391

My Java standalone application gets a URL (which points to a file) from the user and I need to hit it and download it. The problem I am facing is that I am not able to encode the HTTP URL address properly...

Example:

URL:  http://search.barnesandnoble.com/booksearch/first book.pdf

java.net.URLEncoder.encode(url.toString(), "ISO-8859-1");

returns me:

http%3A%2F%2Fsearch.barnesandnoble.com%2Fbooksearch%2Ffirst+book.pdf

But, what I want is

http://search.barnesandnoble.com/booksearch/first%20book.pdf

(space replaced by %20)

I guess URLEncoder is not designed to encode HTTP URLs... The JavaDoc says "Utility class for HTML form encoding"... Is there any other way to do this?

3
  • 1
    Nitpicking: a string containing a whitespace character by definition is not a URI. So what you're looking for is code that implements the URI escaping defined in Section 2.1 of RFC 3986. Apr 7, 2009 at 7:15
  • 2
    See also stackoverflow.com/questions/10786042/…
    – Raedwald
    Jan 21, 2016 at 15:58
  • The behaviour is entirely correct. URL encode is to turn something into a string that can be safely passed as a URL parameter, and isn't interpreted as a URL at all. Whereas you want it to just convert one small part of the URL. Jun 29, 2017 at 8:37

24 Answers 24

322

The java.net.URI class can help; in the documentation of URL you find

Note, the URI class does perform escaping of its component fields in certain circumstances. The recommended way to manage the encoding and decoding of URLs is to use an URI

Use one of the constructors with more than one argument, like:

URI uri = new URI(
    "http", 
    "search.barnesandnoble.com", 
    "/booksearch/first book.pdf",
    null);
URL url = uri.toURL();
//or String request = uri.toString();

(the single-argument constructor of URI does NOT escape illegal characters)


Only illegal characters get escaped by above code - it does NOT escape non-ASCII characters (see fatih's comment).
The toASCIIString method can be used to get a String only with US-ASCII characters:

URI uri = new URI(
    "http", 
    "search.barnesandnoble.com", 
    "/booksearch/é",
    null);
String request = uri.toASCIIString();

For an URL with a query like http://www.google.com/ig/api?weather=São Paulo, use the 5-parameter version of the constructor:

URI uri = new URI(
        "http", 
        "www.google.com", 
        "/ig/api",
        "weather=São Paulo",
        null);
String request = uri.toASCIIString();
19
  • 17
    Please note, the URI class mentioned here is from "org.apache.commons.httpclient.URI" not "java.net" , the "java.net" doesn't URI doesn't accept the illegal characters, unless you will use constructors that builds URL from its components , like the way mentioned in Matt comment below Jun 2, 2010 at 20:47
  • 9
    @Mohamed: the class I mentioned and used for testing actually is java.net.URI: it worked perfectly (Java 1.6). I would mention the fully qualified class name if it was not the standard Java one and the link points to the documentation of java.net.URI. And, by the comment of Sudhakar, it solved the problem without including any "commons libraries"!
    – user85421
    Jun 2, 2010 at 21:07
  • 2
    URI uri = new URI("http", "search.barnesandnoble.com", "/booksearch/é",null); Does not do correct escaping with this sample? This should have been escaped with % escapes
    – fmucar
    Jan 19, 2011 at 12:36
  • @fatih - that's correct, thanks! Normally that should not be a problem, but there is a simple solution - almost same as I wrote before. See 2nd edit.
    – user85421
    Jan 19, 2011 at 13:31
  • @Carlos Thx for the edit. Now it does escape but not correct escaping. It should be adding a % to the HEX value of char for Path params meaning é char should be converted to %e9
    – fmucar
    Jan 19, 2011 at 13:37
97

Please be warned that most of the answers above are INCORRECT.

The URLEncoder class, despite is name, is NOT what needs to be here. It's unfortunate that Sun named this class so annoyingly. URLEncoder is meant for passing data as parameters, not for encoding the URL itself.

In other words, "http://search.barnesandnoble.com/booksearch/first book.pdf" is the URL. Parameters would be, for example, "http://search.barnesandnoble.com/booksearch/first book.pdf?parameter1=this&param2=that". The parameters are what you would use URLEncoder for.

