URL
The URL interface is used to parse, construct, normalize, and encode URLs. It works by providing properties which allow you to easily read and modify the components of a URL.
You normally create a new URL object by specifying the URL as a string when calling its constructor, or by providing a relative URL and a base URL. You can then easily read the parsed components of the URL or make changes to the URL.
If a browser doesn't yet support the URL() constructor, you can access a URL object using the Window interface's URL property. Be sure to check to see if any of your target browsers require this to be prefixed.
Note: This feature is available in Web Workers
Constructor
URL()-
Creates and returns a
URLobject referencing the URL specified using an absolute URL string, or a relative URL string and a base URL string.
Properties
hash-
A
USVStringcontaining a'#'followed by the fragment identifier of the URL. host-
A
USVStringcontaining the domain (that is the hostname) followed by (if a port was specified) a':'and the port of the URL. hostname-
A
USVStringcontaining the domain of the URL. href-
A stringifier that returns a
USVStringcontaining the whole URL. originRead only-
Returns a
USVStringcontaining the origin of the URL, that is its scheme, its domain and its port. password-
A
USVStringcontaining the password specified before the domain name. pathname-
Is a
USVStringcontaining an initial'/'followed by the path of the URL, not including the query string or fragment. port-
A
USVStringcontaining the port number of the URL. protocol-
A
USVStringcontaining the protocol scheme of the URL, including the final':'. search-
A
USVStringindicating the URL's parameter string; if any parameters are provided, this string includes all of them, beginning with the leading?character. searchParamsRead only-
A
URLSearchParamsobject which can be used to access the individual query parameters found insearch. username-
A
USVStringcontaining the username specified before the domain name.
Methods
toString()-
Returns a
USVStringcontaining the whole URL. It is a synonym forURL.href, though it can't be used to modify the value. toJSON()-
Returns a
USVStringcontaining the whole URL. It returns the same string as thehrefproperty.
Static methods
createObjectURL()-
Returns a
DOMStringcontaining a unique blob URL, that is a URL withblob:as its scheme, followed by an opaque string uniquely identifying the object in the browser. revokeObjectURL()-
Revokes an object URL previously created using
URL.createObjectURL().
Usage notes
The constructor takes a url parameter, and an optional base parameter to use as a base if the url parameter is a relative URL:
const url = new URL('../cats', 'http://www.example.com/dogs');
console.log(url.hostname); // "www.example.com"
console.log(url.pathname); // "/cats"
URL properties can be set to construct the URL:
url.hash = 'tabby';
console.log(url.href); // "http://www.example.com/cats#tabby"
URLs are encoded according to the rules found in RFC 3986. For instance:
url.pathname = 'démonstration.html';
console.log(url.href); // "http://www.example.com/d%C3%A9monstration.html"
The URLSearchParams interface can be used to build and manipulate the URL query string.
To get the search params from the current window's URL, you can do this:
// https://some.site/?id=123
const parsedUrl = new URL(window.location.href);
console.log(parsedUrl.searchParams.get("id")); // "123"
The toString() method of URL just returns the value of the href property, so the constructor can be used to normalize and encode a URL directly.
const response = await fetch(new URL('http://www.example.com/démonstration.html'));
Specifications
| Specification |
|---|
| URL Standard # api |
Browser compatibility
BCD tables only load in the browser
See also
- Polyfill of
URLincore-js - URL API
- What is a URL?
- Property to obtain a
URLobject:URL. URLSearchParams.