78

If I had a URL such as

http://localhost/search.php?year=2008

How would I write a JavaScript function to grab the variable year and see if it contains anything?

I know it can be done with location.search but I can’t figure out how it grabs parameters.

4
  • string yr = location.search.substring(6); alert(yr); Oct 31, 2013 at 18:36
  • 13
    location.search.split("year=")[1] only in simplest
    – Huei Tan
    Dec 16, 2013 at 7:30
  • 1
    Looks like the question is closed but the most current answer isn't here: new URLSearchParams(location.search).get('year') Dec 31, 2019 at 23:07
  • You can use URLSearchParams.getAll() to return all of the values associated with a particular parameter: console.log(urlParams.getAll('size'));
    – Nafis
    May 5, 2021 at 1:41

14 Answers 14

77

You may use window.URL class:

new URL(location.href).searchParams.get('year')
// Returns 2008 for href = "http://localhost/search.php?year=2008".
// Or in two steps:
const params = new URL(location.href).searchParams;
const year = params.get('year');
4
  • 4
    window.URL is a handy one, if only using latest Chrome and Firefox
    – socrates
    Jan 13, 2017 at 9:41
  • 4
    this shuld be the accepted answer nowadays
    – pungggi
    Sep 6, 2018 at 10:26
  • 1
    @pungggi ...until your client uses internet explorer :( Sep 7, 2018 at 23:50
  • 1
    @haykam Then use a polyfill for that! Sep 4, 2019 at 14:57
60

My favorite way for getting URL params is this approach:

var parseQueryString = function() {

    var str = window.location.search;
    var objURL = {};

    str.replace(
        new RegExp( "([^?=&]+)(=([^&]*))?", "g" ),
        function( $0, $1, $2, $3 ){
            objURL[ $1 ] = $3;
        }
    );
    return objURL;
};

//Example how to use it: 
var params = parseQueryString();
alert(params["foo"]); 
5
  • 46
    That old man always says "when you have a problem that can only be resolved with regular expressions, you actually have two problems".
    – rscarvalho
    Nov 15, 2013 at 14:44
  • I love this, very cute! is there a reason you capture the '='? you could say /([^?=&]+)=([^&]*)/g and have your params be (match, key, value)?
    – dtudury
    Feb 28, 2014 at 0:03
  • isn't location.search.split("year=")[1] much simpler?
    – Rodrigo
    Nov 25, 2016 at 8:31
  • @Rodrigo if you have more than one params it will blow
    – KTU
    Mar 22, 2017 at 17:31
  • 1
    A more elegant —no regex / more modern (2018) — solution is here: stackoverflow.com/a/42316411/328117
    – vinyll
    Feb 28, 2018 at 20:56
52

A non-regex approach, you can simply split by the character '&' and iterate through the key/value pair:

function getParameter(paramName) {
  var searchString = window.location.search.substring(1),
      i, val, params = searchString.split("&");

  for (i=0;i<params.length;i++) {
    val = params[i].split("=");
    if (val[0] == paramName) {
      return val[1];
    }
  }
  return null;
}

2020 EDIT:

Nowadays, in modern browsers you can use the URLSearchParams constructor:

const params = new URLSearchParams('?year=2020&month=02&day=01')

// You can access specific parameters:
console.log(params.get('year'))
console.log(params.get('month'))

// And you can iterate over all parameters
for (const [key, value] of params) {
  console.log(`Key: ${key}, Value: ${value}`);
}

5
  • Isn't val a global in there? Feb 7, 2009 at 6:24
  • then can i do if(getParameter("year") != "") { var year=getParameter("year"); document.location.href=page.php?year=$year&etc etc.
    – sarmenhb
    Feb 7, 2009 at 6:27
  • 1
    @sarmenhb: You can do: var year=getParameter("year"); if (year){ document.location.href='page.php?year='+year;} Feb 7, 2009 at 6:29
  • 3
    @Luca Matteis: No, val is not a global in there. It's defined as a local var in var searchString, i, val, ...
    – Alex
    Sep 11, 2009 at 11:24
  • 1
    Elegant and easy to use! Why isn't this marked as the answer? Mar 30, 2016 at 5:17
16

This question is old and things have evolved in JavaScript. You can now do this:

const params = {}
document.location.search.substr(1).split('&').forEach(pair => {
  [key, value] = pair.split('=')
  params[key] = value
})

and you get params.year that contains 2008. You would also get other query params in your params object.


