I have the following client side javascript code.
<html>
<script type="text/javascript" src="js/jquery.min.js"></script>
<script>
$(document).ready(function() {
//var parameters = "a=" + JSON.stringify({ Code: "xyyyzz"});
var parameters = "a=" + JSON.stringify({ Code: "x#yyy#zz"});
alert(parameters);
$.getJSON('http://localhost:8080', parameters)
.done(function(str){
alert("success");
})
.fail(function(e) {
alert("failure");
});
});
</script>
</html>
and the following server side node.js code
var http = require('http');
var URL = require('url');
var queryString = require( "querystring" );
handler = function(req, res) {
url = URL.parse(req.url);
var queryObj = queryString.parse( url.query );
var obj = JSON.parse( queryObj.a );
console.log( obj.Code);
};
host = '127.0.0.1';
port = 8080;
http.createServer(handler).listen(port, host);
console.log('Server running at http://' + host + ':' + port + '/');
Now, if I load the .html file, the JSON call is made from the javascript. However, the parameter is not passed in full. It is passed only until the first # character and so causes the nodejs server to crash on the parse function. Now if I uncomment the previous line in the .js where a string without the # is passed, the nodejs server can succesfully parse the parameters.
So my question is, Is JSON incapable of encoding special characters like # in a string ? Or is this a bug ? Or do I need to add anything else to fix this so that x#yyy#zz is passed as a whole string to the nodejs server ?