1734

I have a URL with some GET parameters as follows:

www.test.com/t.html?a=1&b=3&c=m2-m3-m4-m5 

I need to get the whole value of c. I tried to read the URL, but I got only m2. How do I do this using JavaScript?

1
  • 9
    Before you post a new answer, consider there are already 50+ answers for this question. Please, make sure that your answer contributes information that is not among existing answers.
    – janniks
    Feb 3, 2020 at 12:04

63 Answers 63

2680

JavaScript itself has nothing built in for handling query string parameters.

Code running in a (modern) browser can use the URL object (a Web API). URL is also implemented by Node.js:

// You can get url_string from window.location.href if you want to work with
// the URL of the current page
var url_string = "http://www.example.com/t.html?a=1&b=3&c=m2-m3-m4-m5"; 
var url = new URL(url_string);
var c = url.searchParams.get("c");
console.log(c);


For older browsers (including Internet Explorer), you can use this polyfill.

You could also use one for URLSearchParams and extract the query string to pass to it with window.location.search.substring(1).


You could also use the code from the original version of this answer that predates URL. The above polyfill is robust and well tested and I strongly recommend it over this though.

You could access location.search, which would give you from the ? character on to the end of the URL or the start of the fragment identifier (#foo), whichever comes first.

Then you can parse it with this:

function parse_query_string(query) {
  var vars = query.split("&");
  var query_string = {};
  for (var i = 0; i < vars.length; i++) {
    var pair = vars[i].split("=");
    var key = decodeURIComponent(pair.shift());
    var value = decodeURIComponent(pair.join("="));
    // If first entry with this name
    if (typeof query_string[key] === "undefined") {
      query_string[key] = value;
      // If second entry with this name
    } else if (typeof query_string[key] === "string") {
      var arr = [query_string[key], value];
      query_string[key] = arr;
      // If third or later entry with this name
    } else {
      query_string[key].push(value);
    }
  }
  return query_string;
}

var query_string = "a=1&b=3&c=m2-m3-m4-m5";
var parsed_qs = parse_query_string(query_string);
console.log(parsed_qs.c);

You can get the query string from the URL of the current page with:

var query = window.location.search.substring(1);
var qs = parse_query_string(query);
2
  • For older browsers, you may need a polyfill for URL in addition to the one for URLSearchParams. Or you can dodge this issue by replacing the line var c = url.searchParams.get("c"); in the answer above with var c = new URLSearchParams(window.location.search).get("c");. Sep 24, 2018 at 0:09
  • Wow, this is extremely useful even in front-end exclusive pages: You could just share a link with parameters and use this code to preload some variables to generate a certain shared view.
    – Foxcode
    Jul 11, 2022 at 17:48
269

Most implementations I've seen miss out URL-decoding the names and the values.

Here's a general utility function that also does proper URL-decoding:

function getQueryParams(qs) {
    qs = qs.split('+').join(' ');

    var params = {},
        tokens,
        re = /[?&]?([^=]+)=([^&]*)/g;

    while (tokens = re.exec(qs)) {
        params[decodeURIComponent(tokens[1])] = decodeURIComponent(tokens[2]);
    }

    return params;
}

//var query = getQueryParams(document.location.search);
//alert(query.foo);
12
  • 5
    This code doesn't work. It creates an infinite loop because the regex is compiled in the loop definition which resets the current index. It works properly if you put the regex into a variable outside of the loop.
    – maxhawkins
    Jul 6, 2011 at 1:22
  • 4
    @maxhawkins: It works in some browsers while it would go into an infinite loop in others. You're half-right in that regard. I will fix the code to be cross-browser. Thanks for pointing that out!
    – Ates Goral
    Jul 6, 2011 at 5:31
  • 4
    @ZiTAL This function is to be used with the query part of a URL, not the entire URL. See the commented-out usage example below.
    – Ates Goral
    Feb 17, 2012 at 16:57
  • 2
    @Harvey Case insensitivity is not a concern of query parameters. It sounds like an application-specific thing that should be applied along with, or on top of query parameter extraction.
    – Ates Goral
    May 26, 2016 at 21:46
  • 8
    Why qs.split('+').join(' '); and not qs.replace(/\+/g, ' '); ?
    – FlameStorm
    Feb 6, 2018 at 6:58
261

