npm package discovery and stats viewer.

Discover Tips

  • General search

    [free text search, go nuts!]

  • Package details

    pkg:[package-name]

  • User packages

    @[username]

Sponsor

Optimize Toolset

I’ve always been into building performant and accessible sites, but lately I’ve been taking it extremely seriously. So much so that I’ve been building a tool to help me optimize and monitor the sites that I build to make sure that I’m making an attempt to offer the best experience to those who visit them. If you’re into performant, accessible and SEO friendly sites, you might like it too! You can check it out at Optimize Toolset.

About

Hi, 👋, I’m Ryan Hefner  and I built this site for me, and you! The goal of this site was to provide an easy way for me to check the stats on my npm packages, both for prioritizing issues and updates, and to give me a little kick in the pants to keep up on stuff.

As I was building it, I realized that I was actually using the tool to build the tool, and figured I might as well put this out there and hopefully others will find it to be a fast and useful way to search and browse npm packages as I have.

If you’re interested in other things I’m working on, follow me on Twitter or check out the open source projects I’ve been publishing on GitHub.

I am also working on a Twitter bot for this site to tweet the most popular, newest, random packages from npm. Please follow that account now and it will start sending out packages soon–ish.

Open Software & Tools

This site wouldn’t be possible without the immense generosity and tireless efforts from the people who make contributions to the world and share their work via open source initiatives. Thank you 🙏

© 2024 – Pkg Stats / Ryan Hefner

serialize-query-params

v2.0.2

Published

A library for simplifying encoding and decoding URL query parameters.

Downloads

1,537,023

Readme

Installation | API | useQueryParams

Used in React with use-query-params.

Installation

Using npm:

$ npm install --save serialize-query-params

By default, serialize-query-params uses URLSearchParams to handle interpreting the location string, which means it does not decode null and has limited handling of other more advanced URL parameter configurations. If you want access to those features, add a third-party library like query-string and provide its functions to updateLocation and updateInLocation as needed.

API

Param Types

See all param definitions here. You can define your own parameter types by creating an object with an encode and a decode function. See the existing definitions for examples.

Note that all null and empty values are typically treated as follows:

| value | encoding | | --- | --- | | null | ?foo | | "" | ?foo= | | undefined | ? (removed from URL) |

Examples in this table assume query parameter named qp.

| Param | Type | Example Decoded | Example Encoded | | --- | --- | --- | --- | | StringParam | string | 'foo' | ?qp=foo | | NumberParam | number | 123 | ?qp=123 | | ObjectParam | { key: string } | { foo: 'bar', baz: 'zzz' } | ?qp=foo-bar_baz-zzz | | ArrayParam | string[] | ['a','b','c'] | ?qp=a&qp=b&qp=c | | JsonParam | any | { foo: 'bar' } | ?qp=%7B%22foo%22%3A%22bar%22%7D | | DateParam | Date | Date(2019, 2, 1) | ?qp=2019-03-01 | | DateTimeParam | Date | Date(2019, 2, 1) | ?qp=2019-02-28T22:00:00.000Z | | BooleanParam | boolean | true | ?qp=1 | | NumericObjectParam | { key: number } | { foo: 1, bar: 2 } | ?qp=foo-1_bar-2 | | DelimitedArrayParam | string[] | ['a','b','c'] | ?qp=a_b_c' | | DelimitedNumericArrayParam | number[] | [1, 2, 3] | ?qp=1_2_3' |

Enum Param

You can define enum param using createEnumParam. It works as StringParam but restricts decoded output to a list of allowed strings:

import { createEnumParam } from 'serialize-query-params';

// values other than 'asc' or 'desc' will be decoded as undefined
const SortOrderEnumParam = createEnumParam(['asc', 'desc'])

Array Enum Param

You can define array enum param using createEnumArrayParam or createEnumDelimitedArrayParam. It will restricts decoded output to a list of allowed values.

import { createEnumArrayParam } from 'serialize-query-params';

// feel free to use Enum instead of union types
type Color = 'red' | 'green' | 'blue'

// values other than 'red', 'green' or 'blue' will be decoded as undefined
const ColorArrayEnumParam = createEnumArrayParam<Color[]>(['red', 'green', 'blue'])

Setting a default value

If you'd like to have a default value, you can wrap your param with withDefault():

import { withDefault, ArrayParam } from 'serialize-query-params';

// by default, nulls are converted to defaults
const NeverNullArrayParam = withDefault(ArrayParam, []);

// if you don't want nulls to be included, pass false as a third arg
const NeverUndefinedArrayParam = withDefault(ArrayParam, [], false);

