48

How to remove a query string by Key from a Url?

I have the below method which works fine but just wondering is there any better/shorter way? or a built-in .NET method which can do it more efficiently?

 public static string RemoveQueryStringByKey(string url, string key)
        {
            var indexOfQuestionMark = url.IndexOf("?");
            if (indexOfQuestionMark == -1)
            {
                return url;
            }

            var result = url.Substring(0, indexOfQuestionMark);
            var queryStrings = url.Substring(indexOfQuestionMark + 1);
            var queryStringParts = queryStrings.Split(new [] {'&'});
            var isFirstAdded = false;

            for (int index = 0; index <queryStringParts.Length; index++)
            {
                var keyValue = queryStringParts[index].Split(new char[] { '=' });
                if (keyValue[0] == key)
                {
                    continue;
                }

                if (!isFirstAdded)
                {
                    result += "?";
                    isFirstAdded = true;
                }
                else
                {
                    result += "&";
                }

                result += queryStringParts[index];
            }

            return result;
        }

For example I can call it like:

  Console.WriteLine(RemoveQueryStringByKey(@"http://www.domain.com/uk_pa/PostDetail.aspx?hello=hi&xpid=4578", "xpid"));

Hope the question is clear.

Thanks,

4

18 Answers 18

118

This works well:

public static string RemoveQueryStringByKey(string url, string key)
{                   
    var uri = new Uri(url);

    // this gets all the query string key value pairs as a collection
    var newQueryString = HttpUtility.ParseQueryString(uri.Query);

    // this removes the key if exists
    newQueryString.Remove(key);

    // this gets the page path from root without QueryString
    string pagePathWithoutQueryString = uri.GetLeftPart(UriPartial.Path);

    return newQueryString.Count > 0
        ? String.Format("{0}?{1}", pagePathWithoutQueryString, newQueryString)
        : pagePathWithoutQueryString;
}

an example:

RemoveQueryStringByKey("https://www.google.co.uk/search?#hl=en&output=search&sclient=psy-ab&q=cookie", "q");

and returns:

https://www.google.co.uk/search?#hl=en&output=search&sclient=psy-ab
5
  • 2
    string doesnt contain defination for FormatWith method Apr 25, 2013 at 13:41
  • Is there a way to do this without using FormatWith? That's not available in .NET 4.0
    – NickG
    Jul 4, 2013 at 17:01
  • This works if the url has protocol. The Uri constructor throws if it's missing. i.e. new Uri("stackoverflow.com") - works but new Uri("stackoverflow.com") does not. Jan 10, 2018 at 12:19
  • Those of you mentioning the invalid format issue, you are more than likely already dealing with a URI perhaps. You can simply change this method to accept the Uri instead of the string url. Then you simply delete the line creating one from the string.
    – Morgeth888
    Dec 11, 2018 at 22:22
  • 2
    This answer missed Uri.Fragment (the hash #xxx) handling. So the URL like "google.co.uk/…" will losethe "#xxx" after processing. So the returned value should add uri.Fragment
    – Qin Chao
    Dec 11, 2019 at 16:10
11
    var queryString = "hello=hi&xpid=4578";
    var qs = System.Web.HttpUtility.ParseQueryString(queryString);
    qs.Remove("xpid");
    var newQuerystring = qs.ToString();

This still works in .NET 5.

