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jsuri

v1.3.1

Published

Uri and query string manipulation

Downloads

521,688

Readme

jsUri

URI parsing and manipulation for node.js and the browser.

Build Status

NPM

spm package

Pass any URL into the constructor:

var uri = new Uri('http://user:[email protected]:81/index.html?q=books#fragment')

Use property methods to get at the various parts:

uri.protocol()    // http
uri.userInfo()    // user:pass
uri.host()        // www.test.com
uri.port()        // 81
uri.path()        // /index.html
uri.query()       // q=books
uri.anchor()      // fragment

Property methods accept an optional value to set:

uri.protocol('https')
uri.toString()    // https://user:[email protected]:81/index.html?q=books#fragment

uri.host('mydomain.com')
uri.toString()    // https://user:[email protected]:81/index.html?q=books#fragment

Chainable setter methods help you compose strings:

new Uri()
    .setPath('/archives/1979/')
    .setQuery('?page=1')                   // /archives/1979?page=1

new Uri()
    .setPath('/index.html')
    .setAnchor('content')
    .setHost('www.test.com')
    .setPort(8080)
    .setUserInfo('username:password')
    .setProtocol('https')
    .setQuery('this=that&some=thing')      // https://username:[email protected]:8080/index.html?this=that&some=thing#content

new Uri('http://www.test.com')
    .setHost('www.yahoo.com')
    .setProtocol('https')                  // https://www.yahoo.com

Query param methods

Returns the first query param value for the key:

new Uri('?cat=1&cat=2&cat=3').getQueryParamValue('cat')             // 1

Returns all query param values for the given key:

new Uri('?cat=1&cat=2&cat=3').getQueryParamValues('cat')            // [1, 2, 3]

Internally, query key/value pairs are stored as a series of two-value arrays in the Query object:

new Uri('?a=b&c=d').query().params                  // [ ['a', 'b'], ['c', 'd']]

Add query param values:

new Uri().addQueryParam('q', 'books')               // ?q=books

new Uri('http://www.github.com')
    .addQueryParam('testing', '123')
    .addQueryParam('one', 1)                        // http://www.github.com/?testing=123&one=1

// insert param at index 0
new Uri('?b=2&c=3&d=4').addQueryParam('a', '1', 0)  // ?a=1&b=2&c=3&d=4

Replace every query string parameter named key with newVal:

new Uri().replaceQueryParam('page', 2)     // ?page=2

new Uri('?a=1&b=2&c=3')
    .replaceQueryParam('a', 'eh')          // ?a=eh&b=2&c=3

new Uri('?a=1&b=2&c=3&c=4&c=5&c=6')
    .replaceQueryParam('c', 'five', '5')   // ?a=1&b=2&c=3&c=4&c=five&c=6

Removes instances of query parameters named key:

new Uri('?a=1&b=2&c=3')
    .deleteQueryParam('a')                 // ?b=2&c=3

new Uri('test.com?a=1&b=2&c=3&a=eh')
    .deleteQueryParam('a', 'eh')           // test.com/?a=1&b=2&c=3

Test for the existence of query parameters named key:

new Uri('?a=1&b=2&c=3')
    .hasQueryParam('a')                    // true

new Uri('?a=1&b=2&c=3')
    .hasQueryParam('d')                    // false

Create an identical URI object with no shared state:

var baseUri = new Uri('http://localhost/')

baseUri.clone().setProtocol('https')   // https://localhost/
baseUri                                // http://localhost/

This project incorporates the parseUri regular expression by Steven Levithan.