I'm trying something like the following;
let formUrl = new window.URLSearchParams(
new window.FormData(this.searchForm)
).toString()
But I'm getting '0: Invalid argument'
This works on every browser apart from edge.
Has anyone run into this issue before
I'm trying something like the following;
let formUrl = new window.URLSearchParams(
new window.FormData(this.searchForm)
).toString()
But I'm getting '0: Invalid argument'
This works on every browser apart from edge.
Has anyone run into this issue before
Share Improve this question asked Sep 26, 2019 at 12:45 Paul MackeyPaul Mackey 959 bronze badges 1- Which Edge version are you trying? Did you try to print each of the parts of your statement to see if something is undefined in Edge? – callback Commented Sep 26, 2019 at 12:54
2 Answers
Reset to default 6The problem in Edge is that they do not support destructuring of FormData object. (for ... of
in linked table).
Indeed, you are relying on this behavior from other browsers in your code, because URLSearchParams( init )
constructor accepts a record as init
parameter.
The specs read
- Otherwise, if init is a record, then for each name → value in init, append a new name-value pair whose name is name and value is value, to query’s list.
So this means that your code is actually doing
const formData = new FormData( searchForm );
const urlParams = new URLSearchParams();
for ( let [ name, value ] of formData ) {
urlParams.append( name, value );
}
let formUrl = urlParams.toString();
console.log( formUrl );
<form id="searchForm">
<input name="foo" value="bar">
<input name="baz" value="bla">
</form>
But since, once again, Edge doesn't support destructuring of FormData, your code breaks.
However, according to MDN, they do support for ... of FormData.entries()
, so maybe this would work (no Edge to test though so let me know).
let formUrl = new window.URLSearchParams(
new window.FormData(this.searchForm)
.entries() // explicitely call .entries() to get the iterator
).toString()
console.log( formUrl );
<form id="searchForm">
<input name="foo" value="bar">
<input name="baz" value="bla">
</form>
A nice answer to another question that gives you the right code is here: https://stackoverflow./a/44033425/1568714
Basically, do this
new URLSearchParams(Array.from(new FormData(formElement))).toString()
Kaiido's answer explains the problem well, but using that approach you will get issues in iOS safari versions < 10.3 and chrome versions < 53, where .entries
is not supported. (https://caniuse./#feat=object-entries)
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