source

function gup( name, url ) {
    if (!url) url = location.href;
    name = name.replace(/[\[]/,"\\\[").replace(/[\]]/,"\\\]");
    var regexS = "[\\?&]"+name+"=([^&#]*)";
    var regex = new RegExp( regexS );
    var results = regex.exec( url );
    return results == null ? null : results[1];
}
gup('q', 'hxxp://example.com/?q=abc')
7
  • 9
    I like this option best, but prefer to return null, or the result, but not an empty string. Nov 5, 2010 at 2:53
  • 2
    It looks like you have some extra escape chars. "\\[" should be "\[". Since those are regular strings, the [ and ] don't need to be escaped.
    – EricP
    Oct 29, 2013 at 18:24
  • This is not case insensitive. Where would I add the "i" to make it case insensitive?
    – zeta
    Jan 20, 2016 at 1:43
  • alert(gup('UserID', window.location.href)); Mar 10, 2016 at 10:35
  • if there is no parameters in the URL, results will be Null and generate an error. testing for null before attempting to parse the array could be better
    – Antony P.
    Dec 3, 2016 at 1:33
250

This is an easy way to check just one parameter:

Example URL:

http://myserver/action?myParam=2

Example Javascript:

var myParam = location.search.split('myParam=')[1]

if "myParam" exists in the URL... variable myParam will contain "2", otherwise it will be undefined.

Maybe you want a default value, in that case:

var myParam = location.search.split('myParam=')[1] ? location.search.split('myParam=')[1] : 'myDefaultValue';

Update: This works better:

var url = "http://www.example.com/index.php?myParam=384&login=admin"; // or window.location.href for current url
var captured = /myParam=([^&]+)/.exec(url)[1]; // Value is in [1] ('384' in our case)
var result = captured ? captured : 'myDefaultValue';

And it works right even when URL is full of parameters.

6
  • 47
    This only works if the parameter you're grabbing is the last one in the URL, which you shouldn't depend on (even if you're only expecting one parameter). e.g. http://myserver/action?myParam=2&anotherParam=3 would yield not "2" but "2&anotherParam=3". Mar 5, 2014 at 21:39
  • 47
    (location.search.split('myParam=')[1]||'').split('&')[0] -- to use with multiple params or possibliy missing myParam. Sep 17, 2014 at 9:33
  • 2
    or location.search.split('myParam=').splice(1).join('').split('&')[0]
    – J.Steve
    Aug 20, 2015 at 18:17
  • 2
    You can gain more precision and allow any order of parameters by prepending with [?|&] as in [?|&]myParam=([^&]+) May 21, 2018 at 23:52
  • 2
    You may need to decode the value result = decodeURIComponent(result); May 22, 2018 at 0:10
160

Browsers vendors have implemented a native way to do this via URL and URLSearchParams.

let url = new URL('http://www.test.com/t.html?a=1&b=3&c=m2-m3-m4-m5');
let searchParams = new URLSearchParams(url.search);
console.log(searchParams.get('c'));  // outputs "m2-m3-m4-m5"

Currently supported in Firefox, Opera, Safari, Chrome and Edge. For a list of browser support see here.

https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/URLSearchParams https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/URL/URL

https://url.spec.whatwg.org/

Eric Bidelman, an engineer at Google, recommends using this polyfill for unsupported browsers.

