244

I have this URL:

site.fwx?position=1&archiveid=5000&columns=5&rows=20&sorting=ModifiedTimeAsc

what I need is to be able to change the 'rows' url param value to something i specify, lets say 10. And if the 'rows' doesn't exist, I need to add it to the end of the url and add the value i've already specified (10).

10
  • 13
    I can't believe it's 2013 and there's not a better way to do it, like something built into the core browser libraries. Oct 25, 2013 at 22:21
  • 8
    @TylerCollier mid-2015 now and still nothing :( Aug 3, 2015 at 19:46
  • 4
    Seems like we are getting there... developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/URLSearchParams/…
    – chris
    Feb 20, 2017 at 16:02
  • 14
    @TylerCollier it's 2021 now and we finally got this :) const myUrl = new URL("http://www.example.com?columns=5&rows=20"); myUrl.searchParams.set('rows', 10); myUrl.href will contain updated URL
    – sprutex
    Apr 12, 2021 at 8:06
  • 3
    based on @sprutex comment , you may replace http://www.example.com?columns=5&rows=20 with window.location.href to make the code more dynamically Oct 11, 2021 at 8:24

32 Answers 32

135

I've extended Sujoy's code to make up a function.

/**
 * http://stackoverflow.com/a/10997390/11236
 */
function updateURLParameter(url, param, paramVal){
    var newAdditionalURL = "";
    var tempArray = url.split("?");
    var baseURL = tempArray[0];
    var additionalURL = tempArray[1];
    var temp = "";
    if (additionalURL) {
        tempArray = additionalURL.split("&");
        for (var i=0; i<tempArray.length; i++){
            if(tempArray[i].split('=')[0] != param){
                newAdditionalURL += temp + tempArray[i];
                temp = "&";
            }
        }
    }

    var rows_txt = temp + "" + param + "=" + paramVal;
    return baseURL + "?" + newAdditionalURL + rows_txt;
}

Function Calls:

var newURL = updateURLParameter(window.location.href, 'locId', 'newLoc');
newURL = updateURLParameter(newURL, 'resId', 'newResId');

window.history.replaceState('', '', updateURLParameter(window.location.href, "param", "value"));

Updated version that also take care of the anchors on the URL.

function updateURLParameter(url, param, paramVal)
{
    var TheAnchor = null;
    var newAdditionalURL = "";
    var tempArray = url.split("?");
    var baseURL = tempArray[0];
    var additionalURL = tempArray[1];
    var temp = "";

    if (additionalURL) 
    {
        var tmpAnchor = additionalURL.split("#");
        var TheParams = tmpAnchor[0];
            TheAnchor = tmpAnchor[1];
        if(TheAnchor)
            additionalURL = TheParams;

        tempArray = additionalURL.split("&");

        for (var i=0; i<tempArray.length; i++)
        {
            if(tempArray[i].split('=')[0] != param)
            {
                newAdditionalURL += temp + tempArray[i];
                temp = "&";
            }
        }        
    }
    else
    {
        var tmpAnchor = baseURL.split("#");
        var TheParams = tmpAnchor[0];
            TheAnchor  = tmpAnchor[1];

        if(TheParams)
            baseURL = TheParams;
    }

    if(TheAnchor)
        paramVal += "#" + TheAnchor;

    var rows_txt = temp + "" + param + "=" + paramVal;
    return baseURL + "?" + newAdditionalURL + rows_txt;
}
10
  • I can't seem to get this to work. Here is my code: jsfiddle.net/Draven/tTPYL/1 The URL would look like http://www.domain.com/index.php?action=my_action&view-all=Yes and I need to change the "view-all" value. My SO question that was closed: stackoverflow.com/questions/13025880/…
    – Draven
    Oct 25, 2012 at 6:43
  • Are you sure? it worked for me easily. Check it out here: jsfiddle.net/mw49a
    – Adil Malik
    Oct 25, 2012 at 10:47
  • 1
    Use "var i=0" instead of "i=0" to prevent creating/modifying i as a global variable. Sep 5, 2014 at 17:34
  • 2
    Couple of other issues with this function: (1) paramVal is not uri-encoded. (2) if paramVal is null, then you get foo=null. It should be foo= (or even better, remove foo completely). Sep 5, 2014 at 17:50
  • I have used this and it works but the answer could do with some explanation as to what is going on, ie. 'if (additionalURL) { tempArray = additionalURL.split("&"); for (i=0; i<tempArray.length; i++){ if(tempArray[i].split('=')[0] != param){ newAdditionalURL += temp + tempArray[i]; temp = "&"; } } }' Especially the inner if.
    – Sprose
    Dec 20, 2016 at 9:18
95

I think you want the query plugin.