Example with Custom Param

You can define your own params if the ones shipped with this package don't work for you. There are included serialization utility functions to make this easier, but you can use whatever you like.

import {
  encodeDelimitedArray,
  decodeDelimitedArray
} from 'serialize-query-params';

/** Uses a comma to delimit entries. e.g. ['a', 'b'] => qp?=a,b */
const CommaArrayParam = {
  encode: (array: string[] | null | undefined): string | undefined => 
    encodeDelimitedArray(array, ','),

  decode: (arrayStr: string | string[] | null | undefined): string[] | undefined => 
    decodeDelimitedArray(arrayStr, ',')
};

decodeQueryParams

decodeQueryParams<QPCMap extends QueryParamConfigMap>(
  paramConfigMap: QPCMap,
  encodedQuery: Partial<EncodedValueMap<QPCMap>>
): Partial<DecodedValueMap<QPCMap>>

Convert the values in query from strings to their natural types via the decode functions configured in paramConfigMap.

Example

import {
  stringify,
  decodeQueryParams,
  NumberParam,
  DelimitedArrayParam
} from 'serialize-query-params';

// encode each parameter according to the configuration
const decodedQuery = decodeQueryParams(
  { foo: NumberParam, bar: DelimitedArrayParam },
  { foo: '123', bar: 'a_b' }
);
// produces: { foo: 123, bar: ['a', 'b'] }

encodeQueryParams

encodeQueryParams<QPCMap extends QueryParamConfigMap>(
  paramConfigMap: QPCMap,
  query: Partial<DecodedValueMap<QPCMap>>
): Partial<EncodedValueMap<QPCMap>>

Convert the values in query to strings via the encode functions configured in paramConfigMap. This can be useful for constructing links using decoded query parameters.

Example

import {
  encodeQueryParams,
  DelimitedArrayParam,
  NumberParam,
} from 'serialize-query-params';
import { stringify } from 'query-string';

// encode each parameter according to the configuration
const encodedQuery = encodeQueryParams(
  { foo: NumberParam, bar: DelimitedArrayParam },
  { foo: 123, bar: ['a', 'b'] }
);
// produces: { foo: '123', bar: 'a_b' }

const link = `/?${stringify(encodedQuery)}`;

searchStringToObject

function searchStringToObject(searchString: string): EncodedQuery 

Default implementation of searchStringToObject powered by URLSearchParams This converts a search string like ?foo=123&bar=x to { foo: '123', bar: 'x' } This is only a very basic version, you may prefer the advanced versions offered by third party libraries like query-string ("parse") or qs.

Example

import { searchStringToObject } from 'serialize-query-params';

const obj = searchStringToObject('?foo=a&bar=x&foo=z');
// -> { foo: ['a', 'z'], bar: 'x'}

objectToSearchString

function objectToSearchString(encodedParams: EncodedQuery): string 

Default implementation of objectToSearchString powered by URLSearchParams. Does not support null values. Does not prefix with "?" This converts an object { foo: '123', bar: 'x' } to a search string ?foo=123&bar=x This is only a very basic version, you may prefer the advanced versions offered by third party libraries like query-string ("stringify") or qs.

Example

import { objectToSearchString } from 'serialize-query-params';

const obj = objectToSearchString({ foo: ['a', 'z'], bar: 'x' });
// '?foo=a&foo=z&bar=x'

updateLocation

function updateLocation(
  encodedQuery: EncodedQuery,
  location: Location,
  objectToSearchStringFn = objectToSearchString
): Location {

Creates a new location-like object with the new query string (the search field) based on the encoded query parameters passed in via encodedQuery. Parameters not specified in encodedQuery will be dropped from the URL.

Example

import { updateLocation } from 'serialize-query-params';

// location has search: ?foo=123&bar=abc
const newLocation = updateLocation({ foo: '555' }, location);

// newLocation has search: ?foo=555
// note that unspecified query parameters (bar in this case) are not retained.

updateInLocation

function updateInLocation(
  encodedQueryReplacements: EncodedQuery,
  location: Location,
  objectToSearchStringFn = objectToSearchString,
  searchStringToObjectFn = searchStringToObject
): Location {

Creates a new location-like object with the new query string (the search field) based on the encoded query parameters passed in via encodedQueryReplacements. Only parameters specified in encodedQueryReplacements are affected by this update, all other parameters are retained.

Example

import { updateInLocation } from 'serialize-query-params';

// location has search: ?foo=123&bar=abc
const newLocation = updateLocation({ foo: '555' }, location);

// newLocation has search: ?foo=555&bar=abc
// note that unspecified query parameters (bar in this case) are retained.

Development

Run the typescript compiler in watch mode:

npm run dev