1
  • This solution is cool because the Remove() method actually works.
    – Cesar
    Mar 11, 2021 at 16:20
8

I know this is a rather old question, but everything I read felt a bit complicated.

public Uri GetUriWithoutQueryParam( Uri originalUri, string paramKey ) {
  NameValueCollection newQuery = HttpUtility.ParseQueryString( originalUri.Query );
  newQuery.Remove( paramKey );
  return new UriBuilder( originalUri ) { Query = newQuery.ToString() }.Uri;
}
6

There's a useful class called UriBuilder in the System namespace. We can use it along with a couple of extension methods to do the following:

Uri u = new Uri("http://example.com?key1=value1&key2=value2");
u = u.DropQueryItem("key1");

Or like this:

Uri u = new Uri("http://example.com?key1=value1&key2=value2");
UriBuilder b = new UriBuilder(u);
b.RemoveQueryItem("key1");
u = b.Uri;

The extension methods:

using System;
using System.Collections.Specialized;
using System.Text;
using System.Text.RegularExpressions;

public static class UriExtensions
{
    public static Uri DropQueryItem(this Uri u, string key)
    {
        UriBuilder b = new UriBuilder(u);
        b.RemoveQueryItem(key);
        return b.Uri;
    }
}
public static class UriBuilderExtensions
{
    private static string _ParseQueryPattern = @"(?<key>[^&=]+)={0,1}(?<value>[^&]*)";
    private static Regex _ParseQueryRegex = null;

    private static Regex ParseQueryRegex
    {
        get
        {
            if (_ParseQueryRegex == null)
            {
                _ParseQueryRegex = new Regex(_ParseQueryPattern, RegexOptions.Compiled | RegexOptions.Singleline);
            }
            return _ParseQueryRegex;

        }
    }

    public static void SetQueryItem(this UriBuilder b, string key, string value)
    {
        NameValueCollection parms = ParseQueryString(b.Query);
        parms[key] = value;
        b.Query = RenderQuery(parms);
    }

    public static void RemoveQueryItem(this UriBuilder b, string key)
    {
        NameValueCollection parms = ParseQueryString(b.Query);
        parms.Remove(key);
        b.Query = RenderQuery(parms);
    }       
    private static string RenderQuery(NameValueCollection parms)
    {
        StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder();
        for (int i=0; i<parms.Count; i++)
        {
            string key = parms.Keys[i];
            sb.Append(key + "=" + parms[key]);
            if (i < parms.Count - 1)
            {
                sb.Append("&");
            }
        }
        return sb.ToString();
    }
    public static NameValueCollection ParseQueryString(string query, bool caseSensitive = true)
    {
        NameValueCollection pairs = new NameValueCollection(caseSensitive ? StringComparer.Ordinal : StringComparer.OrdinalIgnoreCase);

        string q = query.Trim().TrimStart(new char[] {'?'});
        MatchCollection matches = ParseQueryRegex.Matches(q);

        foreach (Match m in matches)
        {
            string key = m.Groups["key"].Value;
            string value = m.Groups["value"].Value;
            if (pairs[key] != null)
            {
                pairs[key] = pairs[key] + "," + value;
            }
            else
            {
                pairs[key] = value;
            }

        }

        return pairs;

    }

}
2
  • 1
    UriBuilder' does not contain a definition for 'RemoveQueryItem' and no accessible extension method 'RemoveQueryItem' accepting a first argument of type 'UriBuilder' could be found (are you missing a using directive or an assembly reference?) on 4.6 dotnet version
    – Morgeth888
    Dec 11, 2018 at 22:14
  • 2
    @TommyHolman Sorrry about that. It turns out RemoveQueryItem was my own extension method on UriBuilder. I've updated my answer to include it. Dec 13, 2018 at 3:10
3

We can also do it using regex

string queryString = "Default.aspx?Agent=10&Language=2"; //Request.QueryString.ToString();
string parameterToRemove="Language";   //parameter which we want to remove
string regex=string.Format("(&{0}=[^&\s]+|(?<=\?){0}=[^&\s]+&?)",parameterToRemove);   //this will not work for javascript, for javascript you can do following
string finalQS = Regex.Replace(queryString, regex, "");

