I get the following warning when using java.net.URLEncoder.encode
:
warning: [deprecation] encode(java.lang.String) in java.net.URLEncoder has been deprecated
What should I be using instead?
I get the following warning when using java.net.URLEncoder.encode
:
warning: [deprecation] encode(java.lang.String) in java.net.URLEncoder has been deprecated
What should I be using instead?
Use the other encode
method in URLEncoder:
URLEncoder.encode(String, String)
The first parameter is the text to encode; the second is the name of the character encoding to use (e.g., UTF-8
). For example:
System.out.println(
URLEncoder.encode(
"urlParameterString",
java.nio.charset.StandardCharsets.UTF_8.toString()
)
);
StandardCharsets.US_ASCII
, StandardCharsets.UTF_8
etc. Unfortunately, URLEncoder.encode
does not accept a Charset
... (but many other moethods do).
URLEncoder.encode(<urlStringToBeEncoded>, StandardCharsets.UTF_8.name())
. Using the static constant UTF_8
's toString()
method as the character encoding scheme throws java.nio.charset.IllegalCharsetNameException: java.nio.charset.CharsetICU[UTF-8]
as the toString()
returns "java.nio.charset.CharsetICU[UTF-8]". To get the desired "UTF-8" use its name()
method instead.
Use the class URLEncoder:
URLEncoder.encode(String s, String enc)
Where :
s - String to be translated.
enc - The name of a supported character encoding.
Standard charsets:
US-ASCII Seven-bit ASCII, a.k.a. ISO646-US, a.k.a. the Basic Latin block of the Unicode character set ISO-8859-1 ISO Latin Alphabet No. 1, a.k.a. ISO-LATIN-1
UTF-8 Eight-bit UCS Transformation Format
UTF-16BE Sixteen-bit UCS Transformation Format, big-endian byte order
UTF-16LE Sixteen-bit UCS Transformation Format, little-endian byte order
UTF-16 Sixteen-bit UCS Transformation Format, byte order identified by an optional byte-order mark
Example:
import java.net.URLEncoder;
String stringEncoded = URLEncoder.encode(
"This text must be encoded! aeiou áéíóú ñ, peace!", "UTF-8");
The first parameter is the String to encode; the second is the name of the character encoding to use (e.g., UTF-8).
The usage of org.apache.commons.httpclient.URI
is not strictly an issue; what is an issue is that you target the wrong constructor, which is depreciated.
Using just
new URI( [string] );
Will indeed flag it as depreciated. What is needed is to provide at minimum one additional argument (the first, below), and ideally two:
escaped
: true if URI character sequence is in escaped form. false otherwise.charset
: the charset string to do escape encoding, if
requiredThis will target a non-depreciated constructor within that class. So an ideal usage would be as such:
new URI( [string], true, StandardCharsets.UTF_8.toString() );
A bit crazy-late in the game (a hair over 11 years later - egad!), but I hope this helps someone else, especially if the method at the far end is still expecting a URI, such as org.apache.commons.httpclient.setURI()
.
As an additional reference for the other responses, instead of using "UTF-8" you can use:
HTTP.UTF_8
which is included since Java 4 as part of the org.apache.http.protocol library, which is included also since Android API 1.
org.apache.http.protocol.HTTP
class.
Jul 17, 2014 at 20:57