106

Is there any JavaScript library that makes a dictionary out of the query string, ASP.NET style?

Something which can be used like:

var query = window.location.querystring["query"]?

Is "query string" called something else outside the .NET realm? Why isn't location.search broken into a key/value collection ?

EDIT: I have written my own function, but does any major JavaScript library do this?

4

15 Answers 15

232

You can extract the key/value pairs from the location.search property, this property has the part of the URL that follows the ? symbol, including the ? symbol.

function getQueryString() {
  var result = {}, queryString = location.search.slice(1),
      re = /([^&=]+)=([^&]*)/g, m;

  while (m = re.exec(queryString)) {
    result[decodeURIComponent(m[1])] = decodeURIComponent(m[2]);
  }

  return result;
}

// ...
var myParam = getQueryString()["myParam"];
9
  • 11
    This is not a win. What if a key's value has the '=' character in it? E.g. dork.com/?equation=10=2. You could argue it SHOULD be URL-encoded but it sure doesn't have to be. I made the mistake of writing a naive function like this myself once. There are more than one edge case this function account for. Jun 15, 2010 at 1:28
  • 6
    @James, forgot to mention that a couple of months ago I've modified the function, now it correctly can handle your example dork.com/?equation=10=2 ... Oct 21, 2010 at 2:08
  • 2
    @CMS this doesn't handle the possibility of an array in a query string that is represented as such ?val=foo&val=bar&val=baz how would you accomodate this? Dec 30, 2010 at 21:24
  • 2
    @RussBradberry You can't really have val=foo&val=bar&val=baz; it would have to be val[]=foo&val[]=bar&val[]=baz Dec 8, 2011 at 21:18
  • 1
    It seemed incomplete to me when my values had spaces and my vars ended up with %20's, so I replaced result[keyValuePair[0]] = keyValuePair[1] || ''; with result[keyValuePair[0]] = decodeURIComponent((keyValuePair[1]+'').replace(/\+/g, '%20')) || '';
    – user24601
    Jan 9, 2014 at 3:49
22

tl;dr solution on a single(ish) line of code using vanilla javascript

var queryDict = {}
location.search.substr(1).split("&").forEach(function(item) {
    queryDict[item.split("=")[0]] = item.split("=")[1]
})

For querystring ?a=1&b=2&c=3&d&eit returns:

> queryDict
a: "1"
b: "2"
c: "3"
d: undefined
e: undefined

multi-valued keys and encoded characters?

See the original answer at How can I get query string values in JavaScript?

"?a=1&b=2&c=3&d&e&a=5&a=t%20e%20x%20t&e=http%3A%2F%2Fw3schools.com%2Fmy%20test.asp%3Fname%3Dståle%26car%3Dsaab"
> queryDict
a: ["1", "5", "t e x t"]
b: ["2"]
c: ["3"]
d: [undefined]
e: [undefined, "http://w3schools.com/my test.asp?name=ståle&car=saab"]
12
  • 8
    that isn't a single line - it's several lines formatted badly!
    – JonnyRaa
    Jun 20, 2014 at 10:13
  • 2
    Damn, I don't know what to say... You got me. Here, have some multilined solution: ` var queryDict = {}; location.search.substr(1).split("&").forEach( function(item) { queryDict[item.split("=")[0]] = item.split("=")[1]; } );`
    – Qwerty
    Jun 20, 2014 at 11:11
  • 2
    haha I love it! Sorry I used to work with someone who used to say 'I've found a one liner that does x' and then just show you 3 lines with the line breaks taken out!
    – JonnyRaa
    Jun 20, 2014 at 11:20
  • @JonnyLeeds No problem, I know exactly what you mean, but then, why would one write each of chained commands on new line? Then there is a function given as parameter (parameters are usually inlined) which has only a single assignment. It screams to be inlined! :D
    – Qwerty
    Jan 9, 2015 at 15:08
  • 1
    @Qwerty, it's probably because your "one-liner" should be reformatted so that reading it doesn't require horizontal scrolling. I have adjusted it.
    – P i
    Jul 24, 2015 at 15:31
11

Maybe http://plugins.jquery.com/query-object/?

This is the fork of it https://github.com/sousk/jquery.parsequery#readme.