13
  • According to the MDN link(s) Safari support URL but not URLSearchParams. Apr 9, 2016 at 22:23
  • 3
    @Markouver Isn't the polyfill take care of that? BTW, Safari is the modern days' IE6
    – Csaba Toth
    Nov 6, 2016 at 2:45
  • Why is new URLSearchParams("www.test.com/t.html?a=1&b=3&c=m2-m3-m4-m5").get('a') returning null for me? (On Chrome stable). b and c seem to work well.
    – ripper234
    Mar 3, 2017 at 11:58
  • Updated answer. My original answer was not properly using URLSearchParams, as it's only designed to work with the querystring portion of the URL.
    – cgatian
    Mar 3, 2017 at 13:42
  • 7
    Use url.searchParams instead new URLSearchParams(url.search). May 14, 2017 at 14:40
107

I found this ages ago, very easy:

function getUrlVars() {
    var vars = {};
    var parts = window.location.href.replace(/[?&]+([^=&]+)=([^&]*)/gi,    
    function(m,key,value) {
      vars[key] = value;
    });
    return vars;
  }

Then call it like this:

var fType = getUrlVars()["type"];
5
  • 2
    Very nice, it also works using location.search instead of window.location.href
    – Fabio C.
    Jan 15, 2016 at 8:33
  • 2
    @pdxbmw It is useless and should be removed. The code may seem clever at first glance, but isn't very well thought out. Improvements: Use decodeURIComponent() on value, because that's what you usually want to work with; use window.location.search instead of window.location.href, because you are only interested in the parameters, not the whole url.
    – Leif
    Jun 14, 2016 at 8:15
  • I used it in my es6 project: decodeURIComponent(window.location.search).replace(/[?&]+([^=&]+)=([^&]*)/g, (m, key, value) => params[key] = value);
    – Yao
    Aug 14, 2016 at 18:47
  • 3
    @Leif suggestion worked great. I was getting in an ID 142# because at the end of the URL was the # generated on a button click. Leaving the function like this var vars = {}; window.location.search.replace(/[?&]+([^=&]+)=([^&]*)/gi, function(m,key,value) { vars[key] = value; }); return vars; Sep 27, 2016 at 14:16
  • var parts isn't necessary
    – Roee
    May 15, 2018 at 9:35
83

You can get the query string in location.search, then you can split everything after the question mark:

var params = {};

if (location.search) {
    var parts = location.search.substring(1).split('&');

    for (var i = 0; i < parts.length; i++) {
        var nv = parts[i].split('=');
        if (!nv[0]) continue;
        params[nv[0]] = nv[1] || true;
    }
}

// Now you can get the parameters you want like so:
var abc = params.abc;
3
  • 4
    What about URL-decoding the parameter names and values?
    – Ates Goral
    Jul 8, 2009 at 18:04
  • This approach doesn't handle arrays. E.g. ?array[]=1&array[]=2 produces {"array[]": "2"}, which is clearly wrong.
    – Kafoso
    Mar 16, 2017 at 15:54
  • 2
    @Kafoso There is no clear right or wrong here. First of all, repeated fields with the same names have no specified standard behavior, and is up to the parser to handle. Additionally, the [] pattern only has a meaning in some cases (e.g., PHP), but not others. So not "clearly wrong" – just not implemented to handle a non-standard case that you may or may not need to handle.
    – Blixt
    Mar 16, 2017 at 16:56
54

A super simple way using URLSearchParams.

function getParam(param){
  return new URLSearchParams(window.location.search).get(param);
}

It's currently supported in Chrome, Firefox, Safari, Edge, and others.

4
  • Get the error: 'SCRIPT5009: 'URLSearchParams' is not defined' when running in Edge. Dec 18, 2018 at 13:32
  • @AndreasPresthammer What version of edge?
    – spencer.sm
    Dec 18, 2018 at 16:49
  • @spencer-sm Microsoft Edge 41.16299.820.0 Dec 25, 2018 at 18:12
  • @iiiml0sto1 What are "prettified URL parameters" ?
    – spencer.sm
    Oct 26, 2019 at 22:26
39

I wrote a more simple and elegant solution.

