In ASP:
Server.URLEncode("+&(). -*<>/\|")
' returns %2B%26%28%29%2E+%2D%2A%3C%3E%2F%5C%7C
In ASP.NET
Uri.EscapeDataString("+&(). -*<>/\|")
// returns %2B%26().%20-*%3C%3E%2F%5C%7C
HttpUtility.UrlEncode("+&(). -*<>/\|")
// returns %2b%26().+-*%3c%3e%2f%5c%7c
Is there any elegant way how to mimic old ASP behavior in ASP.NET?
You can use a regular expression to match the characters that you want to convert, and a lambda expression for creating the hex code:
string input = #"+&(). -*<>/\|";
string encoded = Regex.Replace(
HttpUtility.UrlEncode(input),
#"[()\.\-*]",
m => "%" + Convert.ToString((int)m.Captures[0].Value[0], 16)
);
You can try using Server.UrlEncode(), which is supported in ASP.Net.
Related
I'm having difficulty with the following.
In VB.Net, I have the following line:
Dim intWidgetID As Integer = CType(Replace(strWidget, "portlet_", ""), Integer)
where strWidget = portlet_n
where n can be any whole number, i.e.
portlet_5
I am trying to convert this code to C#, but I keep getting errors, I currently have this:
intTabID = Convert.ToInt32(Strings.Replace(strTabID, "tab_group_", ""));
which I got using an online converter
But it doesn't like Strings
So my question is, how to I replace part of a string, so intTabID becomes 5 based on this example?
I've done a search for this, and found this link:
C# Replace part of a string
Can this not be done without regular expressions in c#, so basically, I'm trying to produce code as similar as possible to the original vb.net example code.
It should be like this strTabID.Replace("tab_group_", string.Empty);
int intTabID = 0;
string value = strTabID.Replace("tab_group_", string.Empty);
int.TryParse(value, out intTabID);
if (intTabID > 0)
{
}
And in your code i think you need to replace "tab_group_" with "portlet_"
Instead of Strings.Replace(strTabID, "tab_group_", ""), use strTabID.Replace("tab_group_", "").
This should work
int intWidgetID = int.Parse(strTabID.Replace("tab_group_",""));//Can also use TryParse
Their is no Strings class in Vb.Net so please use the string class instead http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/aa903372(v=vs.71).aspx
you can achieve it by this way
string strWidget = "portlet_n";
int intWidgetID = Convert.ToInt32(strWidget.Split('_')[1]);
I am passing '© Alt+ 0169' in my serach fields in query string.
When i am getting QueryString in page like Request.QueryString("SearchVal") then value will be : '© Alt 0169' .
It reomove '+'.
Could u tell me how can i get it..
Thanks
Pankaj Pareek
Use System.Web.HttpUtility.UrlEncode() method.
string encode = HttpUtility.UrlEncode("© Alt+ 0169");
Response.Redirect("Page1.aspx?searchVal=" + encode);
Dim custEmail As String
Dim inputEmail As String
custEmail = dt.Rows(0).Item("email")
inputEmail = email_add.Text
if (custEmail.toString() == inputEmail.toString() ){
label1.Text = custEmail
}
End If
This code is giving an error: Compiler Error Message: BC30201: Expression expected.
I just basically want to check if two values are equal but its saying something about expression expected although i've given the expression to evaluate.
The above is a mix of vb.net and c# syntax. You can use either in .net with success but not both at the same time. Get rid of the { and } to stick with vb.
Looks like you are mixing C# and VB.Net. Assuming you are using VB.Net
Replace the '{' with Begin IF and remove the '}'.
