581

I have a getter to get the value from a cookie.

Now I have 2 cookies by the name shares= and by the name obligations= .

I want to make this getter only to get the values from the obligations cookie.

How do I do this? So the for splits the data into separate values and puts it in an array.

 function getCookie1() {
    // What do I have to add here to look only in the "obligations=" cookie? 
    // Because now it searches all the cookies.

    var elements = document.cookie.split('=');
    var obligations= elements[1].split('%');
    for (var i = 0; i < obligations.length - 1; i++) {
        var tmp = obligations[i].split('$');
        addProduct1(tmp[0], tmp[1], tmp[2], tmp[3]);
    }
 }
8

49 Answers 49

720

One approach, which avoids iterating over an array, would be:

function getCookie(name) {
  const value = `; ${document.cookie}`;
  const parts = value.split(`; ${name}=`);
  if (parts.length === 2) return parts.pop().split(';').shift();
}

Walkthrough

Splitting a string by token will produce either, an array with one string (same value), in case token does not exist in a string, or an array with two strings , in case token is found in a string .

The first (left) element is string of what was before the token, and the second one (right) is what is string of what was after the token.

(NOTE: in case string starts with a token, first element is an empty string)

Considering that cookies are stored as follows:

"{name}={value}; {name}={value}; ..."

in order to retrieve specific cookie value, we just need to get string that is after "; {name}=" and before next ";". Before we do any processing, we prepend the cookies string with "; ", so that every cookie name, including the first one, is enclosed with "; " and "=":

"; {name}={value}; {name}={value}; ..."

Now, we can first split by "; {name}=", and if token is found in a cookie string (i.e. we have two elements), we will end up with second element being a string that begins with our cookie value. Then we pull that out from an array (i.e. pop), and repeat the same process, but now with ";" as a token, but this time pulling out the left string (i.e. shift) to get the actual token value.

9
  • 21
    @user3132564 tried to edit this in, but its actually a comment: This method returns the wrong value when you search for a suffix of a cookie - if the value of document.cookie is "FirstName=John" and you call getCookie("Name"), you'll get back "John" even though there's no cookie by that name. It also doesn't work if one cookie's name is the suffix of another - if document.cookie is "Name=John; LastName=Doe", calling split("Name=") returns an array with three strings and the method doesn't return the right value for getCookie("Name"). Dec 24, 2013 at 13:08
  • 28
    Warning about implementation in this answer: if there is more than one cookie by the same name then no cookie value will be returned. For example, if there's a cookie named stackToken set for domains .stackexchange.com as well as programmers.stackexchange.com then if you call getCookie("stackToken") neither value will be returned -- parts.length will be greater than 2. If you know all cookie values for the same name (but different domain and path) will be the same, see accepted answer here: stackoverflow.com/questions/5639346/…
    – jlpp
    Apr 25, 2014 at 18:15
  • 8
    @DennisJaheruddin - Looks like the suffix issue was fixed. Jul 13, 2015 at 18:11
  • 2
    @NathanJ.Brauer you're correct. Updated to address that issue long time ago, but made a note only in changelog, instead of in comments.
    – kirlich
    Nov 19, 2015 at 19:36
  • 1
    As for perfomance: I set up a jsperf test for the offered solutions: jsperf.com/getcookie-performance . Performance strongly differs between browsers.
    – sborn
    Oct 16, 2019 at 14:31
251

I would prefer using a single regular expression match on the cookie:

window.getCookie = function(name) {
  var match = document.cookie.match(new RegExp('(^| )' + name + '=([^;]+)'));
  if (match) return match[2];
}

OR Also we are able to use as a function , check below code.

function getCookieValue(name) 
    {
      const regex = new RegExp(`(^| )${name}=([^;]+)`)
      const match = document.cookie.match(regex)
      if (match) {
        return match[2]
      }
   }

Improved thanks to Scott Jungwirth in the comments.