var arr = document.URL.match(/room=([0-9]+)/)
var room = arr[1];
7
  • Look at that, two lines, does exactly what it says on the tin - and won't break if someone is trying to probe for vulnerabilities and adds a bunch of extra characters and queries unlike a couple of these solutions. Cheers chap!
    – David G
    Jun 14, 2015 at 20:31
  • This does the job right and only in 2 lines. Great answer! Sep 27, 2016 at 15:29
  • I think it would be handy for other a check for null was included. If not, an example is here: stackoverflow.com/a/36076822/1945948 (I had an edit attempt rejected).
    – atw
    Jan 5, 2017 at 14:06
  • Don't understand... how does this answer the question, which is about getting params from a specific string, 'www.test.com/t.html?a=1&b=3&c=m2-m3-m4-m5'? Oct 22, 2017 at 17:29
  • Loved this answer, +1'ed. Just a suggestion, you can replace [0-9] for \d
    – gmanjon
    Aug 17, 2018 at 10:47
34

Here is a recursive solution that has no regex, and has minimal mutation (only the params object is mutated, which I believe is unavoidable in JS).

It's awesome because it:

  • Is recursive
  • Handles multiple parameters of the same name
  • Deals well with malformed parameter strings (missing values, so on)
  • Doesn't break if '=' is in the value
  • Performs URL decoding
  • And lastly, It's awesome because it...argh!!!

Code:

var get_params = function(search_string) {

  var parse = function(params, pairs) {
    var pair = pairs[0];
    var parts = pair.split('=');
    var key = decodeURIComponent(parts[0]);
    var value = decodeURIComponent(parts.slice(1).join('='));

    // Handle multiple parameters of the same name
    if (typeof params[key] === "undefined") {
      params[key] = value;
    } else {
      params[key] = [].concat(params[key], value);
    }

    return pairs.length == 1 ? params : parse(params, pairs.slice(1))
  }

  // Get rid of leading ?
  return search_string.length == 0 ? {} : parse({}, search_string.substr(1).split('&'));
}

var params = get_params(location.search);

// Finally, to get the param you want
params['c'];
5
  • 32
    You... you said recursive twice. Mar 25, 2014 at 18:04
  • It can't find the first param in the next url : www.mysite.com?first=1&second=2 Jun 26, 2014 at 20:14
  • Hi Mario, here is a JSFiddle showing it working with that URL: jsfiddle.net/q6xfJ - If you have found an error, is this perhaps browser specific? When testing, please note that the answer I supplied uses location.search, which is the '?first=1&second=2' part of the URL. Cheers :)
    – Jai
    Jun 27, 2014 at 0:35
  • 48
    I don't see why something is good just because it is recursive.
    – Adam Arold
    Feb 7, 2015 at 1:54
  • 8
    Erm, I think you missed the recursion joke there Adam. Although now everyone will miss it because edi9999 removed the second "Is recursive".
    – Jai
    May 21, 2015 at 11:52
32

I made a function that does this:

var getUrlParams = function (url) {
  var params = {};
  (url + '?').split('?')[1].split('&').forEach(function (pair) {
    pair = (pair + '=').split('=').map(decodeURIComponent);
    if (pair[0].length) {
      params[pair[0]] = pair[1];
    }
  });
  return params;
};

Update 5/26/2017, here is an ES7 implementation (runs with babel preset stage 0, 1, 2, or 3):

const getUrlParams = url => `${url}?`.split('?')[1]
  .split('&').reduce((params, pair) =>
    ((key, val) => key ? {...params, [key]: val} : params)
    (...`${pair}=`.split('=').map(decodeURIComponent)), {});

Some tests:

console.log(getUrlParams('https://google.com/foo?a=1&b=2&c')); // Will log {a: '1', b: '2', c: ''}
console.log(getUrlParams('/foo?a=1&b=2&c')); // Will log {a: '1', b: '2', c: ''}
console.log(getUrlParams('?a=1&b=2&c')); // Will log {a: '1', b: '2', c: ''}
console.log(getUrlParams('https://google.com/')); // Will log {}
console.log(getUrlParams('a=1&b=2&c')); // Will log {}

Update 3/26/2018, here is a Typescript implementation:

const getUrlParams = (search: string) => `${search}?`
  .split('?')[1]
  .split('&')
  .reduce(
    (params: object, pair: string) => {
      const [key, value] = `${pair}=`
        .split('=')
        .map(decodeURIComponent)

      return key.length > 0 ? { ...params, [key]: value } : params
    },
    {}
  )