E.g.:

window.location.search = jQuery.query.set("rows", 10);

This will work regardless of the current state of rows.

7
  • Mofle, that's because the Query plugin uses decodeURIComponent, and decodeURIComponent("%F8") is invalid. Jul 7, 2009 at 9:11
  • 2
    Get that weird stuff out of your URL. Or, in other words, "change your query-string to use only valid UTF-8 characters". :) F8 alone isn't a valid UTF-8 character. Jul 7, 2009 at 9:51
  • Is there a way to retrieve the base url from this plugin? For example, if my URL is 'youtube.com/watch?v=PZootaxRh3M', get 'youtube.com/watch' May 18, 2011 at 2:59
  • 3
    @Wraith, you don't need a plugin for that. It's just window.location.pathname. May 18, 2011 at 18:43
  • 2
    @MattNorris You don't need a plugin for this, but correct answer is: window.location.host + window.location.pathname In your case it will be "www.youtube.com/watch"
    – nktssh
    Dec 16, 2014 at 12:53
82

To answer my own question 4 years later, after having learned a lot. Especially that you shouldn't use jQuery for everything. I've created a simple module that can parse/stringify a query string. This makes it easy to modify the query string.

You can use query-string as follows:

// parse the query string into an object
var q = queryString.parse(location.search);
// set the `row` property
q.rows = 10;
// convert the object to a query string
// and overwrite the existing query string
location.search = queryString.stringify(q);
6
  • 1
    Wow this is a brilliantly simple solution. Thank you!
    – jetlej
    Oct 1, 2014 at 0:26
  • This works like a champ! Thank you Sindre 🏆🏆🏆 (all you gotta do is minify "query-string/index.js" and paste it in bottom of your js) Apr 7, 2017 at 19:29
  • 8
    Having an extra library just for that seems like a bit extra... Oct 22, 2019 at 15:04
  • 9
    jQuery was too much for 1 function, so instead you used typescript, travis, and several other non-dev dependencies :) Jul 6, 2020 at 21:47
  • 4
    @SindreSorhus It was little lighthearted, but I think it's important to keep the complexity of these things in perspective. If you don't feel that's constructive, then ditto. Jul 11, 2020 at 0:00
82

Quick little solution in pure js, no plugins needed:

function replaceQueryParam(param, newval, search) {
    var regex = new RegExp("([?;&])" + param + "[^&;]*[;&]?");
    var query = search.replace(regex, "$1").replace(/&$/, '');

    return (query.length > 2 ? query + "&" : "?") + (newval ? param + "=" + newval : '');
}

Call it like this:

 window.location = '/mypage' + replaceQueryParam('rows', 55, window.location.search)

Or, if you want to stay on the same page and replace multiple params:

 var str = window.location.search
 str = replaceQueryParam('rows', 55, str)
 str = replaceQueryParam('cols', 'no', str)
 window.location = window.location.pathname + str

edit, thanks Luke: To remove the parameter entirely, pass false or null for the value: replaceQueryParam('rows', false, params). Since 0 is also falsy, specify '0'.

8
  • 2
    also to remove a used parameter from the output do this: str = replaceQueryParam('oldparam',false, str) - basically put a false type value
    – Luke Wenke
    Apr 2, 2015 at 4:44
  • 1
    has problem, duplication my parameter for no good reason, check out this similar solution stackoverflow.com/a/20420424/3160597
    – azerafati
    Aug 5, 2015 at 11:12
  • @Bludream that code has been working in production for years. I haven't seen it duplicate a param yet. Can you post a repro or some more constructive info?
    – bronson
    Aug 6, 2015 at 18:26
  • 1
    @dVyper correct, a falsy value removes the parameter entirely. Use text '0' instead of integer 0.
    – bronson
    Feb 16, 2016 at 22:01
  • 1
    This is old but it worked perfectly for me. It's short, clean, easy to modify and gets the job done at last for what I needed. Thanks.
    – BlueSun3k1
    Sep 22, 2017 at 14:31
79

