I'm making a search page, where you type a search query and the form is submitted to search.php?query=your query
. What PHP function is the best and that I should use for encoding/decoding the search query?
6 Answers
For the URI query value use urlencode
/urldecode
; for anything else use rawurlencode
/rawurldecode
.
To create entire query string use http_build_query()
The difference between urlencode
and rawurlencode
is that
urlencode
encodes according to application/x-www-form-urlencoded (space is encoded with+
) whilerawurlencode
encodes according to the plain Percent-Encoding (space is encoded with%20
).
-
application/x-www-form-urlencoded is just a special variant of the Percent-Encoding and is only applied to encode HTML form data.– GumboJan 20, 2011 at 8:44
-
1@Click Upvote: They can’t be compared in that way. The application/x-www-form-urlencoded format is the Percent-Encoding format except that the space is encoded with
+
instead of%20
. And besides that, application/x-www-form-urlencoded is used to encode form data while the Percent-Encoding has a more general usage.– GumboJan 20, 2011 at 10:25 -
23rawurlencode() is compatible with javascript decodeURI() function Mar 3, 2015 at 6:40
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1Is this rule always the empirical one? I mean, when I need to encode a query string I always use
urldecode
. Then, what about the URI path (e.g./a/path with spaces/
) and URI fragment (e.g.#fragment
). Should I always userawurldecode
for these two?– tonixSep 12, 2018 at 16:53 -
A good rule of thumb is that for paths (Like /my%20folder/) go with
rawurlencode
; but for POST and GET fields go withurlencode
(Like /?folder=my+folder)` Jan 29, 2019 at 15:45
The cunningly-named urlencode() and urldecode().
However, you shouldn't need to use urldecode()
on variables that appear in $_POST
and $_GET
.
-
6could you please elaborate why urldecode() should not be used with $_POST. because i've been doing that since ages without any problems.– sidMay 21, 2019 at 13:18
-
do i need to encode basic parameters (e.g.
"name=b&age=c&location=d"
) sent to a PHP file via AJAX?– oldboyJul 29, 2019 at 1:07 -
Re "you shouldn't need to": Why not? Because they are already encoded? Dec 13, 2022 at 21:40
-
@sid I think their point is that you don't need to. If you're encoding some strings for a URL link, and then reading that data on the landing page with
$_GET
, that data will get decoded by default without the need for you to run it throughurldecode()
too.– A FriendMay 25, 2023 at 20:13
Here is my use case, which requires an exceptional amount of encoding. Maybe you think it is contrived, but we run this in production. Coincidently, this covers every type of encoding, so I'm posting as a tutorial.
Use case description
Somebody just bought a prepaid gift card ("token") on our website. Tokens have corresponding URLs to redeem them. This customer wants to email the URL to someone else. Our web page includes a mailto
link that lets them do that.
PHP code
// The order system generates some opaque token
$token = 'w%a&!e#"^2(^@azW';
// Here is a URL to redeem that token
$redeemUrl = 'https://httpbin.org/get?token=' . urlencode($token);
// Actual contents we want for the email
$subject = 'I just bought this for you';
$body = 'Please enter your shipping details here: ' . $redeemUrl;
// A URI for the email as prescribed
$mailToUri = 'mailto:?subject=' . rawurlencode($subject) . '&body=' . rawurlencode($body);
// Print an HTML element with that mailto link
echo '<a href="' . htmlspecialchars($mailToUri) . '">Email your friend</a>';
Note: the above assumes you are outputting to a text/html
document. If your output media type is text/json
then simply use $retval['url'] = $mailToUri;
because output encoding is handled by json_encode()
.
Test case
- Run the code on a PHP test site (is there a canonical one I should mention here?)
- Click the link
- Send the email
- Get the email
- Click that link
You should see:
"args": {
"token": "w%a&!e#\"^2(^@azW"
},
And of course this is the JSON representation of $token
above.