7
  • 13
    This can have false matches if two cookies have the same suffix. It will match both xyz=value and abcxyz=value when name = xyz. Oct 19, 2015 at 18:39
  • 3
    unescape((document.cookie.match(key + '=([^;].+?)(;|$)') || [])[1] || ''); Modified version of Glize/dom/Cookies Oct 20, 2015 at 17:21
  • 26
    update Regex to new RegExp('(^| )' + name + '=([^;]+)') to avoid issue raised by @BrentWashburne. Also I made a jsperf test for this and the answer with the highest votes, this one comes out slightly on top, but is definitely less code and easier to follow: jsperf.com/simple-get-cookie-by-name Jan 7, 2016 at 1:13
  • 5
    @ScottJungwirth Yes, but then you must update the return statement to return match[2];
    – Joe
    May 12, 2017 at 22:38
  • 3
    Here is this answer rewritten as an ES6 one liner: const getCookie = name => document.cookie.match(new RegExp(`(^| )${name}=([^;]+)`))?.at(2); It returns undefined if the cookie doesn't exist.
    – tsgrgo
    Aug 31, 2022 at 8:43
79

The methods in some of the other answers that use a regular expression do not cover all cases, particularly:

  1. When the cookie is the last cookie. In this case there will not be a semicolon after the cookie value.
  2. When another cookie name ends with the name being looked up. For example, you are looking for the cookie named "one", and there is a cookie named "done".
  3. When the cookie name includes characters that are not interpreted as themselves when used in a regular expression unless they are preceded by a backslash.

The following method handles these cases:

function getCookie(name) {
    function escape(s) { return s.replace(/([.*+?\^$(){}|\[\]\/\\])/g, '\\$1'); }
    var match = document.cookie.match(RegExp('(?:^|;\\s*)' + escape(name) + '=([^;]*)'));
    return match ? match[1] : null;
}

This will return null if the cookie is not found. It will return an empty string if the value of the cookie is empty.

Notes:

  1. This function assumes cookie names are case sensitive.
  2. document.cookie - When this appears on the right-hand side of an assignment, it represents a string containing a semicolon-separated list of cookies, which in turn are name=value pairs. There appears to be a single space after each semicolon.
  3. String.prototype.match() - Returns null when no match is found. Returns an array when a match is found, and the element at index [1] is the value of the first matching group.

Regular Expression Notes:

  1. (?:xxxx) - forms a non-matching group.
  2. ^ - matches the start of the string.
  3. | - separates alternative patterns for the group.
  4. ;\\s* - matches one semi-colon followed by zero or more whitespace characters.
  5. = - matches one equal sign.
  6. (xxxx) - forms a matching group.
  7. [^;]* - matches zero or more characters other than a semi-colon. This means it will match characters up to, but not including, a semi-colon or to the end of the string.
2
  • 5
    This answer is the best and shortest function that works in all cases without false matches. It also has the best explanation of how it works. However, the escape function is not explained and I would think that if the author created the cookie he would know if the name needed to be escaped or not. So I would rather see a shorter function: function getCookie(name) { var match = document.cookie.match(RegExp('(?:^|;\\s*)' + name + '=([^;]*)')); return match ? match[1] : null; }
    – Jeff Baker
    Dec 23, 2015 at 21:12
  • 1
    If it's to be a generic tool, it should either escape the name or throw an error if the name can't be embedded directly in regex. People who know the constraints of their application can remove the escape or the guard.
    – Joe Lapp
    Jul 19, 2016 at 16:12
65

If you use jQuery I recommend you to use this plugin:

https://github.com/carhartl/jquery-cookie
https://github.com/carhartl/jquery-cookie/blob/master/jquery.cookie.js

<script type="text/javascript"
 src="//cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/jquery-cookie/1.4.1/jquery.cookie.min.js">

So you can read cookie like this:

var value = $.cookie("obligations");

Also you can write cookie:

$.cookie('obligations', 'new_value');
$.cookie('obligations', 'new_value', { expires: 14, path: '/' });

Delete cookie:

$.removeCookie('obligations');
5
  • 1
    Not sure why this hasn't been voted the best answer really. Yes its jQuery and not javascript but at the same time IT IS!!!!
    – Cozzbie
    Nov 3, 2014 at 8:32
  • 33
    @Cozzbie probably to include an external library(thereby adding another http request) to just fetch a cookie value is kind of an unnecessary overkill. Oct 2, 2015 at 12:28
  • I am getting an error "Uncaught ReferenceError: $ is not defined" at "$.cookie". Though I included all the necessary libraries like jquery.min.js and the library suggested in this answer. May 7, 2020 at 11:56
  • @rahulserver Yes, may be 2015, but now, 2021 it really doesn't matter and before I start to implement all of the regular expression functions I include the script and I am done. Jan 28, 2021 at 11:16
  • 1
    For what it's worth, jquery-cookie has been superseded by js-cookie: github.com/js-cookie/js-cookie Dec 3, 2021 at 9:18
62

