Document: location property
Baseline Widely available
This feature is well established and works across many devices and browser versions. It’s been available across browsers since July 2015.
The Document.location read-only property returns a Location object, which contains information about the URL of the document and provides methods for changing that URL and loading another URL.
Though Document.location is a read-only Location object, you can also assign a string to it. This means that you can work with document.location as if it were a string in most cases: document.location = 'http://www.example.com' is a synonym of document.location.href = 'http://www.example.com'. If you assign another string to it, browser will load the website you assigned.
To retrieve just the URL as a string, the read-only document.URL property can also be used.
If the current document is not in a browsing context, the returned value is null.
Value
A Location object.
Examples
console.log(document.location); // Prints a Location object to the console Specifications
| Specification |
|---|
| HTML> # the-location-interface> |
Browser compatibility
See also
- The interface of the returned value,
Location - A similar information, but attached to the browsing context,
Window.location