I have this code on my Android phone.
URI uri = new URI(url);
HttpPost post 开发者_StackOverflow中文版= new HttpPost(uri);
HttpClient client = new DefaultHttpClient();
HttpResponse response = client.execute(post);
I have a asp.net webform application that has in the page load this
Response.Output.Write("It worked");
I want to grab this Response from the HttpReponse and print it out. How do I do this?
I tried response.getEntity().toString()
but it just seems to print out the address in memory.
Thanks
Use ResponseHandler
. One line of code. See here and here for sample Android projects using it.
public void postData() {
// Create a new HttpClient and Post Header
HttpClient httpclient = new DefaultHttpClient();
HttpPost httppost = new HttpPost("http://www.yoursite.com/user");
try {
// Add your data
List<NameValuePair> nameValuePairs = new ArrayList<NameValuePair>(2);
nameValuePairs.add(new BasicNameValuePair("id", "12345"));
nameValuePairs.add(new BasicNameValuePair("stringdata", "AndDev is Cool!"));
httppost.setEntity(new UrlEncodedFormEntity(nameValuePairs));
// Execute HTTP Post Request
ResponseHandler<String> responseHandler=new BasicResponseHandler();
String responseBody = httpclient.execute(httppost, responseHandler);
JSONObject response=new JSONObject(responseBody);
} catch (ClientProtocolException e) {
// TODO Auto-generated catch block
} catch (IOException e) {
// TODO Auto-generated catch block
}
}
add combination of this post and complete HttpClient at - http://www.androidsnippets.org/snippets/36/
I would just do it the old way. It's a more bulletproof than ResponseHandler, in case you get different content types in the response.
ByteArrayOutputStream outstream = new ByteArrayOutputStream();
response.getEntity().writeTo(outstream);
byte [] responseBody = outstream.toByteArray();
I used the following code
BufferedReader r = new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(response.getEntity().getContent()));
StringBuilder total = new StringBuilder();
String line = null;
while ((line = r.readLine()) != null) {
total.append(line);
}
r.close();
return total.toString();
The simplest approach is probably using org.apache.http.util.EntityUtils
:
String message = EntityUtils.toString(response.getEntity());
It reads the contents of an entity and returns it as a String. The content is converted using the character set from the entity (if any), failing that, "ISO-8859-1" is used.
If necessary, you can pass a default character set explicitly - e.g.
String message = EntityUtils.toString(response.getEntity(). "UTF-8");
It gets the entity content as a String, using the provided default character set if none is found in the entity. If the passed default character set is null, the default "ISO-8859-1" is used.
This code will return the entire response message in respond as a String
, and status code in rsp, as an int
.
respond = response.getStatusLine().getReasonPhrase();
rsp = response.getStatusLine().getStatusCode();`
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