Edit: a shorter/cleaner way to do this:

const params = new Map(location.search.slice(1).split('&').map(kv => kv.split('=')))

You can then test if the year param exists with:

params.has('year')  // true

Or retrieve it with:

params.get('year')  // 2008

Edit 2020

You can convert URL params to an Object:

const params = location.search.slice(1).split('&').reduce((acc, s) => {
  const [k, v] = s.split('=')
  return Object.assign(acc, {[k]: v})
}, {})

Then it can be used as a regular JS Object:

params.year  // 2008
4
  • 1
    You should use a .reduce() instead of .forEach
    – Olivier
    Jan 16, 2018 at 14:49
  • 1
    Doesn't work with .reduce(). Only first param is written to params object. Checked in Chrome dev tools. Can you please double check and and replace with forEach() instead?
    – tylik
    Jan 28, 2019 at 11:06
  • @vinyll @tylik const getQueryObject = locationSearchString => locationSearchString .substr(1) .split('&') .reduce((queryObject, keyValuePair) => { const [key, value] = keyValuePair.split('='); queryObject[key] = value; return queryObject; }, {});
    – layonez
    Feb 20, 2019 at 10:03
  • 1
    you should use URL but if you're going to do it this way you need to call decodeURIComponent on every key and value after splitting by & and =. This is how it's possible to encode = and & in the keys and values themselves as well as other things like # as they'll all be encoded.
    – gman
    Jan 31, 2020 at 7:05
8

The following uses regular expressions and searches only on the query string portion of the URL.

Most importantly, this method supports normal and array parameters as in http://localhost/?fiz=zip&foo[]=!!=&bar=7890#hashhashhash

function getQueryParam(param) {
    var result =  window.location.search.match(
        new RegExp("(\\?|&)" + param + "(\\[\\])?=([^&]*)")
    );

    return result ? result[3] : false;
}

console.log(getQueryParam("fiz"));
console.log(getQueryParam("foo"));
console.log(getQueryParam("bar"));
console.log(getQueryParam("zxcv"));

Output:

zip
!!=
7890
false
6

It took me a while to find the answer to this question. Most people seem to be suggesting regex solutions. I strongly prefer to use code that is tried and tested as opposed to regex that I or someone else thought up on the fly.

I use the parseUri library available here: http://stevenlevithan.com/demo/parseuri/js/

It allows you to do exactly what you are asking for:

var uri = 'http://localhost/search.php?year=2008';
var year = uri.queryKey['year'];
// year = '2008'
1
  • 3
    var year = parseUri(window.location.search).queryKey['year']; Is a more relevant example. The one above does not work with version 1.2 of the parseUri script.
    – Yannick
    Feb 26, 2013 at 8:39
6
function gup( name ) {
    name = name.replace(/[\[]/,"\\\[").replace(/[\]]/,"\\\]");
    var regexS = "[\\?&]"+name+"=([^&#]*)";
    var regex = new RegExp( regexS );
    var results = regex.exec( window.location.href );
    if( results == null )
        return "";
    else
        return results[1];
}
var year = gup("year"); // returns "2008"
2
  • 3
    You should use window.location.search instead of window.location.href. This would simplify your expressions not having to check for the hash or query markers Sep 10, 2009 at 8:01
  • It would be a good idea to escape all regex meta characters in "name" before creating a regex off of it.
    – kangax
    Sep 11, 2009 at 2:25
5

The easiest way is to have

if (document.location.search.indexOf('yourtext=') >= 0) {
    // your code
} else {
    // what happens?
}

indexOf()

The indexOf(text) function returns

  • A WHOLE NUMBER BELOW 0 when the text passed in the function is not in whatever variable or string you are looking for - in this case document.location.search.
  • A WHOLE NUMBER EQUAL TO 0 OR HIGHER when the text passed in the function is in whatever variable or string you are looking for - in this case document.location.search.