The following two examples highlights the differences between the two.

The following produces the wrong parameters, according to the HTTP standard. Note the ampersand (&) and plus (+) are encoded incorrectly.

uri = new URI("http", null, "www.google.com", 80, 
"/help/me/book name+me/", "MY CRZY QUERY! +&+ :)", null);

// URI: http://www.google.com:80/help/me/book%20name+me/?MY%20CRZY%20QUERY!%20+&+%20:)

The following will produce the correct parameters, with the query properly encoded. Note the spaces, ampersands, and plus marks.

uri = new URI("http", null, "www.google.com", 80, "/help/me/book name+me/", URLEncoder.encode("MY CRZY QUERY! +&+ :)", "UTF-8"), null);

// URI: http://www.google.com:80/help/me/book%20name+me/?MY+CRZY+QUERY%2521+%252B%2526%252B+%253A%2529
4
  • 2
    That's right, the URI constructor already encodes the querystring, according to the documentation docs.oracle.com/javase/1.4.2/docs/api/java/net/…, java.lang.String, java.lang.String, int, java.lang.String, java.lang.String, java.lang.String)
    – madoke
    Oct 10, 2012 at 14:17
  • 10
    @Draemon The answer is correct but uses the query string in an uncommon way; a more normal example might be query = URLEncoder.encode(key) + "=" + URLEncoder.encode(value). The docs merely say that "any character that is not a legal URI character is quoted".
    – tc.
    Mar 13, 2013 at 19:45
  • 1
    I agree with Matt here. If you type this URL: "google.com/help/me/book name+me/?MY CRZY QUERY! +&+ :)" in a browser, it automatically encodes the spaces but the "&" is used as query value separator and "+" are lost.
    – arcot
    Jan 30, 2014 at 22:31
  • Unfortunately, this answer is also wrong, because it double-encodes things. With the multi-param URI constructor, if you have slashes in your path, or '&' or '=' in your query params or values, you are either going to fail to encode these, or double encode them. Aug 24, 2020 at 12:52
92

I'm going to add one suggestion here aimed at Android users. You can do this which avoids having to get any external libraries. Also, all the search/replace characters solutions suggested in some of the answers above are perilous and should be avoided.

Give this a try:

String urlStr = "http://abc.dev.domain.com/0007AC/ads/800x480 15sec h.264.mp4";
URL url = new URL(urlStr);
URI uri = new URI(url.getProtocol(), url.getUserInfo(), url.getHost(), url.getPort(), url.getPath(), url.getQuery(), url.getRef());
url = uri.toURL();

You can see that in this particular URL, I need to have those spaces encoded so that I can use it for a request.

This takes advantage of a couple features available to you in Android classes. First, the URL class can break a url into its proper components so there is no need for you to do any string search/replace work. Secondly, this approach takes advantage of the URI class feature of properly escaping components when you construct a URI via components rather than from a single string.

The beauty of this approach is that you can take any valid url string and have it work without needing any special knowledge of it yourself.

4
  • 6
    Nice approach, but I would like to point out that this code does not prevent double encoding, e.g. %20 got encoded into %2520. Scott's answer does not suffer from this.
    – nattster
    Aug 3, 2014 at 8:12
  • Or if you just want to do path quoting: new URI(null, null, "/path with spaces", null, null).toString() Nov 9, 2014 at 5:54
  • 1
    @Stallman If your file name contains #, the URL class will put it into "ref" (equivalent of "fragment" in the URI class). You can detect whether URL.getRef() returns something that might be treated as a part of the path and pass URL.getPath() + "#" + URL.getRef() as the "path" parameter and null as the "fragment" parameter of the URI class 7 parameters constructor. By default, the string after # is treated as a reference (or an anchor).
    – gouessej
    Jan 7, 2016 at 13:59
  • great answer, i have simple urls and it works for me. Although i don't think its very android specific. I used java.net.URI and java.net.URL and this answer was working perfectly. I am even able to unit test this. Aug 24, 2020 at 2:12
49

a solution i developed and much more stable than any other:

