@nauverse/make-url
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1.10.7Β β€’Β PublicΒ β€’Β Published

πŸͺ„ make-url

A tiny URL builder library for TypeScript.

Build Status npm version minzipped size

What? β€’ Why? β€’ How? β€’ TypeScript β€’ Guide and examples β€’ Help β€’ Contribute

tl;dr

If you just want to try and you don't want to read this guide right now (although you should in the future if you decide to use the library), you can start quickly by:

1. Installing the dependency:

npm install --save @nauverse/make-url

2. Checking this example of use:

import { makeURL } from "@nauverse/make-url";

makeURL("https://api.example.com/", "/:id/:param2/:id///", {
  params: {
    id: 1,
    param2: "678"
  }
});
// https://api.example.com/1/678/1

I added too many slashes intentionally to showcase they can be removed automatically (you also have an option to disable that)

If you want to see more examples, jump to here.

3. You are done! πŸͺ„

Feel free to test and explore and if later on you need more guidance, read the whole guide and ask in the GitHub repo.

What?

make-url is heavily inspired in the awesome urlcat. It is a tiny JavaScript library that makes building URLs very convenient and prevents common mistakes. It is fully type-safe and highly configurable.


Although the image above is from the `urlcat` package, this package behaves very similar so it is a good way to showcase its functionality

Features

v1
0️⃣ β€Ž Zero dependencies
πŸ‘Œ 1kB minified and gzipped
πŸ”’ Reliable. Even when you pass really messed up strings, it finds a way to build a valid URL (just check the tests for some examples)
✍️ TypeScript types provided
πŸ›Ÿ Safe escaping everywhere
🧠 Smart concatenating
❓ Support for query parameters (add them in any format and they will be safely escaped and added)
#️⃣ β€Ž Support for hash parameter
πŸ€“ Smart trailing slash handling (and fully configurable)
🌍 Global default config option (if you use always the same settings, you can make it constant, instead of having to specify them on each function call)
πŸ”— URL type detection (if it is a full URL, a relative URL, an absolute URL...)
πŸš” Protocol enforcing settings (plus a smart mode so it handles it for you)
πŸŽ›οΈ Enable or disable removing extra slashes (so it supports RFC 3986)
πŸ“‹ Query parameters support arrays, with three modes: stringify, repeat key and comma-separated
🧘 It also supports the relative protocol (`//example.com/my-page`)
βœ… Production ready

Why?

When a dev wants to call an API or build an URL, they must make sure to check lots of things: adding parameters in the URL path, adding query parameters, maybe adding hash parameters, making sure it is a valid URL, mayberemoving trailing slashes and much, much more:

const API_URL = 'https://api.example.com/';

function getUserPosts(id, blogId, limit, offset) {
  const requestUrl = `${API_URL}/users/${id}/blogs/${blogId}/posts?limit=${limit}&offset=${offset}`;
  // send HTTP request
}

As you can see, this minimal example is already rather hard to read. It is also incorrect:

  • I forgot that there was a trailing slash at the end of the API_URL constant so this resulted in a URL containing duplicate slashes (https://api.example.com//users).
  • The embedded values need to be escaped using encodeURIComponent

I can use the built-in URL class to prevent duplicate slashes and URLSearchParams to escape the query string. But I still need to escape all path parameters manually.

const API_URL = 'https://api.example.com/';

function getUserPosts(id, blogId, limit, offset) {
  const escapedId = encodeURIComponent(id);
  const escapedBlogId = encodeURIComponent(blogId);
  const path = `/users/${escapedId}/blogs/${escapedBlogId}`;
  const url = new URL(path, API_URL);
  url.search = new URLSearchParams({ limit, offset });
  const requestUrl = url.href;
  // send HTTP request
}

Something like that should be an easy task, but it can be a real pain. That is why this library exists.

And you might wonder: why, if you are inspired in urlcat, don't just use that library?

Well, that library allows you to generate complete URLs with some protections but... it was not enough safe for me (and I also needed to support other URL formats like relative URLs).

const API_URL = 'https://api.example.com/';
const SOME_SLUG = 'hey';

function getUserPosts(id, limit, offset) {
  const requestUrl = makeURL('api.example.com', SOME_SLUG, 'users/:id/posts', {
      params: { 
        id,
        limit,
        offset 
      }
    });
  // The URL will be:
  // https://api.example.com/hey/users/<id_value>/?limit=<limit_value>&offset=<offset_value>
  // send HTTP request
}

How?

