49

I am trying to get a typical asp.net url starting with the tilde sign ('~') to parse into a full exact url starting with "http:"

I have this string "~/PageB.aspx"

And i want to make it become "http://myServer.com/PageB.aspx"

I know there is several methods to parse urls and get different paths of server and application and such. I have tried several but not gotten the result i want.

4 Answers 4

76

Try out

System.Web.VirtualPathUtility.ToAbsolute("yourRelativePath"); 

There are various ways that are available in ASP.NET that we can use to resolve relative paths to a resource on the server-side and making it available on the client-side. I know of 4 ways -

 1) Request.ApplicationPath
 2) System.Web.VirtualPathUtility
 3) Page.ResolveUrl
 4) Page.ResolveClientUrl

Good article : Different approaches for resolving URLs in ASP.NET

1
  • Note that the refactoringaspnet.blogspot.com/2009/09/… article claims "VirtualPathUtility will throw an error if there are Query String parameters in the URL", but I find that it does work correctly even with a Query String.
    – JonBrave
    Aug 23, 2017 at 12:01
18

If you're in a page handler you could always use the ResolveUrl method to convert the relative path to a server specific path. But if you want the "http://www.yourserver.se" part aswell, you'll have to prepend the Request.Url.Scheme and Request.Url.Authority to it.

0
10
string.Format("http://{0}{1}", Request.Url.Host, Page.ResolveUrl(relativeUrl));
2
  • additional information: If you need port number, use it. string.Format("http://{0}{1}", Request.Url.Authority, Page.ResolveUrl(relativeUrl)) Dec 18, 2013 at 17:31
  • This was useful, however, I used "Href()" in Razor instead of Page.ResolveUrl() because it throws a null reference exception.
    – neoscribe
    Dec 1, 2014 at 22:00
5

This method looks the nicest to me. No string manipulation, it can tolerate both relative or absolute URLs as input, and it uses the exact same scheme, authority, port, and root path as whatever the current request is using:

private Uri GetAbsoluteUri(string redirectUrl)
{
    var redirectUri = new Uri(redirectUrl, UriKind.RelativeOrAbsolute);

    if (!redirectUri.IsAbsoluteUri)
    {
        redirectUri = new Uri(new Uri(Request.Url.GetLeftPart(UriPartial.Authority) + Request.ApplicationPath), redirectUri);
    }

    return redirectUri;
}
1
  • If you mix the above information with this one, 'System.Web.VirtualPathUtility.ToAbsolute("yourRelativePath"); ' to resolve the '~/' path, then use this method on the string result of that. It works. (assuming not port information is needed) The combination of these worked for me. Mar 9, 2016 at 20:07

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