public class URLParamEncoder {

    public static String encode(String input) {
        StringBuilder resultStr = new StringBuilder();
        for (char ch : input.toCharArray()) {
            if (isUnsafe(ch)) {
                resultStr.append('%');
                resultStr.append(toHex(ch / 16));
                resultStr.append(toHex(ch % 16));
            } else {
                resultStr.append(ch);
            }
        }
        return resultStr.toString();
    }

    private static char toHex(int ch) {
        return (char) (ch < 10 ? '0' + ch : 'A' + ch - 10);
    }

    private static boolean isUnsafe(char ch) {
        if (ch > 128 || ch < 0)
            return true;
        return " %$&+,/:;=?@<>#%".indexOf(ch) >= 0;
    }

}
7
  • 3
    that also requires you to break the url into pieces. There is no way for a computer to know which part of the url to encode. See my above edit
    – fmucar
    Aug 11, 2011 at 16:34
  • 4
    @fmucar Thanks for that piece of code! It should be noted that this isn't UTF-8. To get UTF-8 just pre-process the input with String utf8Input = new String(Charset.forName("UTF-8").encode(input).array()); (taken from here)
    – letmaik
    Oct 8, 2011 at 19:44
  • 2
    This solution will actually also encode the "http://" part into "http%3A%2F%2F", which is what the initial question tried to avoid. Jun 25, 2013 at 8:21
  • 3
    You only pass what you need to encode, not the whole URL. There is no way to pass one whole URL string and expect correct encoding. In all cases, you need to break the url into its logical pieces.
    – fmucar
    Jun 25, 2013 at 13:36
  • 2
    I had problems with this answer because it doesn't encode unsafe chars to UTF-8.. may be dependent on the peer application though. Oct 9, 2013 at 12:07
40

If you have a URL, you can pass url.toString() into this method. First decode, to avoid double encoding (for example, encoding a space results in %20 and encoding a percent sign results in %25, so double encoding will turn a space into %2520). Then, use the URI as explained above, adding in all the parts of the URL (so that you don't drop the query parameters).

public URL convertToURLEscapingIllegalCharacters(String string){
    try {
        String decodedURL = URLDecoder.decode(string, "UTF-8");
        URL url = new URL(decodedURL);
        URI uri = new URI(url.getProtocol(), url.getUserInfo(), url.getHost(), url.getPort(), url.getPath(), url.getQuery(), url.getRef()); 
        return uri.toURL(); 
    } catch (Exception ex) {
        ex.printStackTrace();
        return null;
    }
}
1
  • 2
    URLDecoder.decode(string, "UTF-8") fails with an IllegalArgumentException when you pass the string as "google.co.in/search?q=123%!123". This is a valid URL. I guess this API doesn't work when % is used as data instead of the encoding character.
    – MediumOne
    May 28, 2015 at 13:10
27

Yeah URL encoding is going to encode that string so that it would be passed properly in a url to a final destination. For example you could not have http://stackoverflow.com?url=http://yyy.com. UrlEncoding the parameter would fix that parameter value.

So i have two choices for you:

  1. Do you have access to the path separate from the domain? If so you may be able to simply UrlEncode the path. However, if this is not the case then option 2 may be for you.

  2. Get commons-httpclient-3.1. This has a class URIUtil:

    System.out.println(URIUtil.encodePath("http://example.com/x y", "ISO-8859-1"));

This will output exactly what you are looking for, as it will only encode the path part of the URI.

FYI, you'll need commons-codec and commons-logging for this method to work at runtime.

2
  • Sidenote apache commons stopped maintaining URIUtil in 4.x branches apparently, recommending you use JDK's URI class instead. Just means you have to break up the string yourself.
    – Nicholi
    Jul 23, 2014 at 22:44
  • 2) Exactly it is also suggested here stackoverflow.com/questions/5330104/… I also used URIUtil solution
    – To Kra
    Feb 5, 2016 at 8:48
13

If anybody doesn't want to add a dependency to their project, these functions may be helpful.

We pass the 'path' part of our URL into here. You probably don't want to pass the full URL in as a parameter (query strings need different escapes, etc).