Install

Currently, the package is distributed via NPM.

npm install --save @nauverse/make-url

Usage with Node

Node 18 and above are officially supported, though you may have luck using it with an earlier Node version. Since the code uses the URL and URLSearchParams classes internally, which aren't available below Node v10, the library is known not to work with those versions.

The package comes with CJS and ESM modules.

TypeScript

This library provides its own type definitions. "It just works", no need to install anything from @types.

Guide and examples

A good contribution for this repo would be a more detailed guide about how to use it.

The most important function that this package offers is makeURL. You can call with with any amount of string values and optionally at the end with a config object.

A config object has the following interface:

export interface IParams {
  params: Record<string, unknown>;
  hash: string;
  config: {
    forceProtocol: "http" | "https" | "none" | "auto" | "auto-insecure";
    trailingSlash: "add" | "remove";
    strict: boolean;
    allowEmptyPathSegments: boolean;
    arraySerializer: "stringify" | "repeat" | "comma";
  };
}

Every field in the object is optional.

params is an optional object that contains key-value pairs. If in the generated URL is there any match of :<key>, being <key> any of the keys in that object, the matches will be replaced with the value of their respective keys. If they are not replaced in the URL, they will be added to the URL as query parameters.

Let's see some examples:

makeURL with only query parameters

makeURL("https://example.com", {
  params: {
    id: 12,
    name: "test"
  }
});
// https://example.com?id=12&name=test

makeURL with query parameters and also URL params

makeURL("https://example.com", ":id/", {
  params: {
    id: 12,
    name: "test"
  }
});
// https://example.com/12?name=test

Notice that the params values can be of any type. I used in the examples string and number types, but you can use anything (including objects) and it will be always safely casted. Don't worry if the string contains invalid characters, everything is safely encoded in this library!


hash is another optional field containg a string.

Don't worry if the string contains invalid characters, everything is safely encoded in this library!

Let's see one example:

makeURL with a hash parameter

makeURL("https://example.com", {
  hash: "test"
});
// https://example.com#test

Now it is time to talk about the config object.

allowEmptyPathSegments

By default, it is set to false

This setting is made to support the RFC 3986. That RFC allows empty path segments in URLs (for example, https://example.com//users////2).

By default, this library has this option disabled but you can enable it in any function call you need it or globally by using the setMakeURLDefaultConfig function.

Some examples:

makeURL with allowEmptyPathSegments: true

makeURL("https://example.com", "//test///a", {
  config: {
    allowEmptyPathSegments: true
  }
});
// https://example.com//test///a

makeURL with allowEmptyPathSegments: false

makeURL("https://example.com", "//test///a", {
  config: {
    allowEmptyPathSegments: false
  }
});
// https://example.com/test/a

arraySerializer

By default, it is set to repeat

Arrays are a special kind of data, specially when sending them as query parameters to the server. There are many ways to handle them and we try to support all of them.

The default mode used is repeat but you can change it in any function call you need it or globally by using the setMakeURLDefaultConfig function.

There are three possible values: repeat, comma and stringify. Each of them specify how to handle the arrays. Let's see some examples:

makeURL with arraySerializer: 'repeat'

makeURL("https://example.com", "/test", {
  params: {
    arr: ['a', 'b', 'c']
  },
  config: {
    arraySerializer: 'repeat'
  }
});
// https://example.com/test?arr=a&arr=b&arr=c

makeURL with arraySerializer: 'stringify'

makeURL("https://example.com", "/test", {
  params: {
    arr: ['a', 'b', 'c']
  },
  config: {
    arraySerializer: 'repeat'
  }
});
// https://example.com/test?arr=%5B%22a%22%2C%22b%22%2C%22c%22%5D

makeURL with arraySerializer: 'comma'

makeURL("https://example.com", "/test", {
  params: {
    arr: ['a', 'b', 'c']
  },
  config: {
    arraySerializer: 'comma'
  }
});
// https://example.com/test?arr=a%2Cb%2Cc

Important: Arrays are not supported for URL variables (no matter the mode you use), so they won't be replaced there but added as a query parameter. See one example below:

makeURL with arraySerializer: 'comma' with array as URL variable

makeURL("https://example.com", "/test/:arr", {
  params: {
    arr: ['a', 'b', 'c']
  },
  config: {
    arraySerializer: 'comma'
  }
});
// https://example.com/test/:arr?arr=a%2Cb%2Cc <- Notice that we can not replace arrays in URL variables

trailingSlash

By default, it is set to add

Some servers expect trailing slashes, some does not support it. With this setting, you can configure the behaviour however you want.