-
Equivalently, and less semantically (because
mailto:
is not HTTP), you can use$mailToUri 'mailto:?' . http_build_query(['subject'=>$subject, 'body'=>$body], null, '&', PHP_QUERY_RFC3986);
. Aug 21, 2019 at 13:34
You can use URL encoding functions. PHP has the
rawurlencode()
function.
ASP.NET has the
Server.URLEncode()
function.
In JavaScript, you can use the
encodeURIComponent()
function.
Based on what type of RFC standard encoding you want to perform or if you need to customize your encoding you might want to create your own class.
/**
* UrlEncoder make it easy to encode your URL
*/
class UrlEncoder{
public const STANDARD_RFC1738 = 1;
public const STANDARD_RFC3986 = 2;
public const STANDARD_CUSTOM_RFC3986_ISH = 3;
// add more here
static function encode($string, $rfc){
switch ($rfc) {
case self::STANDARD_RFC1738:
return urlencode($string);
break;
case self::STANDARD_RFC3986:
return rawurlencode($string);
break;
case self::STANDARD_CUSTOM_RFC3986_ISH:
// Add your custom encoding
$entities = ['%21', '%2A', '%27', '%28', '%29', '%3B', '%3A', '%40', '%26', '%3D', '%2B', '%24', '%2C', '%2F', '%3F', '%25', '%23', '%5B', '%5D'];
$replacements = ['!', '*', "'", "(", ")", ";", ":", "@", "&", "=", "+", "$", ",", "/", "?", "%", "#", "[", "]"];
return str_replace($entities, $replacements, urlencode($string));
break;
default:
throw new Exception("Invalid RFC encoder - See class const for reference");
break;
}
}
}
Use example:
$dataString = "https://www.google.pl/search?q=PHP is **great**!&id=123&css=#kolo&[email protected])";
$dataStringUrlEncodedRFC1738 = UrlEncoder::encode($dataString, UrlEncoder::STANDARD_RFC1738);
$dataStringUrlEncodedRFC3986 = UrlEncoder::encode($dataString, UrlEncoder::STANDARD_RFC3986);
$dataStringUrlEncodedCutom = UrlEncoder::encode($dataString, UrlEncoder::STANDARD_CUSTOM_RFC3986_ISH);
Will output:
string(126) "https%3A%2F%2Fwww.google.pl%2Fsearch%3Fq%3DPHP+is+%2A%2Agreat%2A%2A%21%26id%3D123%26css%3D%23kolo%26email%3Dme%40liszka.com%29"
string(130) "https%3A%2F%2Fwww.google.pl%2Fsearch%3Fq%3DPHP%20is%20%2A%2Agreat%2A%2A%21%26id%3D123%26css%3D%23kolo%26email%3Dme%40liszka.com%29"
string(86) "https://www.google.pl/search?q=PHP+is+**great**!&id=123&css=#kolo&[email protected])"
* Find out more about RFC standards: https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/rfc3986/ and urlencode vs rawurlencode?
You know how people keep saying things like: "Never manually craft a JSON string in PHP -- always call json_encode()
for stability/reliability."?
Well, if you are building a query string, then I say: "Never manually craft a URL query string in PHP—always call http_build_query()
for stability/reliability."
Demo:
$array = [
'query' => 'your query',
'example' => null,
'Qbert says:' => '&%=#?/'
];
echo http_build_query($array);
echo "\n---\n";
echo http_build_query($array, '', '&');
Output:
query=your+query&Qbert+says%3A=%26%25%3D%23%3F%2F
---
query=your+query&Qbert+says%3A=%26%25%3D%23%3F%2F
The fine print on this function is that if an element in the input array has a null
value, then that element will not be included in the output string.
Here is an educational answer on the Joomla Stack Exchange site which encourages the use of &
as the custom delimiter: Why are Joomla URL query strings commonly delimited with "&" instead of "&"?
Initially packaging your query string data in array form offers a compact and readable structure, then the call of http_build_query()
does the hard work and can prevent data corruption. I generally opt for this technique even for small query string construction.
foo bar
in a text field, createsfoo+bar
in the URL).file_get_contents