Here is a one liner to get a cookie value with a specific name without the need of any external lib:

const value = ('; '+document.cookie).split(`; COOKIE_NAME=`).pop().split(';')[0];

This answer is based on kirlich's brilliant solution. The only compromise of this solution is, that you will get an empty string when the cookie does not exist. In most cases this should not be a deal breaker, though.

0
46

4 years later, ES6 way simpler version.

function getCookie(name) {
  let cookie = {};
  document.cookie.split(';').forEach(function(el) {
    let split = el.split('=');
    cookie[split[0].trim()] = split.slice(1).join("=");
  })
  return cookie[name];
}

I also created a gist to use it as a Cookie object. e.g., Cookie.set(name,value) and Cookie.get(name)

This reads all cookies instead of scanning through. It's ok for small number of cookies.

5
  • 6
    Nice and simple. But one gets in trouble if the cookie contains an '='
    – aProgger
    Feb 14, 2021 at 9:57
  • Very readable syntax and clear of the intent. And ES6 should now be supported in major browsers Dec 21, 2022 at 9:32
  • @aProgger you're absolutely correct, and to fix it, replace the inner function body with const parts=el.split("=");cookie[parts[0].trim()] = parts.slice(1).join("=");
    – hanshenrik
    Oct 31, 2023 at 2:24
  • fixed the cookie-value-contains-equal bug ^^
    – hanshenrik
    Oct 31, 2023 at 2:49
  • The cookie string can contain more than one equal symbol
    – b_dubb
    Mar 25 at 14:43
39
+250

One liner to convert cookie into JavaScript Object or Map

Object.fromEntries(document.cookie.split('; ').map(v=>v.split(/=(.*)/s).map(decodeURIComponent)))
new Map(document.cookie.split('; ').map(v=>v.split(/=(.*)/s).map(decodeURIComponent)))
25

I have modified the function that Jonathan provided here, by using regular expression you can get a cookie value by its name like this:

function getCookie(name){
    var pattern = RegExp(name + "=.[^;]*")
    var matched = document.cookie.match(pattern)
    if(matched){
        var cookie = matched[0].split('=')
        return cookie[1]
    }
    return false
}

If it returns empty string it means that the cookie exists but has no value, if it returns false then the cookie doesn't exist. I hope this helps.

2
  • Just curious, why did you not use var on line 3? matched = ... Feb 11, 2020 at 21:24
  • Sorry about that, forgot to write it. Feb 14, 2020 at 11:57
23

You can use js-cookie library to get and set JavaScript cookies.

Include to your HTML:

<script src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/js-cookie@2/src/js.cookie.min.js"></script>

To create a Cookie:

Cookies.set('name', 'value');

To read a Cookie:

Cookies.get('name'); // => 'value'
23

A simple way :)

const cookieObj = new URLSearchParams(document.cookie.replaceAll("&", "%26").replaceAll("; ","&"))
cookieObj.get("your-cookie-name")
3
  • 2
    but cookies keys or value can have '&' eg: name=A&T or date&time=any-date, then it will parse it wrong
    – nkitku
    Apr 19, 2022 at 5:37
  • 1
    @nkitku I built something similar to this, then found this answer and glad you mentioned the "&" character issue. Good catch! I've modified the code above to work around this problem; I have tested this solution as well.
    – ryanm
    Aug 2, 2022 at 19:20
  • 1
    but it converts '+' (plus) to space eg: x=car+bike will give "car bike" test here
    – nkitku
    Oct 7, 2022 at 10:22
14

My one linear function to get the value cookie by its key.

cookie = key=>((new RegExp((key || '=')+'=(.*?); ','gm')).exec(document.cookie+'; ') ||['',null])[1]

Call cookie function as

cookie('some-key')
2
  • 2
    Trouble if the cookie with this name is not set.
    – Robert
    Aug 21, 2020 at 8:46
  • 2
    I have changed the code. It return null if cookie is not found Sep 26, 2020 at 4:12
13

Here is a pretty short version

 function getCookie(n) {
    let a = `; ${document.cookie}`.match(`;\\s*${n}=([^;]+)`);
    return a ? a[1] : '';
}

Note that I made use of ES6's template strings to compose the regex expression.