By default, this library has this option set to add but you can change it in any function call you need it or globally by using the setMakeURLDefaultConfig function.

It has two possible values: add and remove.

Some examples:

makeURL with trailingSlash: 'add'

makeURL("https://example.com", "/test/a", {
  config: {
    trailingSlash: 'add'
  }
});
// https://example.com/test/a/

makeURL with trailingSlash: 'remove'

makeURL("https://example.com", "/test/a/", {
  config: {
    trailingSlash: 'remove'
  }
});
// https://example.com/test/a

forceProtocol

By default, it is set to auto

It has 5 possible values: http, https, none, auto, auto-insecure.

http will always add the http:// to the URL if it does not contain a protocol, without checking if the URL is a full URL, a relative one or an absolute one:

makeURL with forceProtocol: 'http' and a full URL without protocol

makeURL("example.com", "/test/a", {
  config: {
    forceProtocol: 'http'
  }
});
// http://example.com/test/a

makeURL with forceProtocol: 'http' and a full URL with protocol

makeURL("https://example.com", "/test/a", {
  config: {
    forceProtocol: 'http'
  }
});
// https://example.com/test/a

makeURL with forceProtocol: 'http' and a relative URL

makeURL("test/a", {
  config: {
    forceProtocol: 'http'
  }
});
// http://test/a

makeURL with forceProtocol: 'http' and an absolute URL

makeURL("/test/a", {
  config: {
    forceProtocol: 'http'
  }
});
// http://test/a

This means you should only use forceProtocol: 'http' if you are 100% sure the URLs you will build with that function will be always full URLs. If not, you should use auto, auto-insecure or none.


https will always add the https:// to the URL if it does not contain a protocol, without checking if the URL is a full URL, a relative one or an absolute one:

makeURL with forceProtocol: 'https' and a full URL without protocol

makeURL("example.com", "/test/a", {
  config: {
    forceProtocol: 'https'
  }
});
// https://example.com/test/a

makeURL with forceProtocol: 'https' and a full URL with protocol

makeURL("http://example.com", "/test/a", {
  config: {
    forceProtocol: 'https'
  }
});
// http://example.com/test/a

makeURL with forceProtocol: 'https' and a relative URL

makeURL("test/a", {
  config: {
    forceProtocol: 'https'
  }
});
// https://test/a

makeURL with forceProtocol: 'https' and an absolute URL

makeURL("/test/a", {
  config: {
    forceProtocol: 'https'
  }
});
// https://test/a

This means you should only use forceProtocol: 'https' if you are 100% sure the URLs you will build with that function will be always full URLs. If not, you should use auto, auto-insecure or none.


none will not add any protocol to the URL, no matter if it has one, it doesn't have one, it is a full URL, it is a relative URL, an absolute one...:

makeURL with forceProtocol: 'none' and a full URL without protocol

makeURL("example.com", "/test/a", {
  config: {
    forceProtocol: 'none'
  }
});
// example.com/test/a

makeURL with forceProtocol: 'none' and a full URL with protocol

makeURL("https://example.com", "/test/a", {
  config: {
    forceProtocol: 'none'
  }
});
// https://example.com/test/a

makeURL with forceProtocol: 'none' and a relative URL

makeURL("test/a", {
  config: {
    forceProtocol: 'none'
  }
});
// test/a

makeURL with forceProtocol: 'none' and an absolute URL

makeURL("/test/a", {
  config: {
    forceProtocol: 'none'
  }
});
// /test/a

auto is the safe and smart option. It will add the https:// protocol if the generated URL is a full URL (containing a domain) and it doesn't have already a protocol. In any other case, it won't add anything to it. This is the recommened mode in production if you want to have something to "set and forget":