6
  • 37
    This should be native to jquery
    – gcb
    Apr 8, 2011 at 8:36
  • @EvanMulawski Thanks. The plug-in just disappeared it seems. I added a different link, which might help.
    – Shadow2531
    Nov 30, 2011 at 0:58
  • The method provided by CMS is easier and cleaner. Esp. if you are not already using jquery.
    – jcoffland
    Sep 5, 2012 at 0:09
  • 1
    You can refer this library to do that - github.com/Mikhus/jsurl
    – Mikhus
    Apr 26, 2013 at 6:32
  • 1
    Here's the proper link: plugins.jquery.com/query-object
    – thexfactor
    Feb 3, 2014 at 20:35
8

After finding this post, when looking myself I thought I should add that I don't think the most up-voted solution is the best. It doesn't handle array values (such as ?a=foo&a=bar - in this case I would expect getting a to return ['foo', 'bar']). It also as far as I can tell doesn't take into account encoded values - such as hex character encoding where %20 represents a space (example: ?a=Hello%20World) or the plus symbol being used to represent a space (example: ?a=Hello+World).

Node.js offers what looks like a very complete solutions to querystring parsing. It would be easy to take out and use in your own project as its fairly well isolated and under a permissive licence.

The code for it can be viewed here: https://github.com/joyent/node/blob/master/lib/querystring.js

The tests that Node has can be seen here: https://github.com/joyent/node/blob/master/test/simple/test-querystring.js I would suggest trying some of these with the popular answer to see how it handles them.

There is also a project that I was involved in to specifically add this functionality. It is a port of the Python standard lib query string parsing module. My fork can be found here: https://github.com/d0ugal/jquery.qeeree

1
  • There is no just borrowing the code from Node,js, it's highly intertwingled.
    – alfwatt
    Jul 25, 2014 at 21:32
6

Or you could use the library sugar.js.

From sugarjs.com:

Object.fromQueryString ( str , deep = true )

Converts the query string of a URL into an object. If deep is false, conversion will only accept shallow params (ie. no object or arrays with [] syntax) as these are not universally supported.

Object.fromQueryString('foo=bar&broken=wear') >{"foo":"bar","broken":"wear"}
Object.fromQueryString('foo[]=1&foo[]=2') >{"foo":[1,2]}

Example:

var queryString = Object.fromQueryString(location.search);
var foo = queryString.foo;
3

If you have the querystring on hand, use this:

 /**
 * @param qry the querystring
 * @param name name of parameter
 * @returns the parameter specified by name
 * @author [email protected]
 */

function getQueryStringParameter(qry,name){
    if(typeof qry !== undefined && qry !== ""){
        var keyValueArray = qry.split("&");
        for ( var i = 0; i < keyValueArray.length; i++) {
            if(keyValueArray[i].indexOf(name)>-1){
                return keyValueArray[i].split("=")[1];
            }
        }
    }
    return "";
}
2
// How about this
function queryString(qs) {
    var queryStr = qs.substr(1).split("&"),obj={};
    for(var i=0; i < queryStr.length;i++)
        obj[queryStr[i].split("=")[0]] = queryStr[i].split("=")[1];
    return obj;
}

// Usage:
var result = queryString(location.search);
4
  • That's more-or-less the same as the "Update: no need to use regex" code in the highest-voted answer above. There's also loads of similar code in this question). You're missing decodeURIComponent on the extracted strings at least.
    – Rup
    Feb 17, 2014 at 11:00
  • @Rup, the update was made after this answer.
    – Qwerty
    Jun 12, 2014 at 8:12
  • @Qwerty No it wasn't: the update was Feb 2013 whereas this answer was nearly a year later in Feb 2014. But who cares, there's plenty of similar code flying about. My comments about the decodeURIComponent stand, though.
    – Rup
    Jun 12, 2014 at 9:40
  • @Rup Yup, sorry. And yup.
    – Qwerty
    Jun 12, 2014 at 9:46
2

It is worth noting, the library that John Slegers mentioned does have a jQuery dependency, however here is a version that is vanilla Javascript.

https://github.com/EldonMcGuinness/querystring.js

I would have simply commented on his post, but I lack the reputation to do so. :/

Example:

The example below process the following, albeit irregular, query string:

?foo=bar&foo=boo&roo=bar;bee=bop;=ghost;=ghost2;&;checkbox%5B%5D=b1;checkbox%5B%5D=b2;dd=;http=http%3A%2F%2Fw3schools.com%2Fmy%20test.asp%3Fname%3Dst%C3%A5le%26car%3Dsaab&http=http%3A%2F%2Fw3schools2.com%2Fmy%20test.asp%3Fname%3Dst%C3%A5le%26car%3Dsaab 

var qs = "?foo=bar&foo=boo&roo=bar;bee=bop;=ghost;=ghost2;&;checkbox%5B%5D=b1;checkbox%5B%5D=b2;dd=;http=http%3A%2F%2Fw3schools.com%2Fmy%20test.asp%3Fname%3Dst%C3%A5le%26car%3Dsaab&http=http%3A%2F%2Fw3schools2.com%2Fmy%20test.asp%3Fname%3Dst%C3%A5le%26car%3Dsaab";
//var qs = "?=&=";
//var qs = ""

var results = querystring(qs);