Update 2/13/2019, here is an updated TypeScript implementation that works with TypeScript 3.

interface IParams { [key: string]: string }

const paramReducer = (params: IParams, pair: string): IParams => {
  const [key, value] = `${pair}=`.split('=').map(decodeURIComponent)

  return key.length > 0 ? { ...params, [key]: value } : params
}

const getUrlParams = (search: string): IParams =>
  `${search}?`.split('?')[1].split('&').reduce<IParams>(paramReducer, {})
4
  • On a URL without query parameters this will return Object {"": ""} Jun 29, 2015 at 10:46
  • 2
    Looks clean enough to me. The rest of the answers are just too much "magic" without enough explanation. Feb 26, 2016 at 22:30
  • This is an awesome answer! Jun 22, 2019 at 2:06
  • Thanks @SpencerBigum ! Aug 2, 2019 at 16:53
26

See this

function getURLParameters(paramName)
{
    var sURL = window.document.URL.toString();
    if (sURL.indexOf("?") > 0)
    {
        var arrParams = sURL.split("?");
        var arrURLParams = arrParams[1].split("&");
        var arrParamNames = new Array(arrURLParams.length);
        var arrParamValues = new Array(arrURLParams.length);

        var i = 0;
        for (i = 0; i<arrURLParams.length; i++)
        {
            var sParam =  arrURLParams[i].split("=");
            arrParamNames[i] = sParam[0];
            if (sParam[1] != "")
                arrParamValues[i] = unescape(sParam[1]);
            else
                arrParamValues[i] = "No Value";
        }

        for (i=0; i<arrURLParams.length; i++)
        {
            if (arrParamNames[i] == paramName)
            {
                //alert("Parameter:" + arrParamValues[i]);
                return arrParamValues[i];
            }
        }
        return "No Parameters Found";
    }
}
0
25

The shortest way:

new URL(location.href).searchParams.get("my_key");
2
  • 3
    I would favor using new URL(location.href).searchParams.get("my_key") over URLSearchParams since the latter will fail when retrieving the first query parameter of any URL. Aug 22, 2018 at 6:33
  • 1
    Tested both variants. I agree with you. Edited the answer.
    – Zon
    Aug 22, 2018 at 7:18
20

ECMAScript 6 solution:

var params = window.location.search
  .substring(1)
  .split("&")
  .map(v => v.split("="))
  .reduce((map, [key, value]) => map.set(key, decodeURIComponent(value)), new Map())
2
  • Nice. FYI, because it's a Map, usage is params.get("key");
    – evanmcd
    Feb 28, 2019 at 17:51
  • I like it but probably it won't get the first param. I created a function based on your example function urlParams(url) { const [, searchParams = ''] = url.split('?') return searchParams.split('&') .map(v => v.split('=')) .reduce((map, [key = '', value]) => key.length ? map.set(key, decodeURIComponent(value)) : map, new Map()) } Dec 16, 2019 at 19:45
15

I use the parseUri library. It allows you to do exactly what you are asking for:

var uri = 'www.test.com/t.html&a=1&b=3&c=m2-m3-m4-m5';
var c = uri.queryKey['c'];
// c = 'm2-m3-m4-m5'
0
12

I use

function getVal(str) {
    var v = window.location.search.match(new RegExp('(?:[\?\&]'+str+'=)([^&]+)'));
    return v ? v[1] : null;
}
4
  • Please add some explanation. Your answer is currently flagged "low quality" and might eventually be removed without. Mar 18, 2016 at 8:51
  • I found that if there has a string like '#id' at the end of the url,and return the last parameter value like 'somevalue#id'
    – Ayano
    Dec 27, 2016 at 10:00
  • @Ayano window.location.search won't include hash like #id.
    – Fancyoung
    Dec 28, 2016 at 1:54
  • @Fancyoung Yes,you are right,i made a mistake that use location.hrefto match the result instead of the location.search.Thank you.
    – Ayano
    Dec 28, 2016 at 2:04
11