makeURL with forceProtocol: 'auto' and a full URL without protocol

makeURL("example.com", "/test/a", {
  config: {
    forceProtocol: 'auto'
  }
});
// https://example.com/test/a

makeURL with forceProtocol: 'auto' and a full URL with protocol

makeURL("http://example.com", "/test/a", {
  config: {
    forceProtocol: 'auto'
  }
});
// http://example.com/test/a

makeURL with forceProtocol: 'auto' and a relative URL

makeURL("test/a", {
  config: {
    forceProtocol: 'auto'
  }
});
// test/a

makeURL with forceProtocol: 'auto' and an absolute URL

makeURL("/test/a", {
  config: {
    forceProtocol: 'auto'
  }
});
// /test/a

auto-insecure is an alternative smart option to auto. It will add the http:// protocol if the generated URL is a full URL (containing a domain) and it doesn't have already a protocol. In any other case, it won't add anything to it.

It is called insecure not because it is not safe to use but because it uses the http protocol, so I prefer to make it noticeable for the devs.

makeURL with forceProtocol: 'auto-insecure' and a full URL without protocol

makeURL("example.com", "/test/a", {
  config: {
    forceProtocol: 'auto-insecure'
  }
});
// http://example.com/test/a

makeURL with forceProtocol: 'auto-insecure' and a full URL with protocol

makeURL("https://example.com", "/test/a", {
  config: {
    forceProtocol: 'auto-insecure'
  }
});
// https://example.com/test/a

makeURL with forceProtocol: 'auto-insecure' and a relative URL

makeURL("test/a", {
  config: {
    forceProtocol: 'auto-insecure'
  }
});
// test/a

makeURL with forceProtocol: 'auto-insecure' and an absolute URL

makeURL("/test/a", {
  config: {
    forceProtocol: 'auto-insecure'
  }
});
// /test/a

Although it is not recommended to use http in production; if you want to use auto in your local environment and you have issues with the https, you could use a setting like: forceProtocol: process.env.NODE_ENV === "production" ? "auto" : "auto-insecure"

strict

By default, it is set to false

It is a boolean, so it can be true or false. I set it to false by default to provide the most flexible option by default.

This option enforces that the final URL string you get from calling makeURL is a totally valid complete URL (like https://example.com/my/path/). If it is not, it will throw an error, so you can catch it and handle the exception.

The drawback is that relative and absolute URLs won't work with this option set to true, since those URLs are not "fully valid URLs".

makeURL with strict: true and an full URL

makeURL("example.com", "/test/a", {
  config: {
    strict: true
  }
});
// https://example.com/test/a

makeURL with strict: true and an full URL without protocol

makeURL("example.com", "/test/a", {
  config: {
    strict: true,
    forceProtocol: "none"
  }
});
// Throws an error

makeURL with strict: true and an full URL with an invalid domain

makeURL("example", "/test/a", {
  config: {
    strict: true
  }
});
// Throws an error

makeURL with strict: true and a relative URL

makeURL("test/a", {
  config: {
    strict: true
  }
});
// Throws an error

makeURL with strict: true and an absolute URL

makeURL("/test/a", {
  config: {
    strict: true
  }
});
// Throws an error

makeURL with strict: false and an full URL

makeURL("example.com", "/test/a", {
  config: {
    strict: false
  }
});
// https://example.com/test/a

makeURL with strict: false and an full URL without protocol

makeURL("example.com", "/test/a", {
  config: {
    strict: false,
    forceProtocol: "none"
  }
});
// example.com/test/a

makeURL with strict: false and an full URL with an invalid domain

makeURL("example", "/test/a", {
  config: {
    strict: false
  }
});
// https://example/test/a

makeURL with strict: false and a relative URL

makeURL("test/a", {
  config: {
    strict: false
  }
});
// test/a

makeURL with strict: false and an absolute URL

makeURL("/test/a", {
  config: {
    strict: false
  }
});
// /test/a

So, the best and most secure option is to have strict: true, but that won't allow you to use relative and absolute URLs. So my advice is to keep strict: true globally and disable it in the function calls where you know you need to build relative and/or absolute URLs.