/**
 * Percent-encodes a string so it's suitable for use in a URL Path (not a query string / form encode, which uses + for spaces, etc)
 */
public static String percentEncode(String encodeMe) {
    if (encodeMe == null) {
        return "";
    }
    String encoded = encodeMe.replace("%", "%25");
    encoded = encoded.replace(" ", "%20");
    encoded = encoded.replace("!", "%21");
    encoded = encoded.replace("#", "%23");
    encoded = encoded.replace("$", "%24");
    encoded = encoded.replace("&", "%26");
    encoded = encoded.replace("'", "%27");
    encoded = encoded.replace("(", "%28");
    encoded = encoded.replace(")", "%29");
    encoded = encoded.replace("*", "%2A");
    encoded = encoded.replace("+", "%2B");
    encoded = encoded.replace(",", "%2C");
    encoded = encoded.replace("/", "%2F");
    encoded = encoded.replace(":", "%3A");
    encoded = encoded.replace(";", "%3B");
    encoded = encoded.replace("=", "%3D");
    encoded = encoded.replace("?", "%3F");
    encoded = encoded.replace("@", "%40");
    encoded = encoded.replace("[", "%5B");
    encoded = encoded.replace("]", "%5D");
    return encoded;
}

/**
 * Percent-decodes a string, such as used in a URL Path (not a query string / form encode, which uses + for spaces, etc)
 */
public static String percentDecode(String encodeMe) {
    if (encodeMe == null) {
        return "";
    }
    String decoded = encodeMe.replace("%21", "!");
    decoded = decoded.replace("%20", " ");
    decoded = decoded.replace("%23", "#");
    decoded = decoded.replace("%24", "$");
    decoded = decoded.replace("%26", "&");
    decoded = decoded.replace("%27", "'");
    decoded = decoded.replace("%28", "(");
    decoded = decoded.replace("%29", ")");
    decoded = decoded.replace("%2A", "*");
    decoded = decoded.replace("%2B", "+");
    decoded = decoded.replace("%2C", ",");
    decoded = decoded.replace("%2F", "/");
    decoded = decoded.replace("%3A", ":");
    decoded = decoded.replace("%3B", ";");
    decoded = decoded.replace("%3D", "=");
    decoded = decoded.replace("%3F", "?");
    decoded = decoded.replace("%40", "@");
    decoded = decoded.replace("%5B", "[");
    decoded = decoded.replace("%5D", "]");
    decoded = decoded.replace("%25", "%");
    return decoded;
}

And tests:

@Test
public void testPercentEncode_Decode() {
    assertEquals("", percentDecode(percentEncode(null)));
    assertEquals("", percentDecode(percentEncode("")));

    assertEquals("!", percentDecode(percentEncode("!")));
    assertEquals("#", percentDecode(percentEncode("#")));
    assertEquals("$", percentDecode(percentEncode("$")));
    assertEquals("@", percentDecode(percentEncode("@")));
    assertEquals("&", percentDecode(percentEncode("&")));
    assertEquals("'", percentDecode(percentEncode("'")));
    assertEquals("(", percentDecode(percentEncode("(")));
    assertEquals(")", percentDecode(percentEncode(")")));
    assertEquals("*", percentDecode(percentEncode("*")));
    assertEquals("+", percentDecode(percentEncode("+")));
    assertEquals(",", percentDecode(percentEncode(",")));
    assertEquals("/", percentDecode(percentEncode("/")));
    assertEquals(":", percentDecode(percentEncode(":")));
    assertEquals(";", percentDecode(percentEncode(";")));

    assertEquals("=", percentDecode(percentEncode("=")));
    assertEquals("?", percentDecode(percentEncode("?")));
    assertEquals("@", percentDecode(percentEncode("@")));
    assertEquals("[", percentDecode(percentEncode("[")));
    assertEquals("]", percentDecode(percentEncode("]")));
    assertEquals(" ", percentDecode(percentEncode(" ")));

