I am sending the below url with query string. In the query string one parameter
"approverCmt" has value with hash(#).
"/abc/efd/xyz.jas?approverCmt=Transaction Log #459505&batchNm=XS_10APR2015_082224&mfrNm=Timberland"
In server side when I tried to retrieve it from the request I get
approverCmt = Transaction Log -----> "#459505" is missing
batchNm = null
mfrNm = null
And If I remove hash(#) from query string or If I replace # with %23 every thing works fine
I don't understand why I am getting null for one parameter if another parameter contains a hash(#) symbol.
Appreciate if any one can explain.
This is known as the "fragment identifier".
As mentioned in wikipedia:
The fragment identifier
introduced by a hash mark # is the optional last part of a URL
for a document. It is typically used to identify a portion of that document.
The part after the #
is info for the client
. It is not sent to the server. Put everything only the browser needs here.
You can use the encodeURIComponent()
function in JavaScript to encode special characters in a URL, so that #
characters are converted to other characters that way you can be sure your whole URL will be sent to the server.
The Hash value is for the anchor, so it is only client-side, it is often used in client-side framework like angular for client-side routing.
The anchor is NOT available server-side.
In your case you don't need an anchor, but a parameter value with a # break the query string the value is "Transaction Log #459505".
EDIT Naive solution that doesn't work, just let it ther for history, See Real solution below
The solution is to encode client-side and decode serveur-side
Encoding in javascript
encodeURI("Transaction Log #459505")
//result value "Transaction%20Log%20#459505"
Decode in Java
java.net.URLDecoder.decode("Transaction%20Log%20#459505");
//result "Transaction Log #459505"
EDIT: But: Javascript doesn't encode in the same way than Java
So the correct answer (I hope) is to manually replace all your # with %23, then Java will decode it normally, or to use encodeURIComponent as suggested in comments. For your need the replace solution seem to be enough.
Encode in Javascript:
encodeURI("yourUrl/Transaction Log #459505").replace(/#/,"%23")
//result: yourUrl/Transaction%20Log%20%23459505
The decode in Java doesn't change
java.net.URLDecoder.decode("Transaction%20Log%20#459505")
// result (java.lang.String) Transaction Log #459505
Sorry for long post, I didn't see the difference bettween Java and the JavaScrip Url encoding
the hash is an anchor:
see wikipedia for more information