As we explained, you can set the config by passing a config object as the last item in any makeURL call. But if you uses most of the time the same settings, you might prefer to set the config globally and only pass the config object in the makeURL calls when you want to override them.

You can achieve it by calling the function setMakeURLDefaultConfig.

If you want to set the config globally, I recommend you to call this function the earliest you can in your project, so you have the guarantee the global config is set before you call the makeURL function. For example, in a Node app, you might want to call it at the beginning of your entry file. In Next.js you might want to call it in the root server layout or in the middleware (if used server-side) or in a root client layout (of used client-side).

The setMakeURLDefaultConfig accepts only one parameter with a partial config object (meaning you don't need to set every setting). For example:

setMakeURLDefaultConfig setting strict: true globally

setMakeURLDefaultConfig({
  strict: true
});

You probably won't ever need to get the current global config, but if you need it, there is a function you can call: getMakeURLDefaultConfig:

getMakeURLDefaultConfig

getMakeURLDefaultConfig();
/*
{
  forceProtocol: "auto",
  trailingSlash: "add",
  strict: false,
  allowEmptyPathSegments: false
}
*/

getMakeURLDefaultConfig after setting strict: true globally

setMakeURLDefaultConfig({
  strict: true
});
getMakeURLDefaultConfig();
/*
{
  forceProtocol: "auto",
  trailingSlash: "add",
  strict: true,
  allowEmptyPathSegments: false
}
*/

About the relative protocol

Sometimes you might want to build URLs that use the relative protocol (//) so you obtain URLs like //example.com/my/path?test=1.

Luckily, this module supports building them, just keep in mind these URLs, like the relative and the absolute ones; are not compatible with strict: true.

If you have strict: false, you can do use them. Here you have some examples:

makeURL with strict: false and a relative protocol URL

makeURL("//example.com", "test/a", {
  config: {
    strict: false
  }
});
// //example.com/test/a

makeURL with strict: false and a relative protocol URL but an invalid domain

makeURL("//example", "test/a", {
  config: {
    strict: false
  }
});
// /example/test/a <- It is transformed to an absolute URL

makeURL with strict: true and a relative protocol URL

makeURL("//example.com", "test/a", {
  config: {
    strict: true
  }
});
// Throws an error

Full examples

To finish with this "guide", I want to provide some examples combining several of the explained settings:

Example 1

makeURL("example.com/", "/test/:id///edit/", {
  params: {
    id: 1,
    name: "John"
  },
  hash: "test",
  config: {
    forceProtocol: "auto",
    trailingSlash: "remove",
    strict: true,
    allowEmptyPathSegments: false
  }
});
// https://example.com/test/1/edit?name=John#test

Example 2

// Default global settings set in the entry file
setMakeURLDefaultConfig({
  forceProtocol: "auto",
  trailingSlash: "remove",
  strict: true,
  allowEmptyPathSegments: false
});
//

makeURL("https://api.example.com/", "/:id/:param2/:id///", {
  params: {
    id: 1,
    param2: "678"
  }
});
// https://api.example.com/1/678/1

Help

Thank you for using make-url!

If you need any help using this library, feel free to create a GitHub issue, and ask your questions. I'll try to answer as quickly as possible.

Contribute

Contributions of any kind (pull requests, bug reports, feature requests, documentation, design) are more than welcome! If you like this project and want to help, but feel like you are stuck, feel free to contact the maintainers.

Building from source

Building the project should be quick and easy. If it isn't, it's the maintainer's fault. Please report any problems with building in a GitHub issue.

You need to have a reasonably recent version of node.js to build make-url. Tested on node version 18.0.0 and npm version 8.6.0.

First, clone the git repository:

git clone git@github.com:TheNaubit/make-url.git

Then switch to the newly created make-url directory and install the dependencies:

cd make-url
npm install

You can then run the unit tests to verify that everything works correctly:

npm run test:run

And finally, build the library:

npm run build

The output will appear in the dist directory.

Happy hacking!

Contributors ✨

All Contributors

Thanks goes to these wonderful people (emoji key):

Al | Naucode
Al | Naucode

πŸ› πŸ’» πŸ“– 🚧 ⚠️ πŸš‡

This project follows the all-contributors specification. Contributions of any kind welcome!

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