54

I got this error message :

java.net.URISyntaxException: Illegal character in query at index 31: http://finance.yahoo.com/q/h?s=^IXIC

My_Url = http://finance.yahoo.com/q/h?s=^IXIC

When I copied it into a browser address field, it showed the correct page, it's a valid URL, but I can't parse it with this: new URI(My_Url)

I tried : My_Url=My_Url.replace("^","\\^"), but

  1. It won't be the url I need
  2. It doesn't work either

How to handle this ?

Frank

10 Answers 10

62

You need to encode the URI to replace illegal characters with legal encoded characters. If you first make a URL (so you don't have to do the parsing yourself) and then make a URI using the five-argument constructor, then the constructor will do the encoding for you.

import java.net.*;

public class Test {
  public static void main(String[] args) {
    String myURL = "http://finance.yahoo.com/q/h?s=^IXIC";
    try {
      URL url = new URL(myURL);
      String nullFragment = null;
      URI uri = new URI(url.getProtocol(), url.getHost(), url.getPath(), url.getQuery(), nullFragment);
      System.out.println("URI " + uri.toString() + " is OK");
    } catch (MalformedURLException e) {
      System.out.println("URL " + myURL + " is a malformed URL");
    } catch (URISyntaxException e) {
      System.out.println("URI " + myURL + " is a malformed URL");
    }
  }
}
7
  • Just make sure that you use URLDecoder if you later want to turn that URI back into a URL, e.g. new FileInputStream(URLDecoder.decode(uri.toURL().getFile(), "UTF-8"))
    – MrDrews
    Jan 24, 2012 at 19:12
  • Tried multiple other suggested solutions, this seems to do the trick. You can use the "uri" directly in your "new HttpGet(uri)". Sep 18, 2012 at 10:59
  • HELP ME ALOT @@@@@@@@@@@ >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> Feb 13, 2015 at 14:45
  • why nullFragment has to be a variable? we can just null in the constructor of the URI itself right? is this something related with design? @edd Aug 26, 2015 at 7:12
  • 2
    To keep stuff after any # anchors or non-default ports do: URI uri = new URI(url.getProtocol(), url.getUserInfo(), url.getHost(), url.getPort(), url.getPath(), url.getQuery(), url.getRef());
    – Manuel
    Nov 7, 2017 at 15:31
24

Use % encoding for the ^ character, viz. http://finance.yahoo.com/q/h?s=%5EIXIC

15

You have to encode your parameters.

Something like this will do:

import java.net.*;
import java.io.*;

public class EncodeParameter { 

    public static void main( String [] args ) throws URISyntaxException ,
                                         UnsupportedEncodingException   { 

        String myQuery = "^IXIC";

        URI uri = new URI( String.format( 
                           "http://finance.yahoo.com/q/h?s=%s", 
                           URLEncoder.encode( myQuery , "UTF8" ) ) );

        System.out.println( uri );

    }
}

http://java.sun.com/javase/6/docs/api/java/net/URLEncoder.html

1
4

Rather than encoding the URL beforehand you can do the following

String link = "http://example.com";
URL url = null;
URI uri = null;

try {
   url = new URL(link);
} catch(MalformedURLException e) {
   e.printStackTrace();
}

try{
   uri = new URI(url.toString())
} catch(URISyntaxException e {
   try {
        uri = new URI(url.getProtocol(), url.getUserInfo(), url.getHost(),
                      url.getPort(), url.getPath(), url.getQuery(), 
                      url.getRef());
   } catch(URISyntaxException e1 {
        e1.printStackTrace();
   }
}
try {
   url = uri.toURL()
} catch(MalfomedURLException e) {
   e.printStackTrace();
}

String encodedLink = url.toString();
2

A general solution requires parsing the URL into a RFC 2396 compliant URI (note that this is an old version of the URI standard, which java.net.URI uses).