Here is my solution. As advised by Andy E while answering this question, it's not good for your script's performance if it's repeatedly building various regex strings, running loops etc just to get a single value. So, I've come up with a simpler script that returns all the GET parameters in a single object. You should call it just once, assign the result to a variable and then, at any point in the future, get any value you want from that variable using the appropriate key. Note that it also takes care of URI decoding (i.e things like %20) and replaces + with a space:

 function getUrlQueryParams(url) {
  var queryString = url.split("?")[1];
  var keyValuePairs = queryString.split("&");
  var keyValue = [];
  var queryParams = {};
  keyValuePairs.forEach(function(pair) {
    keyValue = pair.split("=");
    queryParams[keyValue[0]] = decodeURIComponent(keyValue[1]).replace(/\+/g, " ");
});
  return queryParams;
}

So, here are are a few tests of the script for you to see:

// Query parameters with strings only, no special characters.
var currentParams = getUrlQueryParams("example.com/foo?number=zero");
alert(currentParams["number"]); // Gives "zero".

// For the URL you stated above...
var someParams = getUrlQueryParams("www.test.com/t.html?a=1&b=3&c=m2-m3-m4-m5 ");
alert(someParams["c"]); // Gives "m2-m3-m4-m5".

// For a query params with URI encoding...
var someParams = getUrlQueryParams("www.example.com/t.html?phrase=a%20long%20shot&location=Silicon+Valley%2C+USA");
alert(someParams["phrase"]); // Gives "a long shot".
alert(someParams["location"]); // Gives "Silicon Valley, USA".
1
  • .replace("+", " ") will only replace the first occurrence You need to use .replace(/\+/g, " ");
    – Tony
    Dec 11, 2017 at 18:53
10

this question has too many answers, so i'm adding another one.

/**
 * parses and returns URI query parameters 
 * 
 * @param {string} param parm
 * @param {bool?} asArray if true, returns an array instead of a scalar 
 * @returns {Object|Array} 
 */
function getURIParameter(param, asArray) {
    return document.location.search.substring(1).split('&').reduce(function(p,c) {
        var parts = c.split('=', 2).map(function(param) { return decodeURIComponent(param); });
        if(parts.length == 0 || parts[0] != param) return (p instanceof Array) && !asArray ? null : p;
        return asArray ? p.concat(parts.concat(true)[1]) : parts.concat(true)[1];
    }, []);
}

usage:

getURIParameter("id")  // returns the last id or null if not present
getURIParameter("id", true) // returns an array of all ids

this copes with empty parameters (those keys present without "=value"), exposure of both a scalar and array-based value retrieval API, as well as proper URI component decoding.

10

The easiest way using the replace() method:

From the urlStr string:

paramVal = urlStr.replace(/.*param_name=([^&]*).*|(.*)/, '$1');

or from the current URL:

paramVal = document.URL.replace(/.*param_name=([^&]*).*|(.*)/, '$1');

Explanation:

  • document.URL - interface returns the document location (page url) as a string.
  • replace() - method returns a new string with some or all matches of a pattern replaced by a replacement.
  • /.*param_name=([^&]*).*/ - the regular expression pattern enclosed between slashes which means:
    • .* - zero or more of any characters,
    • param_name= - param name which is serched,
    • () - group in regular expression,
    • [^&]* - one or more of any characters excluding &,
    • | - alternation,
    • $1 - reference to first group in regular expression.

var urlStr = 'www.test.com/t.html?a=1&b=3&c=m2-m3-m4-m5';
var c = urlStr.replace(/.*c=([^&]*).*|(.*)/, '$1');
var notExisted = urlStr.replace(/.*not_existed=([^&]*).*|(.*)/, '$1');
console.log(`c === '${c}'`);
console.log(`notExisted === '${notExisted}'`);

2
  • 1
    Nice solution, but if the parameter is not found, the whole string is returned. I would expect "undefined" in this case.
    – pensan
    Jul 24, 2019 at 9:41
  • 1
    Hi @pensan, thank you for your great comment. I just add to the regular expression the handling of the situation when the parameter does not appear in the URL. In this case we get the emty string (not whole string). Jul 24, 2019 at 11:02
8

Yet another suggestion.

