25

I'm trying to build an Href using Razor The string is going to end up looking like this:

https://www.notmysite/controller/action?order_ID=xxxxxxx&hashComparator=iFxp3%2BszAMaEB%2FnHCtRr9Ulhv0DumtyDumCik4gKypJqi0BdOGXXsr9QDkfefAsLaR1Xy%2BrX9VcuzP1pF2k6dL%2F92UxphzTKqNAZP2SSZGWtvyO5az%2F9JvDY%2Bsq5TBQo7%2FYAAMIU4QxiSX1SBKk8SUNECW3ZmKM%3D

In my model I have the order id and the hash string As the route is not a part of my site I don't believe I can use the default methods like @Url.Action and therefore can't use protocol: Request.Url.Scheme like I've used elsewhere.

So at present I'm trying to figure out how to create this using string functions I've tried Url.Encode Url.EscapeDataString Html.Encode but am getting no where fast:

<a href="@Uri.EscapeDataString("https://www.notmysite.co.uk/controller/action?order_ID=" + Model.bookingNumber + "&hashComparator=" + Model.hashCode)">Click Here to be transferred</a>

The output text always has plusses and equals in them and doesn't work. Which combination do I need?!

4 Answers 4

48

I've figured out a way of doing it:

@{
  var url = string.Format(
      "https://www.notmysite.co.uk/controller/action?order_ID={0}&hashComparator={1}",
      @Uri.EscapeDataString(Model.bookingNumber.ToString()),
      @Uri.EscapeDataString(Model.hashCode));
}
 <p><a href="@url">Click Here to be transferred</a></p>

Edit 2015 - As mentioned by Jerads post - The solution is to only encode the query string elements and not the whole URL - which is what the above does.

0
5

This was the first link that came up for this issue for me. The answers didn't work for me though because I am using core, I think. So wanted to add this in.

System.Net.WebUtility.UrlEncode(MyVariableName)

If Url.Encode doesn't work try the above. Also as stated before don't use this on the entire URL string, just use it for the individual querystring variables. Otherwise there is a good chance your URL wont work.

4

The problem is that you're trying to encode the whole URL. The only pieces you want to encode are the querystring values, and you can just use Url.Encode() for this.

You don't want to encode the address, the querystring params, or the ? and & delimiters, otherwise you'll end up with an address the browser can't parse.

Ultimately, it would look something like this:

<a href="https://www.notmysite.co.uk/controller/[email protected](Model.bookingNumber)&[email protected](Model.hashCode)">Click Here to be transferred</a>
5
  • I'm not really sure that your answer adds anything over mine other than that it's all on one line... Url.Encode and Uri.EscapeDataString seem to be two sides of the same coin blog.nerdbank.net/2009/05/uriescapedatapath-and.html I guess you've got an explanation of what's happening.. but that could have been a comment? Oct 21, 2015 at 20:56
  • There are some differences, but the important part of my clarification, aside from the inlining, is that you didn't mention that you were trying to encode the full URL, and not just the bits that needed encoding.
    – Jerad Rose
    Oct 22, 2015 at 16:26
  • That is what my answer does though - it does not encode the full URL. I just don't see your answer as a new answer. Just my answer with better sugar coating. Oct 22, 2015 at 16:32
  • As a side note you've linked to the same article as me in that comment. I did read it. If anything it sounds like EscapeDataString is more RFC 3986 compliant... but in a very minimal way... I don't think that will affect the vast majority of people here. Oct 22, 2015 at 16:40
  • 2
    This is a good tip for encoding only parts of a URL, which is sometimes necessary and preferable over encoding it in its entirety. +1
    – InteXX
    Sep 17, 2016 at 0:04
-5

The easier method is to use @Html.Raw(Model.SomethingUrl)

0

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