How to get GET (query string) variables in Express.js on Node.js?

Can we get the variables in the query string in Node.js just like we get them in $_GET in PHP?

I know that in Node.js we can get the URL in the request. Is there a method to get the query string parameters?

5

26 Answers

Since you've mentioned Express.js in your tags, here is an Express-specific answer: use req.query. E.g.

var express = require('express');
var app = express();
app.get('/', function(req, res){ res.send('id: ' + req.query.id);
});
app.listen(3000);
5

In Express it's already done for you and you can simply use req.query for that:

var id = req.query.id; // $_GET["id"]

Otherwise, in NodeJS, you can access req.url and the builtin url module to url.parse it manually:

var url = require('url');
var url_parts = url.parse(request.url, true);
var query = url_parts.query;
11

In Express, use req.query.

req.params only gets the route parameters, not the query string parameters. See the express or sails documentation:

(req.params) Checks route params, ex: /user/:id

(req.query) Checks query string params, ex: ?id=12 Checks urlencoded body params

(req.body), ex: id=12 To utilize urlencoded request bodies, req.body should be an object. This can be done by using the _express.bodyParser middleware.

That said, most of the time, you want to get the value of a parameter irrespective of its source. In that case, use req.param('foo'). Note that this has been deprecated as of Express 4:

The value of the parameter will be returned whether the variable was in the route parameters, query string, or the encoded request body.

Side note- if you're aiming to get the intersection of all three types of request parameters (similar to PHP's $_REQUEST), you just need to merge the parameters together-- here's how I set it up in Sails. Keep in mind that the path/route parameters object (req.params) has array properties, so order matters (although this may change in Express 4)

4

For Express.js you want to do req.params:

app.get('/user/:id', function(req, res) { res.send('user' + req.params.id);
});
6

I learned from the other answers and decided to use this code throughout my site:

var query = require('url').parse(req.url,true).query;

Then you can just call

var id = query.id;
var option = query.option;

where the URL for get should be

/path/filename?id=123&option=456
3
//get query&params in express
//etc.
app.get('/user/:id', function(req, res) { const query = req.query;// query = {sex:"female"} const params = req.params; //params = {id:"000000"}
})
1

If you are using ES6 and Express, try this destructuring approach:

const {id, since, fields, anotherField} = request.query;

In context:

const express = require('express');
const app = express();
app.get('/', function(req, res){ const {id, since, fields, anotherField} = req.query;
});
app.listen(3000);

You can use default values with destructuring too:

// sample request for testing
const req = { query: { id: '123', fields: ['a', 'b', 'c'] }
}
const { id, since = new Date().toString(), fields = ['x'], anotherField = 'default'
} = req.query;
console.log(id, since, fields, anotherField)
1

There are 2 ways to pass parameters via GET method

Method 1 : The MVC approach where you pass the parameters like /routename/:paramname
In this case you can use req.params.paramname to get the parameter value For Example refer below code where I am expecting Id as a param
link could be like :

var express = require('express');
var app = express();
app.get("items/:id", function(req, res) { var id = req.params.id; //further operations to perform
});
app.listen(3000);

Method 2 : General Approach : Passing variables as query string using '?' operator
For Example refer below code where I am expecting Id as a query parameter
link could be like :

var express = require('express');
var app = express();
app.get("/items", function(req, res) { var id = req.query.id; //further operations to perform
});
app.listen(3000);

You should be able to do something like this:

var http = require('http');
var url = require('url');
http.createServer(function(req,res){ var url_parts = url.parse(req.url, true); var query = url_parts.query; console.log(query); //{Object} res.end("End")
})
0

UPDATE 4 May 2014

Old answer preserved here:


1) Install express: npm install express

app.js

var express = require('express');
var app = express();
app.get('/endpoint', function(request, response) { var id = request.query.id; response.end("I have received the ID: " + id);
});
app.listen(3000);
console.log("node express app started at ");

2) Run the app: node app.js

3) Visit in the browser:

I have received the ID: something


(many things have changed since my answer and I believe it is worth keeping things up to date)

0

A small Node.js HTTP server listening on port 9080, parsing GET or POST data and sending it back to the client as part of the response is:

var sys = require('sys'),
url = require('url'),
http = require('http'),
qs = require('querystring');
var server = http.createServer( function (request, response) { if (request.method == 'POST') { var body = ''; request.on('data', function (data) { body += data; }); request.on('end',function() { var POST = qs.parse(body); //console.log(POST); response.writeHead( 200 ); response.write( JSON.stringify( POST ) ); response.end(); }); } else if(request.method == 'GET') { var url_parts = url.parse(request.url,true); //console.log(url_parts.query); response.writeHead( 200 ); response.write( JSON.stringify( url_parts.query ) ); response.end(); } }
);
server.listen(9080);

Save it as parse.js, and run it on the console by entering "node parse.js".

1

Whitequark responded nicely. But with the current versions of Node.js and Express.js it requires one more line. Make sure to add the 'require http' (second line). I've posted a fuller example here that shows how this call can work. Once running, type in your browser, and you will get a cool response based on the code.

var express = require('express');
var http = require('http');
var app = express();
app.configure(function(){ app.set('port', 8080);
});
app.get('/', function(req, res){ res.writeHead(200, {'content-type': 'text/plain'}); res.write('name: ' + req.query.name + '\n'); res.write('fruit: ' + req.query.fruit + '\n'); res.write('query: ' + req.query + '\n'); queryStuff = JSON.stringify(req.query); res.end('That\'s all folks' + '\n' + queryStuff);
});
http.createServer(app).listen(app.get('port'), function(){ console.log("Express server listening on port " + app.get('port'));
})

It is so simple:

Example URL:

You can print all the values of query string by using:

console.log("All query strings: " + JSON.stringify(req.query));

Output

All query strings : { "id":"3","activatekey":"$2a$08$jvGevXUOvYxKsiBt.PpMs.zgzD4C/wwTsvjz fUrqLrgS3zXJVfVRK"}

To print specific:

console.log("activatekey: " + req.query.activatekey);

Output

activatekey: $2a$08$jvGevXUOvYxKsiBt.PpMs.zgzD4C/wwTsvjzfUrqLrgS3zXJVfVRK

You can use

request.query.<varible-name>;

You can use with express ^4.15.4:

var express = require('express'), router = express.Router();
router.get('/', function (req, res, next) { console.log(req.query);
});

Hope this helps.

Express specific simple ways to fetch

  1. query strings(after ?) such as

     var express = require('express'); var app = express(); app.get('/', function(req, res){ res.send('id: ' + req.query.id); }); app.listen(3000);
  2. query params such as

     var express = require('express'); var app = express(); app.get('/get/users/:id', function(req, res){ res.send('id: ' + req.params.id); }); app.listen(3000);

In express.js you can get it pretty easy, all you need to do in your controller function is:

app.get('/', (req, res, next) => { const {id} = req.query; // rest of your code here...
})

And that's all, assuming you are using es6 syntax.

PD. {id} stands for Object destructuring, a new es6 feature.

1
app.get('/user/:id', function(req, res) { res.send('user' + req.params.id);
});

You can use this or you can try body-parser for parsing special element from the request parameters.

3

There are many answers here regarding accessing the query using request.query however, none have mentioned its type quirk. The query string type can be either a string or an array, and this type is controlled by the user.

For instance using the following code:

const express = require("express");
const app = express();
app.get("/", function (req, res) { res.send(`Your name is ${(req.query.name || "").length} characters long`);
});
app.listen(3000);

Requesting /?name=bob will return Your name is 3 characters long but requesting /?name=bob&name=jane will return Your name is 2 characters long because the parameter is now an array ['bob', 'jane'].

