There is a property of the built-in window.location
object that will provide that for the current window.
// If URL is http://www.somedomain.com/account/search?filter=a#top
window.location.pathname // /account/search
// For reference:
window.location.host // www.somedomain.com (includes port if there is one)
window.location.hostname // www.somedomain.com
window.location.hash // #top
window.location.href // http://www.somedomain.com/account/search?filter=a#top
window.location.port // (empty string)
window.location.protocol // http:
window.location.search // ?filter=a
Update, use the same properties for any URL:
It turns out that this schema is being standardized as an interface called URLUtils, and guess what? Both the existing window.location
object and anchor elements implement the interface.
So you can use the same properties above for any URL — just create an anchor with the URL and access the properties:
var el = document.createElement('a');
el.href = "http://www.somedomain.com/account/search?filter=a#top";
el.host // www.somedomain.com (includes port if there is one[1])
el.hostname // www.somedomain.com
el.hash // #top
el.href // http://www.somedomain.com/account/search?filter=a#top
el.pathname // /account/search
el.port // (port if there is one[1])
el.protocol // http:
el.search // ?filter=a
[1]: Browser support for the properties that include port is not consistent, See: http://jessepollak.me/chrome-was-wrong-ie-was-right
This works in the latest versions of Chrome and Firefox. I do not have versions of Internet Explorer to test, so please test yourself with the JSFiddle example.
There's also a coming URL
object that will offer this support for URLs themselves, without the anchor element. Looks like no stable browsers support it at this time, but it is said to be coming in Firefox 26. When you think you might have support for it, try it out here.
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