Using
$("a").attr("href", "http://www.google.com/")
will modify the href of all hyperlinks to point to Google. You probably want a somewhat more refined selector though. For instance, if you have a mix of link source (hyperlink) and link target (a.k.a. "anchor") anchor tags:
<a name="MyLinks"></a>
<a href="http://www.codeproject.com/">The CodeProject</a>
...Then you probably don't want to accidentally add href
attributes to them. For safety then, we can specify that our selector will only match <a>
tags with an existing href
attribute:
$("a[href]") //...
Of course, you'll probably have something more interesting in mind. If you want to match an anchor with a specific existing href
, you might use something like this:
$("a[href='http://www.google.com/']").attr('href', 'http://www.live.com/')
This will find links where the href
exactly matches the string http://www.google.com/
. A more involved task might be matching, then updating only part of the href
:
$("a[href^='http://stackoverflow.com']")
.each(function()
{
this.href = this.href.replace(/^http:\/\/beta\.stackoverflow\.com/,
"http://stackoverflow.com");
});
The first part selects only links where the href starts with http://stackoverflow.com
. Then, a function is defined that uses a simple regular expression to replace this part of the URL with a new one. Note the flexibility this gives you - any sort of modification to the link could be done here.
Edited on 2016-02-02
Starting from iOS 6 SKStoreProductViewController class was introduced. You can link an app without leaving your app. Code snippet in Swift 3.x/2.x and Objective-C is here.
A SKStoreProductViewController object presents a store that allows the
user to purchase other media from the App Store. For example, your app
might display the store to allow the user to purchase another app.
From News and Announcement For Apple Developers.
Drive Customers Directly to Your App
on the App Store with iTunes Links
With iTunes links you can provide your
customers with an easy way to access
your apps on the App Store directly
from your website or marketing
campaigns. Creating an iTunes link is
simple and can be made to direct
customers to either a single app, all
your apps, or to a specific app with
your company name specified.
To send customers to a specific
application:
http://itunes.com/apps/appname
To send
customers to a list of apps you have
on the App Store:
http://itunes.com/apps/developername
To send customers to a specific app
with your company name included in the
URL:
http://itunes.com/apps/developername/appname
Additional notes:
You can replace http://
with itms://
or itms-apps://
to avoid redirects.
Please note that itms://
will send the user to the iTunes store and itms-apps://
with send them to the App Store!
For info on naming, see Apple QA1633:
https://developer.apple.com/library/content/qa/qa1633/_index.html.
Edit (as of January 2015):
itunes.com/apps links should be updated to appstore.com/apps. See QA1633 above, which has been updated. A new QA1629 suggests these steps and code for launching the store from an app:
- Launch iTunes on your computer.
- Search for the item you want to link to.
- Right-click or control-click on the item's name in iTunes, then choose "Copy iTunes Store URL" from the pop-up menu.
- In your application, create an
NSURL
object with the copied iTunes URL, then pass this object to UIApplication
' s openURL
: method to open your item in the App Store.
Sample code:
NSString *iTunesLink = @"itms://itunes.apple.com/app/apple-store/id375380948?mt=8";
[[UIApplication sharedApplication] openURL:[NSURL URLWithString:iTunesLink]];
iOS10+:
[[UIApplication sharedApplication] openURL:[NSURL URLWithString:iTunesLink] options:@{} completionHandler:nil];
Swift 4.2
let urlStr = "itms-apps://itunes.apple.com/app/apple-store/id375380948?mt=8"
if #available(iOS 10.0, *) {
UIApplication.shared.open(URL(string: urlStr)!, options: [:], completionHandler: nil)
} else {
UIApplication.shared.openURL(URL(string: urlStr)!)
}
Best Answer
Apple designates a number of different Media Types (mt values):
So, to answer your question, the "mt=8" in iTunes links simply identifies it as being of type 'Mobile Software Applications'.