(document.getElementById("results")).innerHTML =JSON.stringify(results, null, 2);
<script 
src="https://rawgit.com/EldonMcGuinness/querystring.js/master/dist/querystring.min.js"></script>
<pre id="results">RESULTS: Waiting...</pre>

1
  • Actually, I did remove the jQuery dependency in the code I gave in my answer ;-) Mar 6, 2016 at 13:55
2

The code

This Gist by Eldon McGuinness is by far the most complete implementation of a JavaScript query string parser that I've seen so far.

Unfortunately, it's written as a jQuery plugin.

I rewrote it to vanilla JS and made a few improvements :

function parseQuery(str) {
  var qso = {};
  var qs = (str || document.location.search);
  // Check for an empty querystring
  if (qs == "") {
    return qso;
  }
  // Normalize the querystring
  qs = qs.replace(/(^\?)/, '').replace(/;/g, '&');
  while (qs.indexOf("&&") != -1) {
    qs = qs.replace(/&&/g, '&');
  }
  qs = qs.replace(/([\&]+$)/, '');
  // Break the querystring into parts
  qs = qs.split("&");
  // Build the querystring object
  for (var i = 0; i < qs.length; i++) {
    var qi = qs[i].split("=");
    qi = qi.map(function(n) {
      return decodeURIComponent(n)
    });
    if (typeof qi[1] === "undefined") {
      qi[1] = null;
    }
    if (typeof qso[qi[0]] !== "undefined") {

      // If a key already exists then make this an object
      if (typeof (qso[qi[0]]) == "string") {
        var temp = qso[qi[0]];
        if (qi[1] == "") {
          qi[1] = null;
        }
        qso[qi[0]] = [];
        qso[qi[0]].push(temp);
        qso[qi[0]].push(qi[1]);

      } else if (typeof (qso[qi[0]]) == "object") {
        if (qi[1] == "") {
          qi[1] = null;
        }
        qso[qi[0]].push(qi[1]);
      }
    } else {
      // If no key exists just set it as a string
      if (qi[1] == "") {
        qi[1] = null;
      }
      qso[qi[0]] = qi[1];
    }
  }
  return qso;
}

How to use it

var results = parseQuery("?foo=bar&foo=boo&roo=bar;bee=bop;=ghost;=ghost2;&;checkbox%5B%5D=b1;checkbox%5B%5D=b2;dd=;http=http%3A%2F%2Fw3schools.com%2Fmy%20test.asp%3Fname%3Dst%C3%A5le%26car%3Dsaab&http=http%3A%2F%2Fw3schools2.com%2Fmy%20test.asp%3Fname%3Dst%C3%A5le%26car%3Dsaab");

Output

{
  "foo": ["bar", "boo" ],
  "roo": "bar",
  "bee": "bop",
  "": ["ghost", "ghost2"],
  "checkbox[]": ["b1", "b2"],
  "dd": null,
  "http": [
    "http://w3schools.com/my test.asp?name=ståle&car=saab",
    "http://w3schools2.com/my test.asp?name=ståle&car=saab"
  ]
}

See also this Fiddle.

1

function decode(s) {
    try {
        return decodeURIComponent(s).replace(/\r\n|\r|\n/g, "\r\n");
    } catch (e) {
        return "";
    }
}
function getQueryString(win) {
    var qs = win.location.search;
    var multimap = {};
    if (qs.length > 1) {
        qs = qs.substr(1);
        qs.replace(/([^=&]+)=([^&]*)/g, function(match, hfname, hfvalue) {
            var name = decode(hfname);
            var value = decode(hfvalue);
            if (name.length > 0) {
                if (!multimap.hasOwnProperty(name)) {
                    multimap[name] = [];
                }
                multimap[name].push(value);
            }
        });
    }
    return multimap;
}
var keys = getQueryString(window);
for (var i in keys) {
    if (keys.hasOwnProperty(i)) {
        for (var z = 0; z < keys[i].length; ++z) {
            alert(i + ":" + keys[i][z]);
        }
    }
}
3
  • You can also .toLowerCase() the name if you want hfname matching to be case-insensitive.
    – Shadow2531
    Mar 15, 2009 at 5:03
  • You can also check to see if the value is empty or not. If it is, you can skip adding the entry so the array only contains non-empty values.
    – Shadow2531
    Mar 15, 2009 at 5:06
  • 1
    unescape() doesn't handle UTF-8 sequences, so you might want to use decodeURIComponent(). However then, if you want + chars to be decoded to spaces, run .replace(/\+/g, " ") on the string before decoding.
    – Shadow2531
    Mar 15, 2009 at 5:41
1

