A simple defensive library to encode/decode URL components.
Find a file
2023-01-01 10:30:39 -05:00
.github/workflows Workflow tweaks 2022-12-31 21:46:56 -05:00
gradle/wrapper Upgarded to Gradle 7.6 2022-12-31 01:52:06 -08:00
lib Updated javadoc 2023-01-01 10:30:39 -05:00
.gitattributes First commit 2022-12-31 01:27:51 -05:00
.gitignore First commit 2022-12-31 01:27:51 -05:00
gradlew First commit 2022-12-31 01:27:51 -05:00
gradlew.bat First commit 2022-12-31 01:27:51 -05:00
LICENSE.txt First commit 2022-12-31 01:27:51 -05:00
README.md Update README.md 2023-01-01 09:10:25 -05:00
settings.gradle.kts First commit 2022-12-31 01:27:51 -05:00

License Nexus Snapshot Release Maven Central Repo Quality Gate Status GitHub CI

URL Encoder for Java

A simple library to encode/decode URL parameters.

This library was extracted from the RIFE2 Web Application Framework.
A Kotlin version can also be found at https://github.com/ethauvin/urlencoder.

For decades, we've been using java.net.URLEncoder because of its improper naming. It is actually intended to encode HTML form parameters, not URLs, causing the wrong escape sequences to be used.

Additionally, java.net.URLEncoder allocates memory even when no encoding is necessary, significantly impacting performance. This library has a negligible performance impact when a specified string doesn't need to be encoded.

Android's Uri.encode also addresses these issues, but does not currently support unicode surrogate pairs.

Examples (TL;DR)

UrlEncoder.encode("a test &"); // -> "a%20test%20%26"
UrlEncoder.encode("%#okékÉȢ smile!😁"); // -> "%25%23ok%C3%A9k%C3%89%C8%A2%20smile%21%F0%9F%98%81"
UrlEncoder.encode("?test=a test", "?="); // -> ?test=a%20test

UrlEncoder.decode("a%20test%20%26"); // -> "a test &"
UrlEncoder.decode("%25%23ok%C3%A9k%C3%89%C8%A2%20smile%21%F0%9F%98%81"); // -> "%#okékÉȢ smile!😁"

Gradle, Maven, etc.

To use with Gradle, include the following dependency in your build file:

dependencies {
    implementation("com.uwyn:urlencoder:1.0.0")
}

Instructions for using with Maven, Ivy, etc. can be found on Maven Central.