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Modify request querystring parameters to build a new link without resorting to string manipulation

开发者 https://www.devze.com 2022-12-26 01:13 出处:网络
I want to dynamically populate a link with the URI of the current request, but set one specific query string parameter. All other querystring paramaters (if there are any) should be left untouched. An

I want to dynamically populate a link with the URI of the current request, but set one specific query string parameter. All other querystring paramaters (if there are any) should be left untouched. And I don't know in advance what they might be.

Eg, imagine I want to build a link back to the current page, but 开发者_如何学Pythonwith the querystring parameter "valueOfInterest" always set to be "wibble" (I'm doing this from the code-behind of an aspx page, .Net 3.5 in C# FWIW).

Eg, a request for either of these two:

/somepage.aspx
/somepage.aspx?valueOfInterest=sausages

would become:

/somepage.aspx?valueOfInterest=wibble

And most importantly (perhaps) a request for:

/somepage.aspx?boring=something
/somepage.aspx?boring=something&valueOfInterest=sausages

would preserve the boring params to become:

/somepage.aspx?boring=something&valueOfInterest=wibble

Caveats: I'd like to avoid string manipulation if there's something more elegant in asp.net that is more robust. However if there isn't something more elegant, so be it.

I've done (a little) homework: I found a blog post which suggested copying the request into a local HttpRequest object, but that still has a read-only collection for the querystring params. I've also had a look at using a URI object, but that doesn't seem to have a querystring


This will work as long as [1] you have a valid URL to begin with (which seems reasonable) [2] you make sure that your new value ('sausages') is properly escaped. There's no parsing, the only string manipulation is to concatenate the parameters.

Edit

Here's the C#:

    UriBuilder u = new UriBuilder(Request.Url);
    NameValueCollection nv = new NameValueCollection(Request.QueryString);

    /* A NameValueColllection automatically makes room if this is a new
       name. You don't have to check for NULL.
     */
    nv["valueOfInterest"] = "sausages";

    /* Appending to u.Query doesn't quite work, it
       overloaded to add an extra '?' each time. Have to 
       use StringBuilder instead.
    */
    StringBuilder newQuery = new StringBuilder();
    foreach (string k in nv.Keys)
        newQuery.AppendFormat("&{0}={1}", k, nv[k]);

    u.Query = newQuery.ToString();
    Response.Redirect(u.Uri.ToString());


        UriBuilder u = new UriBuilder(Request.Url);
        NameValueCollection nv = new NameValueCollection(Request.QueryString);
        nv["valueofinterest"] = "wibble";
        string newQuery = "";

        foreach (string k in nv.Keys)
        {
            newQuery += k + "=" + nv[k] + "&";
        }
        u.Query = newQuery.Substring(0,newQuery.Length-1);
        Response.Redirect(u.ToString());

that should do it


If you can't find something that exists to do it, then build a bullet-proof function to do it that is thoroughly tested and can be relied upon. If this uses string manipulation, but is efficient and fully tested, then in reality it will be little different to what you may find any way.

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