OK,
I am using the System.Runtime.Serialization
and the DataContractJsonSerialization
.
The problem is that in the request I send a value of a property with the &
character. Say, AT&T
, and I get a response with error: Invalid JSON Data
.
I thought that the escaping would be done inside the library but now I see that the serialization is left untouched the ampersand &
character.
Yes, for a JSON format this is valid. But it will be a problem to my POST request since I need to send this to a server that if contains an ampersand will response with error, hence here I am.
HttpUtility.HtmlEncode
is in the System.Web
library and so the way to go is using Uri.EscapeUriString
. I did this to try, but anyway, and without it all requests are working fine, except an ampersand is in a value.
EDIT: HttpUtility
class is ported to the Windows Phone SDK but the prefer way to encode a string should be still Uri.EscapeUriString
.
First thought was to get hands dirty and start replacing the special character which would cause a problem in the server, but, I wonder, is there another solution I should do, that it would be efficient and 'proper'?
I should tell that I use
// Convert the string into a byte array.
byte[] postBytes = Encoding.UTF8.GetBytes(data);
To convert the JSON to a byte[]
and write to the Stream
.
And,
request.ContentType = "application/x-www-form-urlencoded";
As the WebRequest.ContentType
.
So, am I messed up for a reason or something I miss?
Thank you.
The problem was that I was encoding the whole request string including the key.
I had a request data={JSON}
and I was formatting it, but the {JSON}
part should only be encoded.
string requestData = "data=" + Uri.EncodeDataString(json) // worked perfect!
Stupid hole to step into.
Have you tried replacing the ampersand with &
for the POST?
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/18707854/proper-way-to-handle-the-ampersand-character-in-json-string-send-to-rest-web-ser