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In a Delphi 10.4.2 win-32 VCL Application in Windows 10, I try to check whether a string is a valid URL.

Of course, I have examined the answers at: https://stackoverflow.com/search?q=delphi+check+valid+url
and: What is the best regular expression to check if a string is a valid URL?

A few of those regular expressions are so long (e.g. 5500 characters) that they cannot be pasted as a string constant in the Delphi code editor. Others simply don't work in this context (Delphi).

This is what I tried, using TRegEx and ShLwApi:

function TformMain.IsValidURL(const AUrl: string): Boolean;
const
  RE = '/((([A-Za-z]{3,9}:(?:\/\/)?)(?:[-;:&=\+\$,\w]+@)?[A-Za-z0-9.-]+(:[0-9]+)?|(?:www.|[-;:&=\+\$,\w]+@)[A-Za-z0-9.-]+)((?:\/[\+~%\/.\w-_]*)?\??(?:[-\+=&;%@.\w_]*)#?(?:[\w]*))?)/';
begin
  Result := False;
  if AUrl = '' then EXIT;

  // Does not work: 'https://www.google.c' is detected as valid:
  //Result := TRegEx.IsMatch(AUrl, '\A\b(?:(?:https?|ftps?|file)://|www\.|ftp|com\.)[-A-Z0-9+&@#/%=~_|$?!:,.]*[A-Z0-9+&@#/%=~_|$]\z', [roIgnoreCase]);

  // Does not work: almost everything starting with 'https:' is valid:
  //Result := Boolean(ShLwApi.PathIsURL(PChar(AUrl)));

  // Does not work with 'https://www.google.com':
  //Result := TRegEx.IsMatch(AUrl, RE, [roIgnoreCase]);
end;

The solution should be only string-based (not connecting to the Internet).

I suspect that there may have to be a very simple solution.

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    "they cannot be pasted as a string constant in the Delphi code editor" - you can concatenate several literals into one constant, which then easily holds 5500 characters. It doesn't have to be one long literal/line: const RE= 'one'+ 'two'+ 'three'...;
    – AmigoJack
    Aug 5, 2021 at 12:00
  • [\+~%\/.\w-_] in the regex might be treated as invalid range - did it even compile? Change - into \- to make sure the regex engine understands what you want.
    – AmigoJack
    Aug 5, 2021 at 12:04
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    This might not apply to your scenario, but for the benefit of others who might see this StackOverflow question: Please note that a URL might look a bit different than the schoolbook example http://www.example.com. For instance, the set of TLDs is increasing: example.beer, example.theatre, example.sydney, and many others. This list might be expanded in the future, so it is unwise to hardcode a list of allowed TLDs. Also, a URL might not have a TLD: rejbrandcloud or 127.0.0.1:80. Aug 5, 2021 at 12:20
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    And this is also a valid URL: http://admin:1grg34bAA@hörsës/things(1,2)?a=5#µ. Aug 5, 2021 at 12:22

1 Answer 1

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Delphi 10.4.2 offers a record TURI in System.Net.URLClient.pas. Calling the constructor Create with your URL will raise an ENetURIException for an invalid URL.

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    The fact that https://duck doesn't raise is very good, because this is certainly a valid URL. For instance, if I rename my personal cloud duck, then I would type https://duck in Firefox to access it. Aug 5, 2021 at 12:27
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    I am in a sort of dilemma here: The validation should check whether the URL is working with Winapi.WinInet.InternetOpen without connecting to the Internet. That is logically impossible, isn't it? Aug 5, 2021 at 12:40
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    I have realized that this kind of URL STRING validation is impossible, like for example a function that checks whether a string is polite or not: function StringIsPolite(const S: string); Aug 5, 2021 at 12:56
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    @user1580348: That sounds like a very wise conclusion. (A schoolbook example: Don't write a function that checks if you have write access to a particular directory. Instead, try to write to it and handle any failure that may occur.) Aug 5, 2021 at 13:00
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    What I wanted to say: The Internet is a reference system (aka universe) completely outside of the realm of a programming language: You cannot make statements about things in that other universe without entering it and becoming a part of it. Aug 5, 2021 at 13:49

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