I'm trying to get content of HttpResponseMessage. It should be: {"message":"Action '' does not exist!","success":false}
, but I don't know, how to get it out of HttpResponseMessage.
HttpClient httpClient = new HttpClient();
HttpResponseMessage response = await httpClient.GetAsync("http://****?action=");
txtBlock.Text = Convert.ToString(response); //wrong!
In this case txtBlock would have value:
StatusCode: 200, ReasonPhrase: 'OK', Version: 1.1, Content: System.Net.Http.StreamContent, Headers:
{
Vary: Accept-Encoding
Keep-Alive: timeout=15, max=100
Connection: Keep-Alive
Date: Wed, 10 Apr 2013 20:46:37 GMT
Server: Apache/2.2.16
Server: (Debian)
X-Powered-By: PHP/5.3.3-7+squeeze14
Content-Length: 55
Content-Type: text/html
}
You need to call GetResponse().
Stream receiveStream = response.GetResponseStream ();
StreamReader readStream = new StreamReader (receiveStream, Encoding.UTF8);
txtBlock.Text = readStream.ReadToEnd();
I think the easiest approach is just to change the last line to
txtBlock.Text = await response.Content.ReadAsStringAsync(); //right!
This way you don't need to introduce any stream readers and you don't need any extension methods.
Try this, you can create an extension method like this:
public static string ContentToString(this HttpContent httpContent)
{
var readAsStringAsync = httpContent.ReadAsStringAsync();
return readAsStringAsync.Result;
}
and then, simple call the extension method:
txtBlock.Text = response.Content.ContentToString();
I hope this help you ;-)
If you want to cast it to specific type (e.g. within tests) you can use ReadAsAsync extension method:
object yourTypeInstance = await response.Content.ReadAsAsync(typeof(YourType));
or following for synchronous code:
object yourTypeInstance = response.Content.ReadAsAsync(typeof(YourType)).Result;
Update: there is also generic option of ReadAsAsync<> which returns specific type instance instead of object-declared one:
YourType yourTypeInstance = await response.Content.ReadAsAsync<YourType>();
You can use the GetStringAsync
method:
var uri = new Uri("http://yoururlhere");
var response = await client.GetStringAsync(uri);
By the answer of rudivonstaden
`txtBlock.Text = await response.Content.ReadAsStringAsync();`
but if you don't want to make the method async you can use
`txtBlock.Text = response.Content.ReadAsStringAsync();
txtBlock.Text.Wait();`
Wait() it's important, becаuse we are doing async operations and we must wait for the task to complete before going ahead.