I'm writing some kind of a page scraper, and one of the things I'm looking to do is combine the current url with an url fragment extracted from the current page.
Like this:
if (WebPath.IsAbsolute(urlFragment))
links.Add(new Uri(urlFragment));
else
links.Add(new Uri(currentUrl, urlFragment));
Easy peasy - this approach works most of the time, for both relative and absolute Uris.
However, some pages look like http://example.com/couple/of/folders/, with the url fragment couple/of/otherfolders/. And every single browser out there interprets that as http://example.com/couple/of/otherfolders.
Of course, my code yields http://example.com/couple/of/folders/couple/of/otherfolders. Which totally looks correct from the Uri's point of view - but I don't get how a browser can interpret this otherwise.
Now, I've searched for a solution to this problem, but I only found people who didn't know how to combine two urls, so that didn't get me very far. Closest thing I found was this question: How do you combine URL fragments in Java the same way browsers do? , but the answer doesn't tackle my particular problem.
Does anybody know what I'm missing?
Edit - this is the IsAbsolute method (I know I should replace it with new Uri(link).IsAbsoluteUri):
public static bool IsAbsolute(string path)
{
var uppercasePath = path.ToUpper();
return uppercasePath.StartsWith("HTTP://") || uppercasePath.StartsWith("HTTPS://");
}
Uri
works properly.<base>
element, which is a horrible thing that you need to handle separately. So check for<base>
, get itshref
, use that instead ofcurrentUrl
if it exists.