A modern approach to this is to use native standard based URLSearchParams. It's supported by all major browsers, except for IE where polyfills are available.

const paramsString = "site.fwx?position=1&archiveid=5000&columns=5&rows=20&sorting=ModifiedTimeAsc"
const searchParams = new URLSearchParams(paramsString);
searchParams.set('rows', 10);
console.log(searchParams.toString()); // return modified string.
5
  • 1
    Would be really nice... but it is not as IE does not support it at all, and using polyfills for such a small thing is totally out of the question.
    – forsberg
    Sep 26, 2017 at 17:41
  • 2
    this also urlencodes the original paramsString in full, so the result looks like site.fwx%3Fposition=1&archiveid=5000&columns=5&rows=10&sorting=ModifiedTimeAsc which is confusing because it's not what you would have built if you did it manually... Oct 24, 2018 at 3:14
  • 1
    Would be nice to see an example of how to use it. I mean, how to get params string from the current page and how to set it afterwards Oct 22, 2019 at 15:11
  • 4
    @Alister your answer has a bug, new URLSearchParams("site.fwx?position=1&... should be new URLSearchParams("position=1&... (it only takes the search string, not a path as well). I'd edited to fix but the edit is being rejected? Also @the-godfather const searchParams = new URLSearchParams(location.search); searchParams.set('rows', 10); location.search = searchParams; is the extra info you wanted in this answer.
    – bazzargh
    Oct 11, 2020 at 23:20
  • My favorite solution because it's shortest and native. You can also get params with searchParams.get('param'). Works in Node.
    – The Onin
    Jan 9, 2021 at 6:45
61

Ben Alman has a good jquery querystring/url plugin here that allows you to manipulate the querystring easily.

As requested -

Goto his test page here

In firebug enter the following into the console

jQuery.param.querystring(window.location.href, 'a=3&newValue=100');

It will return you the following amended url string

http://benalman.com/code/test/js-jquery-url-querystring.html?a=3&b=Y&c=Z&newValue=100#n=1&o=2&p=3

Notice the a querystring value for a has changed from X to 3 and it has added the new value.

You can then use the new url string however you wish e.g using document.location = newUrl or change an anchor link etc

7
  • 4
    Isn't it jQuery.param.querystring instead of jQuery.queryString ? Jan 18, 2010 at 11:59
  • 13
    TypeError: jQuery.param.querystring is not a function
    – Tomas
    Mar 29, 2012 at 20:42
  • 1
    To avoir 'TypeError' it should be : jQuery.queryString(window.location.href, 'a=3&newValue=100')
    – code-gijoe
    Dec 18, 2012 at 19:22
  • 2
    you should call jQuery.param.querystring. I guess they have refactored the library.
    – Will Wu
    Jan 27, 2013 at 9:18
  • Neither of these functions exist any more. You want to update window.location.search manually. It gets more difficult if you don't want the page to repaint, since this will cause a page change.
    – monokrome
    Jul 18, 2013 at 19:40
42

This is the modern way to change URL parameters:

function setGetParam(key,value) {
  if (history.pushState) {
    var params = new URLSearchParams(window.location.search);
    params.set(key, value);
    var newUrl = window.location.origin 
          + window.location.pathname 
          + '?' + params.toString();
    window.history.pushState({path:newUrl},'',newUrl);
  }
}
8
  • 3
    This solution is currently not supported in Internet Explorer 11: caniuse.com/#search=URLSearchParams
    – ˈvɔlə
    Dec 5, 2019 at 11:16
  • The same respons was replied a half year before you by @Alister
    – FantomX1
    May 13, 2020 at 19:31
  • @WoIIe Using URLSearchParams is the cleanest solution. IMO if business requirements still demand IE11 support in 2020. It's time to find a new business to work for. Jul 24, 2020 at 10:41
  • 1
    Come on. Businesses don't determine their user base, and a lot of the people still using IE11 are poor and elderly. Literally the sort of people for whom we should NOT be relegating into a bucket of acceptably broken experiences.
    – Dtipson
    Aug 31, 2020 at 16:30
  • 4
    "Internet Explorer will be retired on June 15, 2022" blogs.windows.com/windowsexperience/2021/05/19/… Sep 27, 2021 at 16:50
28