    // Get a little complex
    assertEquals("[]]", percentDecode(percentEncode("[]]")));
    assertEquals("a=d%*", percentDecode(percentEncode("a=d%*")));
    assertEquals(")  (", percentDecode(percentEncode(")  (")));
    assertEquals("%21%20%2A%20%27%20%28%20%25%20%29%20%3B%20%3A%20%40%20%26%20%3D%20%2B%20%24%20%2C%20%2F%20%3F%20%23%20%5B%20%5D%20%25",
                    percentEncode("! * ' ( % ) ; : @ & = + $ , / ? # [ ] %"));
    assertEquals("! * ' ( % ) ; : @ & = + $ , / ? # [ ] %", percentDecode(
                    "%21%20%2A%20%27%20%28%20%25%20%29%20%3B%20%3A%20%40%20%26%20%3D%20%2B%20%24%20%2C%20%2F%20%3F%20%23%20%5B%20%5D%20%25"));

    assertEquals("%23456", percentDecode(percentEncode("%23456")));

}
2
  • Thanks for this, but what is that I need to do to encode a space -> use %20 instead as per your example? Dec 12, 2017 at 11:35
  • Updated to account for spaces as %20
    – Cuga
    Dec 22, 2017 at 12:03
11

Unfortunately, org.apache.commons.httpclient.util.URIUtil is deprecated, and the replacement org.apache.commons.codec.net.URLCodec does coding suitable for form posts, not in actual URL's. So I had to write my own function, which does a single component (not suitable for entire query strings that have ?'s and &'s)

public static String encodeURLComponent(final String s)
{
  if (s == null)
  {
    return "";
  }

  final StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder();

  try
  {
    for (int i = 0; i < s.length(); i++)
    {
      final char c = s.charAt(i);

      if (((c >= 'A') && (c <= 'Z')) || ((c >= 'a') && (c <= 'z')) ||
          ((c >= '0') && (c <= '9')) ||
          (c == '-') ||  (c == '.')  || (c == '_') || (c == '~'))
      {
        sb.append(c);
      }
      else
      {
        final byte[] bytes = ("" + c).getBytes("UTF-8");

        for (byte b : bytes)
        {
          sb.append('%');

          int upper = (((int) b) >> 4) & 0xf;
          sb.append(Integer.toHexString(upper).toUpperCase(Locale.US));

          int lower = ((int) b) & 0xf;
          sb.append(Integer.toHexString(lower).toUpperCase(Locale.US));
        }
      }
    }

    return sb.toString();
  }
  catch (UnsupportedEncodingException uee)
  {
    throw new RuntimeException("UTF-8 unsupported!?", uee);
  }
}
1
  • 1
    Come on, there has to be a library that does this.
    – shinzou
    Apr 8, 2018 at 9:27
10

URLEncoding can encode HTTP URLs just fine, as you've unfortunately discovered. The string you passed in, "http://search.barnesandnoble.com/booksearch/first book.pdf", was correctly and completely encoded into a URL-encoded form. You could pass that entire long string of gobbledigook that you got back as a parameter in a URL, and it could be decoded back into exactly the string you passed in.

It sounds like you want to do something a little different than passing the entire URL as a parameter. From what I gather, you're trying to create a search URL that looks like "http://search.barnesandnoble.com/booksearch/whateverTheUserPassesIn". The only thing that you need to encode is the "whateverTheUserPassesIn" bit, so perhaps all you need to do is something like this:

String url = "http://search.barnesandnoble.com/booksearch/" + 
       URLEncoder.encode(userInput,"UTF-8");

That should produce something rather more valid for you.

2
  • 20
    That would replace the spaces in userInput with "+". The poster needs them replaced with "%20".
    – vocaro
    Oct 26, 2010 at 23:51
  • @vocaro: that is a very good point. URLEncoder escapes like the arguments are query parameters, not like the rest of the URL. Feb 14, 2014 at 6:02
8

There is still a problem if you have got an encoded "/" (%2F) in your URL.

RFC 3986 - Section 2.2 says: "If data for a URI component would conflict with a reserved character's purpose as a delimiter, then the conflicting data must be percent-encoded before the URI is formed." (RFC 3986 - Section 2.2)

But there is an Issue with Tomcat:

http://tomcat.apache.org/security-6.html - Fixed in Apache Tomcat 6.0.10

important: Directory traversal CVE-2007-0450

Tomcat permits '\', '%2F' and '%5C' [...] .

