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I am decoding characters in a URL by using HTTPUtility.URLDecode. Here are the characters I have to decode:

%26 = "&"
%28 = "("
%29 = ")"
%20 = " "
%5B = "["
%5D = "]"
%2C = ","
%23 = "#"
%F3 = "ó" (spanish character)

HTTPUtility.URLDecode works great on all but the last one. I am doing a find/replace on that last character right now, but hoping there is a better automatic way so I don't have to update the find/replace in the future.

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    I think URL characters are supposed to be UTF-8 encoded. It looks like whoever is constructing that URL is using ISO-8859-1 encoding instead.
    – Joe White
    Nov 1, 2011 at 18:32

1 Answer 1

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You should use an overload of HttpUtility.UrlDecode() that accepts an encoding:

HttpUtility.UrlDecode("%F3", Encoding.GetEncoding("ISO-8859-1"))

This assumes it actually is using the ISO-8859-1 encoding. If it uses Windows-1250, you should use that. (These two are very similar, but they are not the same.)

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