Jquery.

$(location).attr('hostname');                //origin URL
$(location).attr('pathname');                // path name
$(location).attr('hash');                    // everything comes after hash
8

If you want to get the path of the root site, use this:

$(location).attr('href').replace($(location).attr('pathname'),'');
1
  • 1
    wouldn't that be .replace('#.*', '')? Remove not just the hash mark but everything after it as well? Dec 17, 2012 at 9:30
8

See purl.js. This will really help and can also be used, depending on jQuery. Use it like this:

$.url().param("yourparam");
7

Very Commonly Used top 3 ones are

1. window.location.hostname 
2. window.location.href
3. window.location.pathname
6
var newURL = window.location.protocol + "//" + window.location.host + "/" + window.location.pathname;
1
  • 2
    you should add some explanation on your answer.
    – Raptor
    Jul 27, 2016 at 7:22
2

In jstl we can access current url path using pageContext.request.contextPath, If you want to do a ajax call,

  url = "${pageContext.request.contextPath}" + "/controller/path"

Ex: in the page http://stackoverflow.com/questions/406192 this will give http://stackoverflow.com/controller/path

1
// get current URL

$(location).attr('href');
var pathname = window.location.pathname;
alert(window.location);
1

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