The following Java system properties have been added to Tomcat to provide additional control of the handling of path delimiters in URLs (both options default to false):

  • org.apache.tomcat.util.buf.UDecoder.ALLOW_ENCODED_SLASH: true|false
  • org.apache.catalina.connector.CoyoteAdapter.ALLOW_BACKSLASH: true|false

Due to the impossibility to guarantee that all URLs are handled by Tomcat as they are in proxy servers, Tomcat should always be secured as if no proxy restricting context access was used.

Affects: 6.0.0-6.0.9

So if you have got an URL with the %2F character, Tomcat returns: "400 Invalid URI: noSlash"

You can switch of the bugfix in the Tomcat startup script:

set JAVA_OPTS=%JAVA_OPTS% %LOGGING_CONFIG%   -Dorg.apache.tomcat.util.buf.UDecoder.ALLOW_ENCODED_SLASH=true 
8

I read the previous answers to write my own method because I could not have something properly working using the solution of the previous answers, it looks good for me but if you can find URL that does not work with this, please let me know.

public static URL convertToURLEscapingIllegalCharacters(String toEscape) throws MalformedURLException, URISyntaxException {
            URL url = new URL(toEscape);
            URI uri = new URI(url.getProtocol(), url.getUserInfo(), url.getHost(), url.getPort(), url.getPath(), url.getQuery(), url.getRef());
            //if a % is included in the toEscape string, it will be re-encoded to %25 and we don't want re-encoding, just encoding
            return new URL(uri.toString().replace("%25", "%"));
}
1
5

Maybe can try UriUtils in org.springframework.web.util

UriUtils.encodeUri(input, "UTF-8")
0
5

You can also use GUAVA and path escaper: UrlEscapers.urlFragmentEscaper().escape(relativePath)

4

I agree with Matt. Indeed, I've never seen it well explained in tutorials, but one matter is how to encode the URL path, and a very different one is how to encode the parameters which are appended to the URL (the query part, behind the "?" symbol). They use similar encoding, but not the same.

Specially for the encoding of the white space character. The URL path needs it to be encoded as %20, whereas the query part allows %20 and also the "+" sign. The best idea is to test it by ourselves against our Web server, using a Web browser.

For both cases, I ALWAYS would encode COMPONENT BY COMPONENT, never the whole string. Indeed URLEncoder allows that for the query part. For the path part you can use the class URI, although in this case it asks for the entire string, not a single component.

Anyway, I believe that the best way to avoid these problems is to use a personal non-conflictive design. How? For example, I never would name directories or parameters using other characters than a-Z, A-Z, 0-9 and _ . That way, the only need is to encode the value of every parameter, since it may come from an user input and the used characters are unknown.

1
  • 2
    sample code using the URL in the question would be a good thing to put in your answer Nov 20, 2012 at 12:56
3

I took the content above and changed it around a bit. I like positive logic first, and I thought a HashSet might give better performance than some other options, like searching through a String. Although, I'm not sure if the autoboxing penalty is worth it, but if the compiler optimizes for ASCII chars, then the cost of boxing will be low.

/***
 * Replaces any character not specifically unreserved to an equivalent 
 * percent sequence.
 * @param s
 * @return
 */
public static String encodeURIcomponent(String s)
{
    StringBuilder o = new StringBuilder();
    for (char ch : s.toCharArray()) {
        if (isSafe(ch)) {
            o.append(ch);
        }
        else {
            o.append('%');
            o.append(toHex(ch / 16));
            o.append(toHex(ch % 16));
        }
    }
    return o.toString();
}

private static char toHex(int ch)
{
    return (char)(ch < 10 ? '0' + ch : 'A' + ch - 10);
}

// https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc3986#section-2.3
public static final HashSet<Character> UnreservedChars = new HashSet<Character>(Arrays.asList(
        'A','B','C','D','E','F','G','H','I','J','K','L','M','N','O','P','Q','R','S','T','U','V','W','X','Y','Z',
        'a','b','c','d','e','f','g','h','i','j','k','l','m','n','o','p','q','r','s','t','u','v','w','x','y','z',
        '0','1','2','3','4','5','6','7','8','9',
        '-','_','.','~'));
public static boolean isSafe(char ch)
{
    return UnreservedChars.contains(ch);
}
2