//javascript(following is not js syntex, just want to give idea how we can able do it in js)
string regex1 = string.Format("(&{0}=[^&\s]+)",parameterToRemove);
string regex2 = string.Format("(\?{0}=[^&\s]+&?)",parameterToRemove);
string finalQS = Regex.Replace(queryString, regex1, "").Replace(queryString, regex2, "");

https://regexr.com/3i9vj

1
  • Unfortunately your pattern also picks up "end of" matching on the first item (e.g. change parameterToRemove="ent" an you'll end up with Default.aspx?AgLanguage=2). If you don't have to support javascript, the following amendment uses positive-lookbehind to get around this: (&{0}=[^&\s]+|(?<=\?){0}=[^&\s]+&?)
    – freefaller
    Sep 13, 2018 at 11:37
1

How about this:

        string RemoveQueryStringByKey(string url, string key)
    {
        string ret = string.Empty;

        int index = url.IndexOf(key);
        if (index > -1)
        {
            string post = string.Empty;

            // Find end of key's value
            int endIndex = url.IndexOf('&', index);
            if (endIndex != -1) // Last query string value?
            {
                post = url.Substring(endIndex, url.Length - endIndex);
            }

            // Decrement for ? or & character
            --index;
            ret = url.Substring(0, index) + post;
        }

        return ret;
    }
0
1

I found a way without using Regex:

private string RemoveQueryStringByKey(string sURL, string sKey) {
    string sOutput = string.Empty;

    int iQuestion = sURL.IndexOf('?');
    if (iQuestion == -1) return (sURL);

    int iKey = sURL.Substring(iQuestion).IndexOf(sKey) + iQuestion;
    if (iKey == -1) return (sURL);

    int iNextAnd = sURL.Substring(iKey).IndexOf('&') + iKey + 1;

    if (iNextAnd == -1) {
        sOutput = sURL.Substring(0, iKey - 1);
    }
    else {
        sOutput = sURL.Remove(iKey, iNextAnd - iKey);
    }

    return (sOutput);
}

I did try this with adding another field at the end, and it works fine for that too.

0
1

With reusing the signature from the accepted answer, but preserving the fragment and using QueryHelpers from Microsoft.AspNetCore.WebUtilities.

public static string RemoveQueryStringByKey(string url, string key)
{
    var uri = new Uri(url);

    var newQueryString = QueryHelpers.ParseQuery(uri.Query);

    if (newQueryString.Remove(key))
    {
        var urlWithNewQuery = QueryHelpers.AddQueryString(
            uri.GetLeftPart(UriPartial.Path),
            newQueryString.ToDictionary(
                queryParam => queryParam.Key,
                queryParam => queryParam.Value.ToString()))
        return $"{urlWithNewQuery}{uri.Fragment}";
    }

    return url;
}
0

I'm thinking the shortest way (that I believe produces a valid URL in all cases, assuming the URL was valid to begin with) would be to use this regex (where getRidOf is the variable name you are trying to remove) and the replacement is a zero-length string ""):

(?<=[?&])getRidOf=[^&]*(&|$)

or maybe even

\bgetRidOf=[^&]*(&|$)

while possibly not the absolute prettiest URLs, I think they are all valid:

         INPUT                                         OUTPUT
      -----------                                   ------------
blah.com/blah.php?getRidOf=d.co&blah=foo        blah.com/blah.php?blah=foo
blah.com/blah.php?f=0&getRidOf=d.co&blah=foo    blah.com/blah.php?f=0&blah=foo
blah.com/blah.php?hello=true&getRidOf=d.co      blah.com/blah.php?hello=true&
blah.com/blah.php?getRidOf=d.co                 blah.com/blah.php?

and it's a simple regex replace:

Dim RegexObj as Regex = New Regex("(?<=[?&])getRidOf=[^&]*(&|$)")
RegexObj.Replace("source.url.com/find.htm?replace=true&getRidOf=PLEASE!!!", "")

...should result in the string:

"source.url.com/find.htm?replace=true&"

...which seems to be valid for an ASP.Net application, while replace does equal true (not true& or anything like that)

I'll try to adapt it if you have a case where it won't work :)