5
  • 4
    The best answer from now. Uses ES6 features. It's 2017 and people still using var, + to concatenate, etc. -.-' Oct 19, 2017 at 22:26
  • @EliasSoares What's the problem of using var?
    – mrReiha
    Oct 17, 2019 at 14:50
  • 1
    Not a problem, but using let is a good practice as it have advantages in many situations, and almost no disadvantages Oct 17, 2019 at 14:52
  • 3
    const would be better than let here actually
    – nog642
    Apr 17, 2022 at 4:24
12

I know it is an old question but I came across this problem too. Just for the record, There is a little API in developers mozilla web page.

Yoy can get any cookie by name using only JS. The code is also cleaner IMHO (except for the long line, that I'm sure you can easily fix).

function getCookie(sKey) {
    if (!sKey) { return null; }
    return decodeURIComponent(document.cookie.replace(new RegExp("(?:(?:^|.*;)\\s*" + encodeURIComponent(sKey).replace(/[\-\.\+\*]/g, "\\$&") + "\\s*\\=\\s*([^;]*).*$)|^.*$"), "$1")) || null;
}

As stated in the comments be aware that this method assumes that the key and value were encoded using encodeURIComponent(). Remove decode & encodeURIComponent() if the key and value of the cookie were not encoded.

3
  • 1
    Just be aware that method assumes the cookie name and value were both encoded using encodeURIComponent() when the cookie was set, which will be true if you use the companion function to set the cookie, but might not always be the case. test
    – John S
    Nov 10, 2014 at 15:18
  • @JohnS We could just remove the decodeURIComponent though, right? (If we didn't use it to set the cookie?) Would it still work? Mar 29, 2015 at 0:06
  • Yep, just removed the decodeURI and this regexp is a monster. Thank you Marc, voted! Mar 29, 2015 at 0:16
11
function getCookie(name) {
    var pair = document.cookie.split('; ').find(x => x.startsWith(name+'='));
    if (pair)
       return pair.split('=')[1]
}
3
8

kirlich gave a good solution. However, it fails when there are two cookie values with similar names, here is a simple fix for this situation:

function getCookie(name) {
  var value = "; " + document.cookie;
  var parts = value.split("; " + name + "=");
  if (parts.length >= 2) return parts.pop().split(";").shift();
}
7

It seems to me you could split the cookie key-value pairs into an array and base your search on that:

var obligations = getCookieData("obligations");

Which runs the following:

function getCookieData( name ) {
    var pairs = document.cookie.split("; "),
        count = pairs.length, parts; 
    while ( count-- ) {
        parts = pairs[count].split("=");
        if ( parts[0] === name )
            return parts[1];
    }
    return false;
}

Fiddle: http://jsfiddle.net/qFmPc/

Or possibly even the following:

function getCookieData( name ) {
    var patrn = new RegExp( "^" + name + "=(.*?);" ),
        patr2 = new RegExp( " " + name + "=(.*?);" );
    if ( match = (document.cookie.match(patrn) || document.cookie.match(patr2)) )
        return match[1];
    return false;
}
4
  • 1
    is there a method to use document.cookie.indexOf(name) and to compare?
    – user1395001
    May 24, 2012 at 2:59
  • @AndrejHefner You could, though that would match substrings. So if you had a cookie name "foobar", and one named "bar", you may get confuse the "bar" in "foobar" with the key "bar".
    – Sampson
    May 24, 2012 at 3:13
  • @AndrejHefner Please see the later method, which should be faster, since it checks the string for a match.
    – Sampson
    May 24, 2012 at 3:29
  • 1
    The second method has a bug in which it won't find the last cookie value since it always looks for a ; at the end. A correction version would be: function getCookieData( name ) { var patrn = new RegExp( "(?:^| )" + name + "=(.*?)(?:;|$)" ); if ( match = (document.cookie.match(patrn) )) return match[1]; return false; }
    – Oz Solomon
    Nov 12, 2013 at 19:25
7

Use object.defineProperty

With this, you can easily access cookies

Object.defineProperty(window, "Cookies", {
    get: function() {
        return document.cookie.split(';').reduce(function(cookies, cookie) {
            cookies[cookie.split("=")[0]] = unescape(cookie.split("=")[1]);
            return cookies
        }, {});
    }
});

From now on you can just do:

alert( Cookies.obligations );

This will automatically update too, so if you change a cookie, the Cookies will change too.

