10

Suppose I want to create an Uri object from the following string:

string url = @"http://someserver.com?param1=1&url=http%3a%2f%2fwww.otherserver.com";
Uri uri = new Uri(url, UriKind.Absolute);

Expected result would be:

http://someserver.com?param1=1&url=http%3a%2f%2fwww.otherserver.com 

Obtained:

http://someserver.com/?param1=1&url=http://www.otherserver.com

The same behavior is noticed in many related methods that allow Uri creation: Uri.TryCreate, UriBuilder.Uri, etc.

How would I get an Uri that preserve initial encoded parameter?

2
  • Expected result of doing what? If I try your code in a Console Application Console.WriteLine(uri.AbsoluteUri); returns the encoded url Sep 5, 2011 at 12:16
  • 1
    For other searching regarding this. It is actually the ToString() method that decodes the string. .OriginalString or .AbsoluteUri will return the encoded string. For a relative url, use .PathAndQuery
    – jishi
    Feb 17, 2014 at 15:01

5 Answers 5

7

In .NET4 you can disable Uri compaction for certain scheme via a configuration:

<configuration>
  <uri>
    <schemeSettings>
      <add name="http" genericUriParserOptions="DontUnescapePathDotsAndSlashes"/>
    </schemeSettings>
  </uri>
</configuration>

Note that there are security implications related to disabling of the default behaviour.

5

How did you "obtain" the URL? If I hover my mouse over it in Visual Studio, it indeed shows the decoded URL.

But whenever I access it through the AbsoluteUri property, it shows the encoded URL.

4
  • Well I'm describing observed behaviour. It's an asp.net mvc app but it does not matter. Sep 5, 2011 at 13:10
  • I didn't ask what, I asked how.
    – CodeCaster
    Sep 5, 2011 at 13:32
  • ooops sorry. I formed using asp.net mvc routing but I need to make some tweeks to it. Sep 5, 2011 at 13:35
  • I was responding to your "obtained". It only prints like that when you cast it to a string. The AbsoluteUri property gives you what you want.
    – CodeCaster
    Sep 5, 2011 at 13:42
3

This behavior is documented:

As part of canonicalization in the constructor for some schemes, escaped representations are compacted. The schemes for which URI will compact escaped sequences include the following: file, http, https, net.pipe, and net.tcp. For all other schemes, escaped sequences are not compacted. For example: if you percent encode the two dots ".." as "%2E%2E" then the URI constructor will compact this sequence for some schemes. For example, the following code sample shows a URI constructor for the http scheme.

So one workaround might be temporarily using a custom scheme (e.g. leavemealone://) to construct the URL objects (possibly through UriBuilder?).

1
  • Interestingly, I discovered the compaction to also occur with rtsp://. The documentation is vague about which are included (saying "some" schemes are left uncompacted, and ones which are compacted "include" these).
    – Joseph
    Aug 22, 2019 at 0:08
0

In my case I solved it by returning ToString() method of UriBuilder class instead of using Uri property of the same class.

0

I recommend using the library Flurl. It allows a fluent and correct build and analysis of URIs. See their examples. https://flurl.dev/docs/fluent-url/

It is available as NuGet package. You don't need the HTTP-Stuff

    using Flurl;

    var url = "http://www.some-api.com"
    .AppendPathSegment("endpoint")
    .SetQueryParams(new {
        api_key = ConfigurationManager.AppSettings["SomeApiKey"],
        max_results = 20,
        q = "Don't worry, I'll get encoded!"
    })
    .SetFragment("after-hash");

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