I like to keep it simple, readable and small.

function searchToObject(search) {
    var pairs = search.substring(1).split("&"),
        obj = {}, pair;

    for (var i in pairs) {
        if (pairs[i] === "") continue;
        pair = pairs[i].split("=");
        obj[decodeURIComponent(pair[0])] = decodeURIComponent(pair[1]);
    }
    return obj;
}

searchToObject(location.search);

Example:

searchToObject('?query=myvalue')['query']; // spits out: 'myvalue'
1

Function I wrote for a requirement similar to this with pure javascript string manipulation

"http://www.google.lk/?Name=John&Age=20&Gender=Male"

function queryize(sampleurl){
    var tokens = url.split('?')[1].split('&');
    var result = {};

    for(var i=0; i<tokens.length; i++){
        result[tokens[i].split('=')[0]] = tokens[i].split('=')[1];
    }

    return result;
}

Usage:

queryize(window.location.href)['Name'] //returns John
queryize(window.location.href)['Age'] //returns 20
queryize(window.location.href)['Gender'] //returns Male
2
  • Neat, but apart from the way you remove the leading ? that's basically the same as the two answers above you?
    – Rup
    Aug 4, 2014 at 14:28
  • Just a small improvement. The way the method is used makes it easy for the user. User only needs to know what query string value he needs. Aug 8, 2014 at 7:49
1

If you are using lodash + ES6, here is a one line solution: _.object(window.location.search.replace(/(^\?)/, '').split('&').map(keyVal => keyVal.split('=')));

0

Okay, since everyone is ignoring my actual question, heh, I'll post mine too! Here's what I have:

location.querystring = (function() {

    // The return is a collection of key/value pairs

    var queryStringDictionary = {};

    // Gets the query string, starts with '?'

    var querystring = unescape(location.search);

    // document.location.search is empty if no query string

    if (!querystring) {
        return {};
    }

    // Remove the '?' via substring(1)

    querystring = querystring.substring(1);

    // '&' seperates key/value pairs

    var pairs = querystring.split("&");

    // Load the key/values of the return collection

    for (var i = 0; i < pairs.length; i++) {
        var keyValuePair = pairs[i].split("=");
        queryStringDictionary[keyValuePair[0]] = keyValuePair[1];
    }

    // Return the key/value pairs concatenated

    queryStringDictionary.toString = function() {

        if (queryStringDictionary.length == 0) {
            return "";
        }

        var toString = "?";

        for (var key in queryStringDictionary) {
            toString += key + "=" + queryStringDictionary[key];
        }

        return toString;
    };

    // Return the key/value dictionary

    return queryStringDictionary;
})();

And the tests:

alert(window.location.querystring.toString());

for (var key in location.querystring) {
    alert(key + "=" + location.querystring[key]);
}

Mind you thought, JavaScript isn't my native tongue.

Anyway, I'm looking for a JavaScript library (e.g. jQuery, Prototype) that already has one written. :)

3
  • 1
    I'm not convinced you really need a library to do what amounts to three lines of code above! Still, at least you would hope a library would remember the decodeURIComponent() both the key and value, something every code snippet posted so far has failed to do.
    – bobince
    Mar 15, 2009 at 15:08
  • You don't need a library. I wanted to compare my implementation to one in a library so I could see if I was missing any edge cases. :)
    – core
    Mar 15, 2009 at 22:44
  • javascript isnt your native tongue what does it mean , you should learn it even if you need a library to use
    – Marwan
    Nov 1, 2011 at 8:06
0

Building on the answer by @CMS I have the following (in CoffeeScript which can easily be converted to JavaScript):

String::to_query = ->
  [result, re, d] = [{}, /([^&=]+)=([^&]*)/g, decodeURIComponent]
  while match = re.exec(if @.match /^\?/ then @.substring(1) else @)
    result[d(match[1])] = d match[2] 
  result

You can easily grab what you need with:

location.search.to_query()['my_param']

The win here is an object-oriented interface (instead of functional) and it can be done on any string (not just location.search).

If you are already using a JavaScript library this function make already exist. For example here is Prototype's version

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.