I have written a Java URL parsing library that makes this possible: galimatias. With this library, you can achieve your desired behaviour with this code:

String urlString = //...
URLParsingSettings settings = URLParsingSettings.create()
  .withStandard(URLParsingSettings.Standard.RFC_2396);
URL url = URL.parse(settings, urlString);

Note that galimatias is in a very early stage and some features are experimental, but it is already quite solid for this use case.

2

A space is encoded to %20 in URLs, and to + in forms submitted data (content type application/x-www-form-urlencoded). You need the former.

Using Guava:

dependencies {
     compile 'com.google.guava:guava:28.1-jre'
}

You can use UrlEscapers:

String encodedString = UrlEscapers.urlFragmentEscaper().escape(inputString);

Don't use String.replace, this would only encode the space. Use a library instead.

1

Coudn't imagine nothing better for
http://server.ru:8080/template/get?type=mail&format=html&key=ecm_task_assignment&label=Согласовать с контрагентом&descr=Описание&objectid=2231
that:

public static boolean checkForExternal(String str) {
    int length = str.length();
    for (int i = 0; i < length; i++) {
        if (str.charAt(i) > 0x7F) {
            return true;
        }
    }
    return false;
}

private static final Pattern COLON = Pattern.compile("%3A", Pattern.LITERAL);
private static final Pattern SLASH = Pattern.compile("%2F", Pattern.LITERAL);
private static final Pattern QUEST_MARK = Pattern.compile("%3F", Pattern.LITERAL);
private static final Pattern EQUAL = Pattern.compile("%3D", Pattern.LITERAL);
private static final Pattern AMP = Pattern.compile("%26", Pattern.LITERAL);

public static String encodeUrl(String url) {
    if (checkForExternal(url)) {
        try {
            String value = URLEncoder.encode(url, "UTF-8");
            value = COLON.matcher(value).replaceAll(":");
            value = SLASH.matcher(value).replaceAll("/");
            value = QUEST_MARK.matcher(value).replaceAll("?");
            value = EQUAL.matcher(value).replaceAll("=");
            return AMP.matcher(value).replaceAll("&");
        } catch (UnsupportedEncodingException e) {
            throw LOGGER.getIllegalStateException(e);
        }
    } else {
        return url;
    }
}
1

I had this exception in the case of a test for checking some actual accessed URLs by users.

And the URLs are sometime contains an illegal-character and hang by this error.

So I make a function to encode only the characters in the URL string like this.

String encodeIllegalChar(String uriStr,String enc)
  throws URISyntaxException,UnsupportedEncodingException {
  String _uriStr = uriStr;
  int retryCount = 17;
  while(true){
     try{
       new URI(_uriStr);
       break;
     }catch(URISyntaxException e){
       String reason = e.getReason();
       if(reason == null ||
         !(
          reason.contains("in path") ||
          reason.contains("in query") ||
          reason.contains("in fragment")
         )
       ){
         throw e;
       }
       if(0 > retryCount--){
         throw e;
       }
       String input = e.getInput();
       int idx = e.getIndex();
       String illChar = String.valueOf(input.charAt(idx));
       _uriStr = input.replace(illChar,URLEncoder.encode(illChar,enc));
     }
  }
  return _uriStr;
}

test:

String q =  "\\'|&`^\"<>)(}{][";
String url = "http://test.com/?q=" + q + "#" + q;
String eic = encodeIllegalChar(url,'UTF-8');
System.out.println(String.format("  original:%s",url));
System.out.println(String.format("   encoded:%s",eic));
System.out.println(String.format("   uri-obj:%s",new URI(eic)));
System.out.println(String.format("re-decoded:%s",URLDecoder.decode(eic)));
0

If you're using RestangularV2 to post to a spring controller in java you can get this exception if you use RestangularV2.one() instead of RestangularV2.all()

0

Replace spaces in URL with + like If url contains dimension1=Incontinence Liners then replace it with dimension1=Incontinence+Liners.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.