A tiny (305B) browser utility for stringifying a query Object.
You should only consider using this within a browser context since Node's built-in querystring.stringify
is much faster and should be used in a Node environment! An ideal use case is serializing a query object before an API request is sent.
This module exposes three module definitions:
- ES Module:
dist/qss.mjs
- CommonJS:
dist/qss.js
- UMD:
dist/qss.min.js
$ npm install --save qss
import { encode, decode } from 'qss';
encode({ foo:'hello', bar:[1,2,3], baz:true });
//=> 'foo=hello&bar=1&bar=2&bar=3&baz=true'
encode({ foo:123 }, '?');
//=> '?foo=123'
encode({ bar:'world' }, 'foo=hello&');
//=> 'foo=hello&bar=world'
decode('foo=hello&bar=1&bar=2&bar=3&baz=true');
//=> { foo:'hello', bar:[1,2,3], baz:true };
Returns: String
Returns the formatted querystring.
Type: Object
The object that contains all query parameter keys & their values.
Type: String
Default: ''
An optional prefix. The stringified params
will be appended to this value, so it must end with your desired joiner; eg ?
.
Important: No checks or validations will run on your
prefix
. Similarly, no character is used to "glue" the query string to yourprefix
string.
Returns: Object
Returns an Object with decoded keys and values.
Repetitive keys will form an Array of its values. Also, qss
will attempt to typecast Boolean
and Number
values.
Type: String
The query string, without its leading ?
character.
qss.decode(
location.search.substring(1) // removes the "?"
);
Running Node v10.13.0
Encode
qss x 1,112,341 ops/sec ±0.24% (96 runs sampled)
native x 5,303,246 ops/sec ±0.76% (95 runs sampled)
querystringify x 950,501 ops/sec ±0.76% (96 runs sampled)
query-string x 347,603 ops/sec ±1.05% (92 runs sampled)
qs x 733,449 ops/sec ±0.62% (97 runs sampled)
Decode
qss x 443,667 ops/sec ±0.17% (95 runs sampled)
native x 189,194 ops/sec ±0.44% (94 runs sampled)
querystringify x 282,169 ops/sec ±0.26% (96 runs sampled)
query-string x 191,334 ops/sec ±0.71% (95 runs sampled)
qs x 168,165 ops/sec ±0.41% (93 runs sampled)
MIT © Luke Edwards