There are some good answers already, but I found them needlessly complex and hard to understand. This is short, simple, and returns a simple associative array with key names corresponding to the token names in the URL.

I added a version with comments below for those who want to learn.

Note this relies on jQuery ($.each) for its loop, which I recommend instead of forEach. I find it simpler to ensure cross-browser compatibility using jQuery across the board rather than plugging in individual fixes to support whichever new functions aren't supported in older browsers.

Edit: After I wrote this I noticed Eric Elliott's answer, which is almost the same, though it uses forEach, while I'm generally against (for reasons stated above).

function getTokens(){
    var tokens = [];
    var query = location.search;
    query = query.slice(1);
    query = query.split('&');
    $.each(query, function(i,value){    
        var token = value.split('=');   
        var key = decodeURIComponent(token[0]);     
        var data = decodeURIComponent(token[1]);
        tokens[key] = data;
    });
    return tokens;
}

Commented version:

function getTokens(){
    var tokens = [];            // new array to hold result
    var query = location.search; // everything from the '?' onward 
    query = query.slice(1);     // remove the first character, which will be the '?' 
    query = query.split('&');   // split via each '&', leaving us an array of something=something strings

    // iterate through each something=something string
    $.each(query, function(i,value){    

        // split the something=something string via '=', creating an array containing the token name and data
        var token = value.split('=');   

        // assign the first array element (the token name) to the 'key' variable
        var key = decodeURIComponent(token[0]);     

        // assign the second array element (the token data) to the 'data' variable
        var data = decodeURIComponent(token[1]);

        tokens[key] = data;     // add an associative key/data pair to our result array, with key names being the URI token names
    });

    return tokens;  // return the array
}

For the examples below we'll assume this address:

http://www.example.com/page.htm?id=4&name=murray

You can assign the URL tokens to your own variable:

var tokens = getTokens();

Then refer to each URL token by name like this:

document.write( tokens['id'] );

This would print "4".

You can also simply refer to a a token name from the function directly:

document.write( getTokens()['name'] );

...which would print "murray".

8

Or if you don't want to reinvent the URI parsing wheel use URI.js

To get the value of a parameter named foo:

new URI((''+document.location)).search(true).foo

What that does is

  1. Convert document.location to a string (it's an object)
  2. Feed that string to URI.js's URI class construtor
  3. Invoke the search() function to get the search (query) portion of the url
    (passing true tells it to output an object)
  4. Access the foo property on the resulting object to get the value

Here's a fiddle for this.... http://jsfiddle.net/m6tett01/12/

8

For Single Parameter Value like this index.html?msg=1 use following code,

$(window).load(function(){
    queryString();
});

function queryString()
{
    var queryString = window.location.search.substring(1);
    var varArray = queryString.split("="); //eg. index.html?msg=1

    var param1 = varArray[0];
    var param2 = varArray[1];

}

For All Parameter Value use following Code,

$(window).load(function(){
    queryString();
});

function queryString()
{
    var queryString = window.location.search;
    var varArray = queryString.split("&");
    for (var i=0;i<varArray.length;i++) {
      var param = varArray[i].split("=");
        //parameter-value pair
    }
} 
0
8

Here I am posting one example. But it's in jQuery. Hope it will help others:

<script type="text/javascript" src="jquery.js"></script>
<script type="text/javascript" src="jquery.url.js"></script>

<!-- URL:  www.example.com/correct/?message=done&year=1990-->

<script type="text/javascript">
$(function(){
    $.url.attr('protocol')  // --> Protocol: "http"
    $.url.attr('path')          // --> host: "www.example.com"
    $.url.attr('query')         // --> path: "/correct/"
    $.url.attr('message')   // --> query: "done"
    $.url.attr('year')      // --> query: "1990"
});
</script>
1
  • 1
    Copied from your other post: "Requires the url plugin : plugins.jquery.com/url"
    – zeta
    Jan 20, 2016 at 0:12
8

I had the need to read a URL GET variable and complete an action based on the url parameter. I searched high and low for a solution and came across this little piece of code. It basically reads the current page url, perform some regular expression on the URL then saves the url parameters in an associative array, which we can easily access.