0
public static string RemoveQueryStringByKey(string sURL, string sKey)
    {
        string sOutput = string.Empty;
        string sToReplace = string.Empty;

        int iFindTheKey = sURL.IndexOf(sKey);
        if (iFindTheKey == -1) return (sURL);

        int iQuestion = sURL.IndexOf('?');
        if (iQuestion == -1) return (sURL);

        string sEverythingBehindQ = sURL.Substring(iQuestion);
        List<string> everythingBehindQ = new List<string>(sEverythingBehindQ.Split('&'));
        foreach (string OneParamPair in everythingBehindQ)
        {
            int iIsKeyInThisParamPair = OneParamPair.IndexOf(sKey);
            if (iIsKeyInThisParamPair != -1)
            {
                sToReplace = "&" + OneParamPair;
            }
        }

        sOutput = sURL.Replace(sToReplace, "");
        return (sOutput);
    }
0

Below code before deleting your QueryString.

 PropertyInfo isreadonly = 
          typeof(System.Collections.Specialized.NameValueCollection).GetProperty(
          "IsReadOnly", BindingFlags.Instance | BindingFlags.NonPublic);
        // make collection editable
        isreadonly.SetValue(this.Request.QueryString, false, null);
        // remove
        this.Request.QueryString.Remove("yourKey");
0

Sorry this is a bit dirty but should work in older framework

public String RemoveQueryString( String rawUrl  , String keyName)
{
    var currentURL_Split =  rawUrl.Split('&').ToList();
    currentURL_Split = currentURL_Split.Where(o => !o.ToLower().StartsWith(keyName.ToLower()+"=")).ToList();
    String New_RemovedKey = String.Join("&", currentURL_Split.ToArray()); 
    New_RemovedKey = New_RemovedKey.Replace("&&", "&");
    return New_RemovedKey;
}
0

Here is my solution:

I'v added some extra input validation.

public static void TryRemoveQueryStringByKey(ref string url, string key)
{
    if (string.IsNullOrEmpty(url) ||
        string.IsNullOrEmpty(key) ||
        Uri.IsWellFormedUriString(url, UriKind.RelativeOrAbsolute) == false)
    {
        return false;
    }            

    try
    {
        Uri uri = new Uri(url);

        // This gets all the query string key value pairs as a collection
        NameValueCollection queryCollection = HttpUtility.ParseQueryString(uri.Query);
        string keyValue = queryCollection.Get(key);

        if (url.IndexOf("&" + key + "=" + keyValue, StringComparison.OrdinalIgnoreCase) >= 0)
        {
            url = url.Replace("&" + key + "=" + keyValue, String.Empty);
            return true;
        }
        else if (url.IndexOf("?" + key + "=" + keyValue, StringComparison.OrdinalIgnoreCase) >= 0)
        {
            url = url.Replace("?" + key + "=" + keyValue, String.Empty);
            return true;
        }
        else
        {
            return false;
        }
    }
    catch
    {
        return false;
    }
}

Some unit testing examples:

string url1 = "http://www.gmail.com?a=1&cookie=cookieValue"
Assert.IsTrue(TryRemoveQueryStringByKey(ref url1,"cookie")); //OUTPUT: "http://www.gmail.com?a=1"

string url2 = "http://www.gmail.com?cookie=cookieValue"  
Assert.IsTrue(TryRemoveQueryStringByKey(ref url2,"cookie")); //OUTPUT: "http://www.gmail.com"

string url3 = "http://www.gmail.com?cookie="  
Assert.IsTrue(TryRemoveQueryStringByKey(ref url2,"cookie")); //OUTPUT: "http://www.gmail.com"
0

Here's a full solution that works with >= 0 params specified, and any form of URL:

    /// <summary>
    /// Given a URL in any format, return URL with specified query string param removed if it exists
    /// </summary>
    public static string StripQueryStringParam(string url, string paramToRemove)
    {
        return StripQueryStringParams(url, new List<string> {paramToRemove});
    }