2
  • 3
    Perfect! except that it will not work for objects that have some characters like dashes (as cookie names), and when splitting, objects have a blank space on first so I go cookies[(cookie.split("=")[0]).replace(/ /g,'')] = ... Thanks!!
    – Ismail
    Jul 17, 2016 at 14:55
  • @Samuel Elh correct, but you also can use .trim() instead of replace(/ /g, '' )
    – mtizziani
    Jan 15, 2017 at 6:54
6

In my projects I use following function to access cookies by name

function getCookie(cookie) {
    return document.cookie.split(';').reduce(function(prev, c) {
        var arr = c.split('=');
        return (arr[0].trim() === cookie) ? arr[1] : prev;
    }, undefined);
}
6

always works well:

function getCookie(cname) {
    var name = cname + "=",
        ca = document.cookie.split(';'),
        i,
        c,
        ca_length = ca.length;
    for (i = 0; i < ca_length; i += 1) {
        c = ca[i];
        while (c.charAt(0) === ' ') {
            c = c.substring(1);
        }
        if (c.indexOf(name) !== -1) {
            return c.substring(name.length, c.length);
        }
    }
    return "";
}

function setCookie(variable, value, expires_seconds) {
    var d = new Date();
    d = new Date(d.getTime() + 1000 * expires_seconds);
    document.cookie = variable + '=' + value + '; expires=' + d.toGMTString() + ';';
}

No requirements for jQuery or anything. Pure old good JavaScript.

0
6

Simple function for Get cookie with cookie name:

function getCookie(cn) {
    var name = cn+"=";
    var allCookie = decodeURIComponent(document.cookie).split(';');
    var cval = [];
    for(var i=0; i < allCookie.length; i++) {
        if (allCookie[i].trim().indexOf(name) == 0) {
            cval = allCookie[i].trim().split("=");
        }   
    }
    return (cval.length > 0) ? cval[1] : "";
}
6

Apparently MDN has never heard of the word-boundary regex character class \b, which matches contiguous \w+ that is bounded on either side with \W+:

getCookie = function(name) {
    var r = document.cookie.match("\\b" + name + "=([^;]*)\\b");
    return r ? r[1] : null;
};

var obligations = getCookie('obligations');
3

There are already nice answers here for getting the cookie,However here is my own solution :

function getcookie(cookiename){
var cookiestring  = document.cookie;
var cookiearray = cookiestring.split(';');
for(var i =0 ; i < cookiearray.length ; ++i){ 
    if(cookiearray[i].trim().match('^'+cookiename+'=')){ 
        return cookiearray[i].replace(`${cookiename}=`,'').trim();
    }
} return null;
}

usage :`

     getcookie('session_id');
   // gets cookie with name session_id
3

Just use the following function (a pure javascript code)

const getCookie = (name) => {
 const cookies = Object.assign({}, ...document.cookie.split('; ').map(cookie => {
    const name = cookie.split('=')[0];
    const value = cookie.split('=')[1];

    return {[name]: value};
  }));

  return cookies[name];
};
1
  • clean solution. Thank you.
    – Marco
    May 13, 2021 at 18:57
3
function getCookie(cname) {
  var name = cname + "=";
  var ca = document.cookie.split(';');
  for(var i = 0; i < ca.length; i++) {
    var c = ca[i];
    while (c.charAt(0) == ' ') {
      c = c.substring(1);
    }
    if (c.indexOf(name) == 0) {
      return c.substring(name.length, c.length);
    }
  }
  return "";
}

Pass the cookie name to getCookie() function to get it's value

2

My solution is this:

function getCookieValue(cookieName) {
    var ca = document.cookie.split('; ');
    return _.find(ca, function (cookie) {
        return cookie.indexOf(cookieName) === 0;
    });
}