The URL link below will open a new Google mail window. The problem I have is that Google replaces all the plus (+) signs in the email body with blank space. It looks like it only happens with the + sign. How can I remedy this? (I am working on a ASP.NET web page.)
https://mail.google.com/mail?view=cm&tf=0&to=someemail#somedomain.com&su=some subject&body=Hi there+Hello there
(In the body email, "Hi there+Hello there" will show up as "Hi there Hello there")
The + character has a special meaning in [the query segment of] a URL => it means whitespace: . If you want to use the literal + sign there, you need to URL encode it to %2b:
body=Hi+there%2bHello+there
Here's an example of how you could properly generate URLs in .NET:
var uriBuilder = new UriBuilder("https://mail.google.com/mail");
var values = HttpUtility.ParseQueryString(string.Empty);
values["view"] = "cm";
values["tf"] = "0";
values["to"] = "someemail#somedomain.com";
values["su"] = "some subject";
values["body"] = "Hi there+Hello there";
uriBuilder.Query = values.ToString();
Console.WriteLine(uriBuilder.ToString());
The result:
https://mail.google.com:443/mail?view=cm&tf=0&to=someemail%40somedomain.com&su=some+subject&body=Hi+there%2bHello+there
If you want a plus + symbol in the body you have to encode it as 2B.
For example:
Try this
In order to encode a + value using JavaScript, you can use the encodeURIComponent function.
Example:
var url = "+11";
var encoded_url = encodeURIComponent(url);
console.log(encoded_url)
It's safer to always percent-encode all characters except those defined as "unreserved" in RFC-3986.
unreserved = ALPHA / DIGIT / "-" / "." / "_" / "~"
So, percent-encode the plus character and other special characters.
The problem that you are having with pluses is because, according to RFC-1866 (HTML 2.0 specification), paragraph 8.2.1. subparagraph 1., "The form field names and values are escaped: space characters are replaced by `+', and then reserved characters are escaped"). This way of encoding form data is also given in later HTML specifications, look for relevant paragraphs about application/x-www-form-urlencoded.
Just to add this to the list:
Uri.EscapeUriString("Hi there+Hello there") // Hi%20there+Hello%20there
Uri.EscapeDataString("Hi there+Hello there") // Hi%20there%2BHello%20there
See https://stackoverflow.com/a/34189188/98491
Usually you want to use EscapeDataString which does it right.
Generally if you use .NET API's - new Uri("someproto:with+plus").LocalPath or AbsolutePath will keep plus character in URL. (Same "someproto:with+plus" string)
but Uri.EscapeDataString("with+plus") will escape plus character and will produce "with%2Bplus".
Just to be consistent I would recommend to always escape plus character to "%2B" and use it everywhere - then no need to guess who thinks and what about your plus character.
I'm not sure why from escaped character '+' decoding would produce space character ' ' - but apparently it's the issue with some of components.
I have a server side operation manually generating some json response. Within the json is a property that contains a string value.
What is the easiest way to escape the string value contained within this json result?
So this
string result = "{ \"propName\" : '" + (" *** \\\"Hello World!\\\" ***") + "' }";
would turn into
string result = "{ \"propName\" : '" + SomeJsonConverter.EscapeString(" *** \\\"Hello World!\\\" ***") + "' }";
and result in the following json
{ \"propName\" : '*** \"Hello World!\" ***' }
First of all I find the idea to implement serialization manually not good. You should to do this mostla only for studying purpose or of you have other very important reason why you can not use standard .NET classes (for example use have to use .NET 1.0-3.0 and not higher).
Now back to your code. The results which you produce currently are not in JSON format. You should place the property name and property value in double quotas:
{ "propName" : "*** \"Hello World!\" ***" }
How you can read on http://www.json.org/ the double quota in not only character which must be escaped. The backslash character also must be escaped. You cen verify you JSON results on http://www.jsonlint.com/.
If you implement deserialization also manually you should know that there are more characters which can be escaped abbitionally to \" and \\: \/, \b, \f, \n, \r, \t and \u which follows to 4 hexadecimal digits.
How I wrote at the beginning of my answer, it is better to use standard .NET classes like DataContractJsonSerializer or JavaScriptSerializer. If you have to use .NET 2.0 and not higher you can use Json.NET.
You may try something like:
string.replace(/(\\|")/g, "\\$1").replace("\n", "\\n").replace("\r", "\\r");