Sortix cross-nightly manual
This manual documents Sortix cross-nightly. You can instead view this document in the latest official manual.
curl_easy_escape(3) | Library Functions Manual | curl_easy_escape(3) |
NAME
curl_easy_escape - URL encode a stringDESCRIPTION
This function converts the given input string to a URL encoded string and returns that as a new allocated string. All input characters that are not a-z, A-Z, 0-9, '-', '.', '_' or '~' are converted to their "URL escaped" version ( %NN where NN is a two-digit hexadecimal number).ENCODING
libcurl is typically not aware of, nor does it care about, character encodings. curl_easy_escape(3) encodes the data byte-by-byte into the URL encoded version without knowledge or care for what particular character encoding the application or the receiving server may assume that the data uses.URLs
URLs are by definition URL encoded. To create a proper URL from a set of components that may not be URL encoded already, you cannot just URL encode the entire URL string with curl_easy_escape(3), because it then also converts colons, slashes and other symbols that you probably want untouched.PROTOCOLS
This functionality affects all supported protocolsEXAMPLE
int main(void)
{
CURL *curl = curl_easy_init();
if(curl) {
char *output = curl_easy_escape(curl, "data to convert", 15);
if(output) {
printf("Encoded: %s\n", output);
curl_free(output);
}
curl_easy_cleanup(curl);
}
}
HISTORY
Since 7.82.0, the curl parameter is ignored. Prior to that there was per-handle character conversion support for some old operating systems such as TPF, but it was otherwise ignored.AVAILABILITY
Added in curl 7.15.4RETURN VALUE
A pointer to a null-terminated string or NULL if it failed.SEE ALSO
curl_easy_unescape(3), curl_url_get(3), curl_url_set(3)2024-11-24 | libcurl |