This function uses the Underscorejs _.find-function. Returns undefined if cookie name doesn't exist

2

I have done it this way. so that i get an object to access to separate the values.With this u can pass the cookie to the parent and then you can access your values by the keys like

var cookies=getCookieVal(mycookie);
alert(cookies.mykey);
function getCookieVal(parent) {
            var cookievalue = $.cookie(parent).split('&');
            var obj = {};
            $.each(cookievalue, function (i, v) {
                var key = v.substr(0, v.indexOf("="));
                var val = v.substr(v.indexOf("=") + 1, v.length);

                obj[key] = val;

            });
            return obj;
        }  
2

set by javascript

document.cookie = 'cookiename=tesing';

get by jquery with the jquery-cookie plugin

var value = $.cookie("cookiename");

alert(value);
3
  • @cytsunny - this is because you have to have the jquery cookie plugin to use this. May 7, 2018 at 14:58
  • Wow.... what an important info missing previously.... But from the link you provided, it seems that the owner of the library decided that they better remove the jquery dependency.
    – cytsunny
    May 8, 2018 at 6:39
  • the OP doesn't ask for a jQuery solution
    – b_dubb
    Mar 25 at 14:50
2

I wrote something that might be easy to use, If anyone has some things to add, feel free to do so.

function getcookie(name = '') {
    let cookies = document.cookie;
    let cookiestore = {};
    
    cookies = cookies.split(";");
    
    if (cookies[0] == "" && cookies[0][0] == undefined) {
        return undefined;
    }
    
    cookies.forEach(function(cookie) {
        cookie = cookie.split(/=(.+)/);
        if (cookie[0].substr(0, 1) == ' ') {
            cookie[0] = cookie[0].substr(1);
        }
        cookiestore[cookie[0]] = cookie[1];
    });
    
    return (name !== '' ? cookiestore[name] : cookiestore);
}

Usage

getcookie() - returns an object with all cookies on the web page.

getcookie('myCookie') - returns the value of the cookie myCookie from the cookie object, otherwise returns undefined if the cookie is empty or not set.


Example

// Have some cookies :-)
document.cookie = "myCookies=delicious";
document.cookie = "myComputer=good";
document.cookie = "myBrowser=RAM hungry";

// Read them
console.log( "My cookies are " + getcookie('myCookie') );
// Outputs: My cookies are delicious

console.log( "My computer is " + getcookie('myComputer') );
// Outputs: My computer is good

console.log( "My browser is " + getcookie('myBrowser') );
// Outputs: My browser is RAM hungry

console.log( getcookie() );
// Outputs: {myCookie: "delicious", myComputer: "good", myBrowser: "RAM hungry"}

// (does cookie exist?)
if (getcookie('hidden_cookie')) {
    console.log('Hidden cookie was found!');
} else {
    console.log('Still no cookie :-(');
}

// (do any cookies exist?)
if (getcookie()) {
    console.log("You've got cookies to eat!");
} else {
    console.log('No cookies for today :-(');
}
2

Set-Cookie in JS

document.cookie = 'fb-event-id=15648779++';

Get Cookies by name funcation

function getCookie(name) {
    // Split cookie string and get all individual name=value pairs in an array
    var cookieArr = document.cookie.split(";");
    // Loop through the array elements
    for(var i = 0; i < cookieArr.length; i++) {
        var cookiePair = cookieArr[i].split("=");
        /* Removing whitespace at the beginning of the cookie name
        and compare it with the given string */
        if(name == cookiePair[0].trim()) {
            // Decode the cookie value and return
            return decodeURIComponent(cookiePair[1]);
        }
    } 
    // Return null if not found
    return null;
}

This is how to use the getCookie function

var eventID = getCookie('fb-event-id')
2

There's an Experimental API Called CookieStore that offers convient, safe, asynchronous access to Cookies. It's available on chromium based browsers, but it's easily polyfillable elsewhere using the cookie-store package.

// import polyfill and declare types
import 'cookie-store';
 
// set a cookie
await cookieStore.set('forgive', 'me');

// get a cookie
const foo = await cookieStore.get('forgive');
console.log(foo); // { name: 'forgive', value: 'me' }

Further Reading