Express offers 2 query parsers: simple and extended, both will give you either a string or an array. Rather than checking a method for possible side effects or validating types, I personally think you should override the parser to have a consistent type: all arrays or all strings.

const express = require("express");
const app = express();
const querystring = require("querystring");
// if asArray=false only the first item with the same name will be returned
// if asArray=true all items will be returned as an array (even if they are a single item)
const asArray = false;
app.set("query parser", (qs) => { const parsed = querystring.parse(qs); return Object.entries(parsed).reduce((previous, [key, value]) => { const isArray = Array.isArray(value); if (!asArray && isArray) { value = value[0]; } else if (asArray && !isArray) { value = [value]; } previous[key] = value; return previous; }, {});
});
app.get("/", function (req, res) { res.send(`Your name is ${(req.query.name || "").length} characters long`);
});
app.listen(3000);

consider this url -> /api/endpoint/:id?name=sahilhere id is param where as name is query. You can get this value in nodejs like this

app.get('/api/endpoint/:id', (req, res) => { const name = req.query.name; // query const id = req.params.id //params
});
2

So, there are two ways in which this "id" can be received: 1) using params: the code params will look something like : Say we have an array,

const courses = [{ id: 1, name: 'Mathematics'
},
{ id: 2, name: 'History'
}
];

Then for params we can do something like:

app.get('/api/posts/:id',(req,res)=>{ const course = courses.find(o=>o.id == (req.params.id)) res.send(course);
});

2) Another method is to use query parameters. so the url will look something like ".....\api\xyz?id=1" where "?id=1" is the query part. In this case we can do something like:

app.get('/api/posts',(req,res)=>{ const course = courses.find(o=>o.id == (req.query.id)) res.send(course);
});

you can use url module to collect parameters by using url.parse

var url = require('url');
var url_data = url.parse(request.url, true);
var query = url_data.query;

In expressjs it's done by,

var id = req.query.id;

Eg:

var express = require('express');
var app = express();
app.get('/login', function (req, res, next) { console.log(req.query); console.log(req.query.id); //Give parameter id
});

If you ever need to send GET request to an IP as well as a Domain (Other answers did not mention you can specify a port variable), you can make use of this function:

function getCode(host, port, path, queryString) { console.log("(" + host + ":" + port + path + ")" + "Running httpHelper.getCode()") // Construct url and query string const requestUrl = url.parse(url.format({ protocol: 'http', hostname: host, pathname: path, port: port, query: queryString })); console.log("(" + host + path + ")" + "Sending GET request") // Send request console.log(url.format(requestUrl)) http.get(url.format(requestUrl), (resp) => { let data = ''; // A chunk of data has been received. resp.on('data', (chunk) => { console.log("GET chunk: " + chunk); data += chunk; }); // The whole response has been received. Print out the result. resp.on('end', () => { console.log("GET end of response: " + data); }); }).on("error", (err) => { console.log("GET Error: " + err); });
}

Don't miss requiring modules at the top of your file:

http = require("http");
url = require('url')

Also bare in mind that you may use https module for communicating over secured domains and ssl. so these two lines would change:

https = require("https");
...
https.get(url.format(requestUrl), (resp) => { ......

In case you want to avoid express, use this example:

var http = require('http');
const url = require('url');
function func111(req, res) { res.writeHead(200, {'Content-Type': 'text/plain'}); var q = url.parse(req.url, true); res.end("9999999>>> " + q.query['user_name']);
}
http.createServer(func111).listen(3000); 

usage:

curl 

by yl

1

do like me

npm query-string
import queryString from "query-string";
export interface QueryUrl { limit?: number; range?: string; page?: number; filed?: string; embody?: string; q?: string | object; order?: number; sort?: string;
} let parseUri: QueryUrl = queryString.parse(uri.query);

I am using MEANJS 0.6.0 with express@4.16, it's good

Client:

Controller:

var input = { keyword: vm.keyword };
ProductAPi.getOrder(input)

services:

this.getOrder = function (input) {return $http.get('/api/order', { params: input });};

Server

routes

app.route('/api/order').get(products.order);

controller

exports.order = function (req, res) { var keyword = req.query.keyword ...

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