0

Feed burner changed their blog service return results that it returns blocks of javascript similar to:

document.write("\x3cdiv class\x3d\x22feedburnerFeedBlock\x22 id\x3d\x22RitterInsuranceMarketingRSSv3iugf6igask14fl8ok645b6l0\x22\x3e"); document.write("\x3cul\x3e"); document.write("\x3cli\x3e\x3cspan class\x3d\x22headline\x22\x3e\x3ca href\x3d\x22

I want the raw html out of this. Previously I was able to easily just use .Replace to cleave out the document.write syntax but I can't figure out what kind of encoding this is or atleast how to decode it with C#.

Edit: Well this was a semi-nightmare to finally solve, here's what I came up with incase anyone has any improvements to offer

public static  char ConvertHexToASCII(this string hex)
{
    if (hex == null) throw new ArgumentNullException(hex);
    return (char)Convert.ToByte(hex, 16);
}

.

private string DecodeFeedburnerHtml(string html)
{
    var builder = new StringBuilder(html.Length);
    var stack = new Stack<char>(4);
    foreach (var chr in html)
    {
        switch (chr)
        {
            case '\\':
                if (stack.Count == 0)
                {
                    stack.Push(chr);
                }
                else
                {
                    stack.Clear();
                    builder.Append(chr);
                }
                break;
            case 'x':
                if (stack.Count == 1)
                {
                    stack.Push(chr);
                }
                else
                {
                    stack.Clear();
                    builder.Append(chr);
                }
                break;
            default:
                if (stack.Count >= 2)
                {
                    stack.Push(chr);

                    if (stack.Count == 4)
                    {
                        //get stack[3]stack[4]
                        string hexString = string.Format("{1}{0}", stack.Pop(),
                                                     stack.Pop());

                        builder.Append(hexString.ConvertHexToASCII());
                        stack.Clear();
                    }
                }
                else
                {
                    builder.Append(chr);
                }
                break;
        }
    }

    html = builder.ToString();
    return html;
}

Not sure what else I could do better. For some reason code like this always feels really dirty to me even though it's a linear time algorithm I guess this is related to how long it has to be.

3 Answers 3

2

In dotnet core you can use Uri.UnescapeDataString(originalString.Replace("\x","%")) to convert it by making it into a Url encoded string first.

1

Those look like ASCII values, encoded in hex. You could traverse the string, and whenever you find a \x followed by two hexadecimal digits (0-9,a-f), replace it with the corresponding ASCII character. If the string is long, it would be faster to save the result incrementally to a StringBuilder instead of using String.Replace().

I don't know the encoding specification, but there might be more rules to follow (for example, if \\ is an escape character for a literal \).

1

That is a PHP Twig encoding:

http://www.twig-project.org/

Since you are using C# you will most likely have to create a dictionary to translate the symbols and then use a series of .Replace() string methods to convert those back to HTML characters.

Alternatively you can save that data to a file, run a Perl script to decode the text and then read from the file in C#, but that might be more costly.

1
  • that is amazingly depressing to hear Dec 15, 2010 at 20:41

Your Answer

Reminder: Answers generated by Artificial Intelligence tools are not allowed on Stack Overflow. Learn more

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

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