So as an example if we had the following url with the javascript at the bottom in place.

http://TestServer/Pages/NewsArchive.aspx?year=2013&Month=July

All we’d need to do to get the parameters id and page are to call this:

The Code will be:

<script type="text/javascript">
var first = getUrlVars()["year"];
var second = getUrlVars()["Month"];

alert(first);
alert(second);
function getUrlVars() {
var vars = {};
var parts = window.location.href.replace(/[?&]+([^=&]+)=([^&]*)/gi, function(m,key,value) {
vars[key] = value;
});
return vars;
}
</script>
2
  • I don't get why you rolled back my edit of your answer. However you'r welcome to improve it your self :) May 3, 2021 at 9:06
  • Not working for URL like -> ?action=api_call&dates[]=2022-01-28&dates[]=2022-02-03
    – Codextent
    Feb 1, 2022 at 14:10
7
// Read a page's GET URL variables and return them as an associative array.
function getUrlVars()
{
    var vars = [], hash;
    var hashes = window.location.href.slice(window.location.href.indexOf('?') + 1).split('&');
    for(var i = 0; i < hashes.length; i++)
    {
        hash = hashes[i].split('=');
        vars.push(hash[0]);
        vars[hash[0]] = hash[1];
    }
    return vars;
}

// Usage for URL: http://my.site.com/location?locationId=53cc272c0364aefcb78756cd&shared=false
var id = getUrlVars()["locationId"];

Got from here: http://jquery-howto.blogspot.ru/2009/09/get-url-parameters-values-with-jquery.html

0
7

It's the N++ time I am looking for a clean way to do this.
Will save this here in case I get back cause I know I will... 🙄

const parseUrlQuery = (value) => {
  var urlParams = new URL(value).searchParams
  return Array.from(urlParams.keys()).reduce((acc, key) => {
    acc[key] = urlParams.getAll(key)
    return acc
  }, {})
}

console.log(parseUrlQuery('http://url/path?param1=A&param1=B&param2=ABC&param3=61569'))

6

Simple way

function getParams(url){
        var regex = /[?&]([^=#]+)=([^&#]*)/g,
            params = {},
            match;
        while(match = regex.exec(url)) {
            params[match[1]] = match[2];
        }
        return params;
    }

then call it like getParams(url)

6

Elegant, functional style solution

Let's create an object containing URL param names as keys, then we can easily extract the parameter by its name:

// URL: https://example.com/?test=true&orderId=9381  

// Build an object containing key-value pairs
export const queryStringParams = window.location.search
  .split('?')[1]
  .split('&')
  .map(keyValue => keyValue.split('='))
  .reduce<QueryStringParams>((params, [key, value]) => {
    params[key] = value;
    return params;
  }, {});

type QueryStringParams = {
  [key: string]: string;
};


// Return URL parameter called "orderId"
return queryStringParams.orderId;
3
  • love this, but didn't work for me without making sure to return the accumulator in the reduce function
    – Ella
    Aug 2, 2019 at 5:31
  • @Ella it was a typo, there is no way it can work without a return
    – user6269864
    Aug 7, 2019 at 6:59
  • Looks better now, let's hope you make it to the first page!
    – Ella
    Aug 8, 2019 at 18:24
5

Here is what I do:

var uriParams = getSearchParameters();
alert(uriParams.c);


// background functions:

// 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;
}
5
// http:localhost:8080/path?param_1=a&param_2=b
var getParamsMap = function () {
    var params = window.location.search.split("&");
    var paramsMap = {};
    params.forEach(function (p) {
        var v = p.split("=");
        paramsMap[v[0]]=decodeURIComponent(v[1]);
    });
    return paramsMap;
};

// -----------------------

console.log(getParamsMap()["param_1"]);  // should log "a"     
1
  • This returns the first parameter with '?' Jan 19, 2017 at 12:58

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