you can do it via normal JS also

var url = document.URL
var newAdditionalURL = "";
var tempArray = url.split("?");
var baseURL = tempArray[0];
var aditionalURL = tempArray[1]; 
var temp = "";
if(aditionalURL)
{
var tempArray = aditionalURL.split("&");
for ( var i in tempArray ){
    if(tempArray[i].indexOf("rows") == -1){
            newAdditionalURL += temp+tempArray[i];
                temp = "&";
            }
        }
}
var rows_txt = temp+"rows=10";
var finalURL = baseURL+"?"+newAdditionalURL+rows_txt;
3
  • Nice! I took this and modified into a function. You send in the current url, the parameter name you're looking for, the new value, and a bool telling it if you want to add the parameter to the query string if I don't find it in there currently. Function returns the modified url.
    – Gromer
    May 3, 2012 at 21:30
  • Gormer, you must share that function with others :)
    – Adil Malik
    Jun 12, 2012 at 12:07
  • Awesome snippet. I too turned it into a function for my own use case. Thanks for sharing! +1
    – robabby
    Sep 19, 2012 at 18:34
24

Use URLSearchParams to check, get and set the parameters value into URL

Here is the example to get the current URL set new parameters and update the URL or reload the page as per your needs

var rows = 5; // value that you want to set
var url = new URL(window.location);
(url.searchParams.has('rows') ? url.searchParams.set('rows', rows) : url.searchParams.append('rows', rows));

url.search = url.searchParams;
url        = url.toString();

// if you want to append into URL without reloading the page
history.pushState({}, null, url);

// want to reload the window with a new param
window.location = url;
13

2020 Solution: sets the variable or removes iti if you pass null or undefined to the value.

var setSearchParam = function(key, value) {
    if (!window.history.pushState) {
        return;
    }

    if (!key) {
        return;
    }

    var url = new URL(window.location.href);
    var params = new window.URLSearchParams(window.location.search);
    if (value === undefined || value === null) {
        params.delete(key);
    } else {
        params.set(key, value);
    }

    url.search = params;
    url = url.toString();
    window.history.replaceState({url: url}, null, url);
}
6
  • Note that URLSearchParams does not work in the latest versions of all major browsers (2020) Mar 27, 2020 at 15:53
  • 1
    It's supported in all major browsers except IE11: caniuse.com/#search=URLSearchParams Apr 15, 2020 at 12:29
  • 2
    Even if it started to be supported, the same answer with URLSearchParams was answered in this question at least 3 times already on answered Jan 15 '17 at 15:24, answered Jun 14 '18 at 15:54 and answered Mar 1 '19 at 12:46 , as if nobody of you was reading replies before posting
    – FantomX1
    May 13, 2020 at 19:39
  • 1
    all posts have minor issues that needs to be solved. so let the users vote and pick the best one. May 21, 2020 at 13:07
  • 1
    Why is there a need to check pushState? Is it to check if this is supported?
    – M3RS
    Jun 29, 2020 at 17:48
10

Would a viable alternative to String manipulation be to set up an html form and just modify the value of the rows element?

So, with html that is something like

<form id='myForm' target='site.fwx'>
    <input type='hidden' name='position' value='1'/>
    <input type='hidden' name='archiveid' value='5000'/>
    <input type='hidden' name='columns' value='5'/>
    <input type='hidden' name='rows' value='20'/>
    <input type='hidden' name='sorting' value='ModifiedTimeAsc'/>
</form>

With the following JavaScript to submit the form

var myForm = document.getElementById('myForm');
myForm.rows.value = yourNewValue;
myForm.submit();

Probably not suitable for all situations, but might be nicer than parsing the URL string.