I hope this was useful, @gumbo

2
  • 2
    This fails with a query string like ?notyourtext=foo Mar 24, 2016 at 23:48
  • 1
    ...and fails when using ?yourtext=foo&notyourtext=bar.
    – Arjan
    Jul 5, 2017 at 5:42
4

A Simple One-Line Solution:

let query = Object.assign.apply(null, location.search.slice(1).split('&').map(entry => ({ [entry.split('=')[0]]: entry.split('=')[1] })));

Expanded & Explained:

// define variable
let query;

// fetch source query
query = location.search;

// skip past the '?' delimiter
query = query.slice(1);

// split source query by entry delimiter
query = query.split('&');

// replace each query entry with an object containing the query entry
query = query.map((entry) => {

   // get query entry key
   let key = entry.split('=')[0];

   // get query entry value
   let value = entry.split('=')[1];

   // define query object
   let container = {};

   // add query entry to object
   container[key] = value;

   // return query object
   return container;
});

// merge all query objects
query = Object.assign.apply(null, query);
1

I used a variant of Alex's - but needed to to convert the param appearing multiple times to an array. There seem to be many options. I didn't want rely on another library for something this simple. I suppose one of the other options posted here may be better - I adapted Alex's because of the straight forwardness.

parseQueryString = function() {
    var str = window.location.search;
    var objURL = {};

    // local isArray - defer to underscore, as we are already using the lib
    var isArray = _.isArray

    str.replace(
        new RegExp( "([^?=&]+)(=([^&]*))?", "g" ),
        function( $0, $1, $2, $3 ){

            if(objURL[ $1 ] && !isArray(objURL[ $1 ])){
                // if there parameter occurs more than once, convert to an array on 2nd
                var first = objURL[ $1 ]
                objURL[ $1 ] = [first, $3]
            } else if(objURL[ $1 ] && isArray(objURL[ $1 ])){
                // if there parameter occurs more than once, add to array after 2nd
                objURL[ $1 ].push($3)
            }
            else
            {
                // this is the first instance
                objURL[ $1 ] = $3;
            }

        }
    );
    return objURL;
};
1
  • If a param appears more than once, it should only be treated as an array if it ends with [] (e.g. foo[]=1&foo[]=2). Otherwise, you should use either the first or last occurrence. Mar 24, 2016 at 23:50
1

I played a bit with this problem and at this end I used this:

function getJsonFromUrl() {
  return Object.assign(...location.search.substr(1).split("&").map(sliceProperty));
}
  • Object.assign to transform a list of object into one object
  • Spread operator ... to transform an array into a list
  • location.search.substr(1).split("&") to get all parameters as array of properties (foo=bar)
  • map walk each properties and split them into an array (either call splitProperty or sliceProperty).

splitProperty:

  function splitProperty(pair) {
    [key, value] = pair.split("=")
    return { [key]: decodeURIComponent(value) }
  }
  • Split by =
  • Deconstruct the array into an array of two elements
  • Return a new object with the dynamic property syntax

sliceProperty:

  function sliceProperty(pair) {
    const position = pair.indexOf("="),
      key = pair.slice(0, position),
      value = pair.slice(position + 1, pair.length);
    return { [key]: decodeURIComponent(value) }
  }
  • Set the position of =, key and value
  • Return a new object with the dynamic property syntax

I think splitProperty is prettier but sliceProperty is faster. Run JsPerf for more information.

1

Grab the params from location.search with one line:

const params = new Map(this.props.location.search.slice(1).split('&').map(param => param.split('=')))

Then, simply:

if(params.get("year")){
  //year exists. do something...
} else {
  //year doesn't exist. do something else...
}
0

ES6 answer:

const parseQueryString = (path = window.location.search) =>
  path.slice(1).split('&').reduce((car, cur) => {
   const [key, value] = cur.split('=')
   return { ...car, [key]: value } 
  }, {})

for example:

parseQueryString('?foo=bar&foobar=baz')
// => {foo: "bar", foobar: "baz"}
0

This is what I like to do:

window.location.search
    .substr(1)
    .split('&')
    .reduce(
        function(accumulator, currentValue) {
            var pair = currentValue
                .split('=')
                .map(function(value) {
                    return decodeURIComponent(value);
                });

            accumulator[pair[0]] = pair[1];

            return accumulator;
        },
        {}
    );

Of course you can make it more compact using modern syntax or writing everything into one line...

I leave that up to you.