Intro
So we installed NodeJS on our machine.
We also know how to use commandline arguments.
Now we want to learn how to process an url
from the commandline by using the URL module.
Write a simple script
- Open your terminal
- Create a file named
index.js
:
touch index.js
- Add this JavaScript code into it:
const url = require('url');
const myUrl = process.argv[2];
if (myUrl) {
const { href, host, pathname, protocol } = new URL(myUrl);
console.log(`The HREF is: ${href}`);
console.log(`The Protocol is: ${protocol}`);
console.log(`The Host is: ${host}`);
console.log(`The Pathname is: ${pathname}`);
}
Note: I use the most used url properties to decrease the complexity of this simple example. To see all the available properties, read the docs of the URL module.
Every line explained
// import the url module
const url = require('url');
// read the third argument (= the url ) & save it into a variable
const myUrl = process.argv[2];
// only run this block if the user inputs a third argument
if (myUrl) {
// destructure these specific properties from the URL
const { href, host, pathname, protocol } = new URL(myUrl);
// log the destructured properties
console.log(`The Href is: ${href}`);
console.log(`The Protocol is: ${protocol}`);
console.log(`The Host is: ${host}`);
console.log(`The Pathname is: ${pathname}`);
}
Sometimes you can see the usage of url.parse() from the Legacy URL API. The Legacy URL API is deprecated, don't use url.parse()
, use new URL()
.
Run it from the terminal
- Run it:
node index.js https://miku86.com/articles
- Result:
The Href is: https://miku86.com/articles
The Protocol is: https:
The Host is: miku86.com
The Pathname is: /articles
Further Reading
Questions
- Do you use the native
URL module
or some libraries like query-string? Why do you use it?
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