1.0.4 • Published 10 years ago

urlapi v1.0.4

Weekly downloads
22
License
MIT
Repository
github
Last release
10 years ago

Urlapi

This module contains methods for working with url:

  • serialize from object to string (serialize({ }));
  • parse string to object (parse(' ')).

Good abilities for working with queries and authentication in object types.

Installation

In your cmd/terminal

npm install urlapi

then add module to your project

var urlapi = require('urlapi');

or for ES2015 use

import * as urlapi from 'urlapi';

urlapi.serialize({ })

Takes object with next attributes and return string

  • protocol: protocol with or without colon-slash-slash, colon (example: http, http://, mailto:) - string;
  • auth: authentication data (example: user:password, { login: 'user', password: 'password'}) - string or object;
  • host: hostname and port if exist (example: site_name.com:3333, site_name.com, localhost) - string;
  • hostname: hostname (example: site_name.com) - string;
  • port: port (example: 3333) - string or number;
  • path: full path with search and queries (with or without leading slash) (example: path/inner/page?ref=1&close=false) - string;
  • pathname: path without search and queries (with or without leading slash) (example: path/inner/page) - string;
  • search: part of path with leading question mark (with or without question mark) (example: ?ref=1&close=false) - string;
  • query: part of path with parameters (example: ref=1&close=false, {ref: '1', close: 'false'}) - string or object;
  • hash: part of url with pound-sign (with or without pound-sign) (example: #g=where&a=find, {g: 'where', a: 'find'}) - string or object;

Additionaly:

  • None attribute is required but add to object protocol and host is good idea.
  • If host exist hostname and port will not touch.
  • If path exist pathname, search, query will not touch.

Example

import * as urlapi from 'urlapi';

let preparedObject = {
    protocol: 'http',
    auth: {
        login : 'user',
        password: 'password'
    },
    host: 'site_name.com:3333',
    hostname: 'site_name.com',
    port: 3333,
    path: 'path/inner/page?ref=1&close=false',
    pathname: 'path/inner/page',
    search: '?ref=1&close=false',
    query: {
        ref: '1',
        close: 'false'
    },
    hash: {
        g: 'where',
        a: 'find'
    }
};

console.log(urlapi.serialize(preparedObject)); 

return --> 

http://user:password@site_name.com:3333/path/inner/page?ref=1&close=false#g=where&a=find

urlapi.parse(' ')

Takes string and return object

Additionaly:

  • None attribute is required but add to object protocol and host is good idea.

Example

import * as urlapi from 'urlapi';

let stringParse = 'http://user:password@site_name.com:3333/path/inner/page?ref=1&close=false#g=where&a=find';

console.log(urlapi.parse(stringParse));

return -->

{
    protocol: 'http',
    auth: {
        login : 'user',
        password: 'password'
    },
    host: 'site_name.com:3333',
    hostname: 'site_name.com',
    port: 3333,
    path: 'path/inner/page?ref=1&close=false',
    pathname: 'path/inner/page',
    search: '?ref=1&close=false',
    query: {
        ref: '1',
        close: 'false'
    },
    hash: {
        g: 'where',
        a: 'find'
    }
}

Finally

You can find this documentation and a little bit more (example project with es2015 original code, tests and etc.) on GitHub.

1.0.4

10 years ago

1.0.3

10 years ago

1.0.2

10 years ago

1.0.1

10 years ago

1.0.0

10 years ago