1
  • That's a clever one.
    – icarito
    Mar 15, 2018 at 12:59
10

URL query parameters can be easily modified using URLSearchParams and History interfaces:

// Construct URLSearchParams object instance from current URL querystring.
var queryParams = new URLSearchParams(window.location.search);
 
// Set new or modify existing parameter value. 
//queryParams.set("myParam", "myValue");
queryParams.set("rows", "10");
 
// Replace current querystring with the new one.
history.replaceState(null, null, "?"+queryParams.toString());

Alternatively instead of modifying current history entry using replaceState() we can use pushState() method to create a new one:

history.pushState(null, null, "?"+queryParams.toString());

https://zgadzaj.com/development/javascript/how-to-change-url-query-parameter-with-javascript-only

7

You can use this my library to do the job: https://github.com/Mikhus/jsurl

var url = new Url('site.fwx?position=1&archiveid=5000&columns=5&rows=20&sorting=ModifiedTimeAsc');
url.query.rows = 10;
alert( url);
7

Consider this one:

const myUrl = new URL("http://www.example.com?columns=5&rows=20");
myUrl.searchParams.set('rows', 10);
console.log(myUrl.href); // http://www.example.com?columns=5&rows=10
myUrl.searchParams.set('foo', 'bar'); // add new param
console.log(myUrl.href); // http://www.example.com?columns=5&rows=10&foo=bar

It will do exactly the same thing you required. Please note URL must have correct format. In your example you have to specify protocol (either http or https)

3

I wrote a little helper function that works with any select. All you need to do is add the class "redirectOnChange" to any select element, and this will cause the page to reload with a new/changed querystring parameter, equal to the id and value of the select, e.g:

<select id="myValue" class="redirectOnChange"> 
    <option value="222">test222</option>
    <option value="333">test333</option>
</select>

The above example would add "?myValue=222" or "?myValue=333" (or using "&" if other params exist), and reload the page.

jQuery:

$(document).ready(function () {

    //Redirect on Change
    $(".redirectOnChange").change(function () {
        var href = window.location.href.substring(0, window.location.href.indexOf('?'));
        var qs = window.location.href.substring(window.location.href.indexOf('?') + 1, window.location.href.length);
        var newParam = $(this).attr("id") + '=' + $(this).val();

        if (qs.indexOf($(this).attr("id") + '=') == -1) {
            if (qs == '') {
                qs = '?'
            }
            else {
                qs = qs + '&'
            }
            qs = qs + newParam;

        }
        else {
            var start = qs.indexOf($(this).attr("id") + "=");
            var end = qs.indexOf("&", start);
            if (end == -1) {
                end = qs.length;
            }
            var curParam = qs.substring(start, end);
            qs = qs.replace(curParam, newParam);
        }
        window.location.replace(href + '?' + qs);
    });
});
1
  • By far the best solution on this page
    – ed209
    Oct 14, 2013 at 15:15
3

Using javascript URL:

var url = new URL(window.location);
(url.searchParams.has('rows') ? url.searchParams.set('rows', rows) : url.searchParams.append('rows', rows));
window.location = url;
3
var url = new URL(window.location.href);
var search_params = url.searchParams;
search_params.set("param", value);
url.search = search_params.toString();
var new_url = url.pathname + url.search;
window.history.replaceState({}, '', new_url);
3

In the URLSearchParams documentation, there's a very clean way of doing this, without affecting the history stack.

// URL: https://example.com?version=1.0
const params = new URLSearchParams(location.search);
params.set('version', 2.0);

window.history.replaceState({}, '', `${location.pathname}?${params}`);
// URL: https://example.com?version=2.0

Similarily, to remove a parameter

params.delete('version')
window.history.replaceState({}, '', `${location.pathname}?${params}`);
// URL: https://example.com?
2

Here I have taken Adil Malik's answer and fixed the 3 issues I identified with it.

/**
 * Adds or updates a URL parameter.
 *
 * @param {string} url  the URL to modify
 * @param {string} param  the name of the parameter
 * @param {string} paramVal  the new value for the parameter
 * @return {string}  the updated URL
 */
self.setParameter = function (url, param, paramVal){
  // http://stackoverflow.com/a/10997390/2391566
  var parts = url.split('?');
  var baseUrl = parts[0];
  var oldQueryString = parts[1];
  var newParameters = [];
  if (oldQueryString) {
    var oldParameters = oldQueryString.split('&');
    for (var i = 0; i < oldParameters.length; i++) {
      if(oldParameters[i].split('=')[0] != param) {
        newParameters.push(oldParameters[i]);
      }
    }
  }
  if (paramVal !== '' && paramVal !== null && typeof paramVal !== 'undefined') {
    newParameters.push(param + '=' + encodeURI(paramVal));
  }
  if (newParameters.length > 0) {
    return baseUrl + '?' + newParameters.join('&');
  } else {
    return baseUrl;
  }
}
2

let url= new URL("https://example.com/site.fwx?position=1&archiveid=5000&columns=5&rows=20&sorting=ModifiedTimeAsc")
url.searchParams.set('rows', 10)
console.log(url.toString())

