url-modify v0.0.5
url-modify
Modify URL instances cleanly and safely. Works in any environment that supports the URL API.
Installation
yarn add url-modify
# Or if you are using NPM:
# npm install --save url-modifyUsage
urlModify(modifications: UrlModifyModifications, base: string | URL, options?: UrlModifyOptions): URLUrlModifyModifications
{
hash?: string;
host?: string;
password?: string;
path?: string;
port?: string;
protocol?: string;
search?: string | string[][] | Record<string, string> | URLSearchParams;
username?: string;
}UrlModifyOptions
{
pathBehavior?: 'append' | 'prepend' | 'replace';
searchBehavior?: 'append' | 'clear' | 'replace';
}pathBehavior
appendAppends
modifications.pathto the base URL path. Note that the base URL path is not tampered with; it may or may not end in a trailing slash depending how you provided it.prependPrepend
modifications.pathto the base URL path. Note that the leading slash from the base URL path is removed, so you may need to ensuremodifications.pathends with a slash.replace(default)Replace the base URL path with
modifications.path.
searchBehavior
appendIf a search key provided in
modifications.searchalready exists in the base URL then retain it and append the values provided inmodifications.searchto the search string.clearClear all search params provided in the base URL before appending the values provided in
modifications.searchto the search string.replace(default)If a search key provided in
modifications.searchalready exists in the base URL then remove it before appending the values provided inmodifications.searchto the search string.
Examples
import { urlModify } from 'url-modify';
// Or if you are using CommonJS:
// const { urlModify } = require('url-modify');
const base = new URL('https://foo.example?foo=bar');
console.log(urlModify({ protocol: 'wss' }, base).toString())
// "wss://foo.example/?foo=bar"
console.log(urlModify({ search: { foo: 'bar2' } }, base).toString())
// "https://foo.example/?foo=bar2"
console.log(urlModify({ search: { foo: 'bar2' } }, base, { searchBehavior: 'append' }).toString())
// "https://foo.example/?foo=bar&foo=bar2"
console.log(urlModify({ search: [ [ 'foo', 'bar2' ], [ 'foo', 'bar3' ] ] }, base, { searchBehavior: 'append' }).toString())
// "https://foo.example/?foo=bar&foo=bar2&foo=bar3"
console.log(urlModify({ search: [ [ 'foo', 'bar2' ], [ 'foo', 'bar3' ] ] }, base, { searchBehavior: 'replace' }).toString())
// "https://foo.example/?foo=bar2&foo=bar3"
console.log(urlModify({ search: { abc: '123' } }, base).toString())
// "https://foo.example/?foo=bar&abc=123"
console.log(urlModify({ search: { abc: '123' } }, base, { searchBehavior: 'clear' }).toString())
// "https://foo.example/?abc=123"Rationale
While the URL API simplifies creating URL strings, it's difficult to cleanly mutate URL instances without creating excessive variables and/or risk modifying the original URL instance.
Until the spec allows you to do something like...
const base = new URL('http://foo.example');
new URL({ protocol: 'https' }, base);...or...
const base = new URL('http://foo.example');
new URL({ ...base, protocol: 'https' });...then this package is a helpful workaround.