.NET has changed a bit over the years, making the other answers on this post pretty dated:
- They use
Image
from System.Drawing
(which is not available for .NET Core) to find the image format
- They use
System.Net.WebClient
which is deprecated
We don't recommend that you use the WebClient
class for new development. Instead, use the System.Net.Http.HttpClient class.
.NET Core asynchronous solution
Getting the file extension
The first part of getting the file extension is to remove all the unnecessary parts from the URL.
We can use Uri.GetLeftPart() with UriPartial.Path to get everything from the Scheme
up to the Path
.
In other words, https://www.example.com/image.png?query&with.dots
becomes https://www.example.com/image.png
.
After that, we can use Path.GetExtension() to get only the extension (in my previous example, .png
).
var uriWithoutQuery = uri.GetLeftPart(UriPartial.Path);
var fileExtension = Path.GetExtension(uriWithoutQuery);
Downloading the image
From here it should be straight forward. Download the image with HttpClient.GetByteArrayAsync, create the path, ensure the directory exists and then write the bytes to the path with File.WriteAllBytesAsync()
private async Task DownloadImageAsync(string directoryPath, string fileName, Uri uri)
{
using var httpClient = new HttpClient();
// Get the file extension
var uriWithoutQuery = uri.GetLeftPart(UriPartial.Path);
var fileExtension = Path.GetExtension(uriWithoutQuery);
// Create file path and ensure directory exists
var path = Path.Combine(directoryPath, $"{fileName}{fileExtension}");
Directory.CreateDirectory(directoryPath);
// Download the image and write to the file
var imageBytes = await httpClient.GetByteArrayAsync(uri);
await File.WriteAllBytesAsync(path, imageBytes);
}
Note that you need the following using directives.
using System;
using System.IO;
using System.Threading.Tasks;
using System.Net.Http;
Example usage
var folder = "images";
var fileName = "test";
var url = "https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/458291463663386646/592779619212460054/Screenshot_20190624-201411.jpg?query&with.dots";
await DownloadImageAsync(folder, fileName, new Uri(url));
Notes
- It's bad practice to create a new
HttpClient
for every method call. It is supposed to be reused throughout the application. I wrote a short example of an ImageDownloader
(50 lines) with more documentation that correctly reuses the HttpClient
and properly disposes of it that you can find here.