1

Here is what I do. Using my editParams() function, you can add, remove, or change any parameter, then use the built in replaceState() function to update the URL:

window.history.replaceState('object or string', 'Title', 'page.html' + editParams('sorting', ModifiedTimeAsc));


// background functions below:

// add/change/remove URL parameter
// use a value of false to remove parameter
// returns a url-style string
function editParams (key, value) {
  key = encodeURI(key);

  var params = getSearchParameters();

  if (Object.keys(params).length === 0) {
    if (value !== false)
      return '?' + key + '=' + encodeURI(value);
    else
      return '';
  }

  if (value !== false)
    params[key] = encodeURI(value);
  else
    delete params[key];

  if (Object.keys(params).length === 0)
    return '';

  return '?' + $.map(params, function (value, key) {
    return key + '=' + value;
  }).join('&');
}

// Get object/associative array of URL parameters
function getSearchParameters () {
  var prmstr = window.location.search.substr(1);
  return prmstr !== null && prmstr !== "" ? transformToAssocArray(prmstr) : {};
}

// convert parameters from url-style string to associative array
function transformToAssocArray (prmstr) {
  var params = {},
      prmarr = prmstr.split("&");

  for (var i = 0; i < prmarr.length; i++) {
    var tmparr = prmarr[i].split("=");
    params[tmparr[0]] = tmparr[1];
  }
  return params;
}
1
  • A downvote without a comment? What's wrong with the code? It works fantastic for many situations.
    – Bobb Fwed
    Jul 3, 2014 at 18:01
1

My solution:

const setParams = (data) => {
    if (typeof data !== 'undefined' && typeof data !== 'object') {
        return
    }

    let url = new URL(window.location.href)
    const params = new URLSearchParams(url.search)

    for (const key of Object.keys(data)) {
        if (data[key] == 0) {
            params.delete(key)
        } else {
            params.set(key, data[key])
        }
    }

    url.search = params
    url = url.toString()
    window.history.replaceState({ url: url }, null, url)
}

Then just call "setParams" and pass an object with data you want to set.

Example:

$('select').on('change', e => {
    const $this = $(e.currentTarget)
    setParams({ $this.attr('name'): $this.val() })
})

In my case I had to update a html select input when it changes and if the value is "0", remove the parameter. You can edit the function and remove the parameter from the url if the object key is "null" as well.

Hope this helps yall

1
  • there are already 2 same answers with URLSearchParams before you, as if nobody of you really read answers. Posted on answered Jan 15 '17 at 15:24 , answered Jun 14 '18 at 15:54
    – FantomX1
    May 13, 2020 at 19:38
1

If you want to change the url in address bar:

const search = new URLSearchParams(location.search);
search.set('rows', 10);
location.search = search.toString();

Note, changing location.search reloads the page.

1

Here is a simple solution using the query-string library.

const qs = require('query-string')
function addQuery(key, value) {
  const q = qs.parse(location.search)
  const url = qs.stringifyUrl(
    {
      url: location.pathname,
      query: {
      ...q,
      [key]: value,
      },
    },
    { skipEmptyString: true }
  );
  window.location.href = url
  // if you are using Turbolinks
  // add this: Turbolinks.visit(url)
}
// Usage
addQuery('page', 2)

If you are using react without react-router

export function useAddQuery() {
  const location = window.location;
  const addQuery = useCallback(
    (key, value) => {
      const q = qs.parse(location.search);
      const url = qs.stringifyUrl(
        {
          url: location.pathname,
          query: {
            ...q,
            [key]: value,
          },
        },
        { skipEmptyString: true }
      );
      window.location.href = url
    },
    [location]
  );

  return { addQuery };
}
// Usage
const { addQuery } = useAddQuery()
addQuery('page', 2)

If you are using react with react-router

export function useAddQuery() {
  const location = useLocation();
  const history = useHistory();

  const addQuery = useCallback(
    (key, value) => {
      let pathname = location.pathname;
      let searchParams = new URLSearchParams(location.search);
      searchParams.set(key, value);
      history.push({
        pathname: pathname,
        search: searchParams.toString()
      });
    },
    [location, history]
  );

  return { addQuery };
}

// Usage
const { addQuery } = useAddQuery()
addQuery('page', 2)

PS: qs is the import from query-string module.

