3

Having trouble setting up a URL connection with Chinese characters in the URL. It works with Latin characters:

String xstr = "维也纳恩斯特哈佩尔球场" ;
URI uri = new URI("http","ajax.googleapis.com","/ajax/services/language/detect","v=1.0&q="+xstr,null);   
URL url = uri.toURL(); 
URLConnection connection = url.openConnection();
InputStream is = connection.getInputStream() ;

The getInputStream() call results in:

java.lang.IllegalArgumentException: Invalid uri 'http://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/services/language/detect?v=1.0&q=???????????': Invalid query
2
  • Weird, I did a small JUnit test case and didn't get that exception. I'm running java version "1.6.0_20" OpenJDK Runtime Environment (IcedTea6 1.9.4) (6b20-1.9.4-0ubuntu1) OpenJDK 64-Bit Server VM (build 19.0-b09, mixed mode) Are you sure your .java file encoding is UTF-8?
    – hleinone
    Jan 28, 2011 at 17:53
  • Pretty sure--the characters go into the datastore as expected as long as that step is passed. In googling around I found an Oracle page download.oracle.com/javase/1.4.2/docs/api/java/net/URI.html that states as acceptable "...the Unicode characters that are not in the US-ASCII character set, are not control characters (according to the Character.isISOControl method), and are not space characters (according to the Character.isSpaceChar method) (Deviation from RFC 2396, which is limited to US-ASCII)." So maybe it depends on the implementation? Mine is Android.
    – Joe Knapp
    Jan 28, 2011 at 19:00

5 Answers 5

8

The problem is caused by the fact that URI.toURL() doesn't percent-encode non-ASCII characters. Use the following instead:

URL url = new URL(uri.toASCIIString());  
4
  • Hey, I go out for a few minute to shovel the driveway and I come back and my question is answered. I love this site...
    – Joe Knapp
    Jan 28, 2011 at 18:49
  • 3
    One can also achieve the same result with: String xstr = URLEncoder.encode("维也纳恩斯特哈佩尔球场", "utf-8"); URL url = new URL("http","ajax.googleapis.com","/ajax/services/language/detect?v=1.0&q="+xstr);.
    – hleinone
    Jan 28, 2011 at 18:49
  • On further testing, turn out that URLEncoder works better than toASCIIString for this purpose. The latter fails when the string includes square brackets, as it leaves those alone & they are not legal in a URL.
    – Joe Knapp
    Jan 29, 2011 at 2:41
  • @hleinone Why we use utf-8? What's the standard? Thanks~
    – Alston
    Aug 21, 2014 at 10:15
2

axtavt's answer above saved me from insanity, thanks! Just one comment (I could not figure out how to comment below the answer:)

If you start with a URL, you need to encode quotes before you build the URI:

String s = "your_url?with=\"quotes\"";
URI su = new URI (s.replaceAll("\"", "%22");
URL ur = new URL( su.toASCIIString());
0

I think it is related to the "UTF-8" charset. Have a look at this topic to learn more and also this chinese in java

0

Per the URI RFC (see section 2.4), non-US-ASCII characters aren't valid in a URI. You must encode them.

0
0

Downloading image url with special characters. Below snippet show how to read image property from URL with special characters.

  1. replace and with actual IP address and port number with your actual port number.

  2. In case If you are working with domain, you can replace : with the domain name.

  3. Replace the <file_path> with your file path.

     try {
         String fileName = "pexels-martin-péchy-1866149%20(1).jpg";
         URI uri = new URI("http://<IP>:<port>/<file_path>/" + fileName);
         URL url = new URL(uri.toASCIIString());
         BufferedImage image = ImageIO.read(url);
         int height = image.getHeight();
         int width = image.getWidth();
    
    
         System.out.println("Image downloaded successfully!: " + url.toString()+" height: "+height);
     } catch (Exception e) {
         e.printStackTrace();
     }
    

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