    /// <summary>
    /// Given a URL in any format, return URL with specified query string params removed if it exists
    /// </summary>
    public static string StripQueryStringParams(string url, List<string> paramsToRemove)
    {
        if (paramsToRemove == null || !paramsToRemove.Any()) return url;

        var splitUrl = url.Split('?');
        if (splitUrl.Length == 1) return url;

        var urlFirstPart = splitUrl[0];
        var urlSecondPart = splitUrl[1];

        // Even though in most cases # isn't available to context,
        // we may be passing it in explicitly for helper urls
        var secondPartSplit = urlSecondPart.Split('#');
        var querystring = secondPartSplit[0];
        var hashUrlPart = string.Empty;
        if (secondPartSplit.Length > 1)
        {
            hashUrlPart = "#" + secondPartSplit[1];
        }
        var nvc = HttpUtility.ParseQueryString(querystring);
        if (!nvc.HasKeys()) return url;

        // Remove any matches
        foreach (var key in nvc.AllKeys)
        {
            if (paramsToRemove.Contains(key))
            {
                nvc.Remove(key);
            }
        }

        if (!nvc.HasKeys()) return urlFirstPart;
        return urlFirstPart + 
               "?" + string.Join("&", nvc.AllKeys.Select(c => c.ToString() + "=" + nvc[c.ToString()])) + 
               hashUrlPart;
    }
0

A more modern answer for this old question in case someone else stumbles across it like I did.

This is using the Uri class to parse the URL (can be skipped if your URL is already in a Uri object) and LINQ to filter the query string.

public static string RemoveQueryStringByKey(string url, string key)
{
    var uri = new Uri(url, UriKind.Absolute);
    var queryParts = uri.Query
        .TrimStart('?')
        .Split('&')
        .Where(item => string.CompareOrdinal(item, key) != 0);
    return uri.Scheme + Uri.SchemeDelimiter
        + uri.Authority
        + uri.AbsolutePath
        + "?" + string.Join("&", queryParts);
}
0

I needed this to work on a relative url, which the accepted answer doesn't. This is an adaptation of Ash's answer.

    public static string RemoveQueryStringParam(string url, string key)
    {
        string sOutput = string.Empty;
        string sToReplace = string.Empty;

        int iFindTheKey = url.IndexOf(key);
        if (iFindTheKey == -1) return (url);

        int iQuestion = url.IndexOf('?');
        if (iQuestion == -1) return (url);

        //loop querystring params to find the key
        string sEverythingBehindQ = url.Substring(iQuestion + 1);
        List<string> everythingBehindQ = new List<string>(sEverythingBehindQ.Split('&'));
        foreach (string OneParamPair in everythingBehindQ)
        {
            int iIsKeyInThisParamPair = OneParamPair.IndexOf(key);
            if (iIsKeyInThisParamPair != -1)
            {
                sToReplace = OneParamPair;
            }
        }

        //remove the param
        sOutput = url.Replace(sToReplace, "");

        //cleanup
        sOutput = sOutput.Replace("?&", "?");
        sOutput = sOutput.Replace("&&", "&");
        sOutput = sOutput.TrimEnd("?&".ToCharArray());

        return (sOutput);
    }
0
    public string RemoveQueryStringByKey(string query, string key)
    {
        if (query == null)
            return null;
        return string.Join("&", query.Split("&").Where(s => !s.StartsWith(key)));
    }
-1
string url = HttpContext.Current.Request.Url.AbsoluteUri;
string[] separateURL = url.Split('?');

NameValueCollection queryString = System.Web.HttpUtility.ParseQueryString(separateURL[1]);
queryString.Remove("param_toremove");

string revisedurl = separateURL[0] + "?" + queryString.ToString();
1
  • Not processed case when no query
    – Pavel
    Mar 1, 2018 at 8:43

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