In addition to the Carlos Heuberger's reply: if a different than the default (80) is needed, the 7 param constructor should be used:

URI uri = new URI(
        "http",
        null, // this is for userInfo
        "www.google.com",
        8080, // port number as int
        "/ig/api",
        "weather=São Paulo",
        null);
String request = uri.toASCIIString();
2

Use the following standard Java solution (passes around 100 of the testcases provided by Web Plattform Tests):

0. Test if URL is already encoded.

1. Split URL into structural parts. Use java.net.URL for it.

2. Encode each structural part properly!

3. Use IDN.toASCII(putDomainNameHere) to Punycode encode the host name!

4. Use java.net.URI.toASCIIString() to percent-encode, NFC encoded unicode - (better would be NFKC!).

Find more here: https://stackoverflow.com/a/49796882/1485527

0
2

If you are using spring, you can try org.springframework.web.util.UriUtils#encodePath

0

I've created a new project to help construct HTTP URLs. The library will automatically URL encode path segments and query parameters.

You can view the source and download a binary at https://github.com/Widen/urlbuilder

The example URL in this question:

new UrlBuilder("search.barnesandnoble.com", "booksearch/first book.pdf").toString()

produces

http://search.barnesandnoble.com/booksearch/first%20book.pdf

0

I had the same problem. Solved this by unsing:

android.net.Uri.encode(urlString, ":/");

It encodes the string but skips ":" and "/".

-1

I develop a library that serves this purpose: galimatias. It parses URL the same way web browsers do. That is, if a URL works in a browser, it will be correctly parsed by galimatias.

In this case:

// Parse
io.mola.galimatias.URL.parse(
    "http://search.barnesandnoble.com/booksearch/first book.pdf"
).toString()

Will give you: http://search.barnesandnoble.com/booksearch/first%20book.pdf. Of course this is the simplest case, but it'll work with anything, way beyond java.net.URI.

You can check it out at: https://github.com/smola/galimatias

1
  • I'm not sure why this answer was downvoted so much. This library albeit a bit big in footprint does exactly what I need. Nov 23, 2021 at 23:43
-2

i use this

org.apache.commons.text.StringEscapeUtils.escapeHtml4("my text % & < >");

add this dependecy

 <dependency>
        <groupId>org.apache.commons</groupId>
        <artifactId>commons-text</artifactId>
        <version>1.8</version>
    </dependency>
1
  • This escapes HTML tags but not URLs
    – MrTux
    Jan 19, 2021 at 22:15
-3

You can use a function like this. Complete and modify it to your need :

/**
     * Encode URL (except :, /, ?, &, =, ... characters)
     * @param url to encode
     * @param encodingCharset url encoding charset
     * @return encoded URL
     * @throws UnsupportedEncodingException
     */
    public static String encodeUrl (String url, String encodingCharset) throws UnsupportedEncodingException{
            return new URLCodec().encode(url, encodingCharset).replace("%3A", ":").replace("%2F", "/").replace("%3F", "?").replace("%3D", "=").replace("%26", "&");
    }

Example of use :

String urlToEncode = ""http://www.growup.com/folder/intérieur-à_vendre?o=4";
Utils.encodeUrl (urlToEncode , "UTF-8")

The result is : http://www.growup.com/folder/int%C3%A9rieur-%C3%A0_vendre?o=4

2
  • 1
    This answer is incomplete without URLCodec.
    – user207421
    Aug 23, 2014 at 0:18
  • upvote for .replace() chaining, it's not ideal but it's enough for basic ad-hoc use cases
    – svarog
    Feb 20, 2016 at 14:03
-7

How about:

public String UrlEncode(String in_) {

String retVal = "";

try {
    retVal = URLEncoder.encode(in_, "UTF8");
} catch (UnsupportedEncodingException ex) {
    Log.get().exception(Log.Level.Error, "urlEncode ", ex);
}

return retVal;

}

1
  • URLEncoder can't be used to escape ivalid URL characters. Only to encode forms.
    – Archer
    Mar 23, 2013 at 13:06

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