0

Another variation on Sujoy's answer. Just changed the variable names & added a namespace wrapper:

window.MyNamespace = window.MyNamespace  || {};
window.MyNamespace.Uri = window.MyNamespace.Uri || {};

(function (ns) {

    ns.SetQueryStringParameter = function(url, parameterName, parameterValue) {

        var otherQueryStringParameters = "";

        var urlParts = url.split("?");

        var baseUrl = urlParts[0];
        var queryString = urlParts[1];

        var itemSeparator = "";
        if (queryString) {

            var queryStringParts = queryString.split("&");

            for (var i = 0; i < queryStringParts.length; i++){

                if(queryStringParts[i].split('=')[0] != parameterName){

                    otherQueryStringParameters += itemSeparator + queryStringParts[i];
                    itemSeparator = "&";
                }
            }
        }

        var newQueryStringParameter = itemSeparator + parameterName + "=" + parameterValue;

        return baseUrl + "?" + otherQueryStringParameters + newQueryStringParameter;
    };

})(window.MyNamespace.Uri);

Useage is now:

var changedUrl = MyNamespace.Uri.SetQueryStringParameter(originalUrl, "CarType", "Ford");
0

I too have written a library for getting and setting URL query parameters in JavaScript.

Here is an example of its usage.

var url = Qurl.create()
  , query
  , foo
  ;

Get query params as an object, by key, or add/change/remove.

// returns { foo: 'bar', baz: 'qux' } for ?foo=bar&baz=qux
query = url.query();

// get the current value of foo
foo = url.query('foo');

// set ?foo=bar&baz=qux
url.query('foo', 'bar');
url.query('baz', 'qux');

// unset foo, leaving ?baz=qux
url.query('foo', false); // unsets foo
0
0

I was looking for the same thing and found: https://github.com/medialize/URI.js which is quite nice :)

-- Update

I found a better package: https://www.npmjs.org/package/qs it also deals with arrays in get params.

0

No library, using URL() WebAPI (https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/URL)

function setURLParameter(url, parameter, value) {
    let url = new URL(url);
    if (url.searchParams.get(parameter) === value) {
        return url;
    }
    url.searchParams.set(parameter, value);
    return url.href;
}

This doesn't work on IE: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/URL#Browser_compatibility

1
  • 1
    This should be the answer now! IE who?
    – Mosh Feu
    Aug 9, 2020 at 11:55
-1

I know this is an old question. I have enhanced the function above to add or update query params. Still a pure JS solution only.

                      function addOrUpdateQueryParam(param, newval, search) {

                        var questionIndex = search.indexOf('?');

                        if (questionIndex < 0) {
                            search = search + '?';
                            search = search + param + '=' + newval;
                            return search;
                        }

                        var regex = new RegExp("([?;&])" + param + "[^&;]*[;&]?");
                        var query = search.replace(regex, "$1").replace(/&$/, '');

                        var indexOfEquals = query.indexOf('=');

                        return (indexOfEquals >= 0 ? query + '&' : query + '') + (newval ? param + '=' + newval : '');
                    }
-1

my function support removing param

function updateURLParameter(url, param, paramVal, remove = false) {
        var newAdditionalURL = '';
        var tempArray = url.split('?');
        var baseURL = tempArray[0];
        var additionalURL = tempArray[1];
        var rows_txt = '';

        if (additionalURL)
            newAdditionalURL = decodeURI(additionalURL) + '&';

        if (remove)
            newAdditionalURL = newAdditionalURL.replace(param + '=' + paramVal, '');
        else
            rows_txt = param + '=' + paramVal;

        window.history.replaceState('', '', (baseURL + "?" + newAdditionalURL + rows_txt).replace('?&', '?').replace('&&', '&').replace(/\&$/, ''));
    }

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