bflemi3
bflemi3

Reputation: 6790

Remove last segment of Request.Url

I would like to remove the last segment of Request.Url, so for instance...

http://www.example.com/admin/users.aspx/deleteUser

would change to

http://www.example.com/admin/users.aspx

I would prefer linq but accept any solution that efficiently works.

Upvotes: 19

Views: 35781

Answers (5)

Dimitri Troncquo
Dimitri Troncquo

Reputation: 461

I find manipulating Uri's fairly annoying, and as the other answers are quite verbose, here's my two cents in the form of an extension method.

As a bonus you also get a replace last segement method. Both methods will leave querystring and other parts of the url intact.

public static class UriExtensions
{
    private static readonly Regex LastSegmentPattern = 
        new Regex(@"([^:]+://[^?]+)(/[^/?#]+)(.*$)", RegexOptions.Compiled | RegexOptions.IgnoreCase);        

    public static Uri ReplaceLastSegement(this Uri me, string replacement)
        => me != null ? new Uri(LastSegmentPattern.Replace(me.AbsoluteUri, $"$1/{replacement}$3")) : null;

    public static Uri RemoveLastSegement(this Uri me)
        => me != null ? new Uri(LastSegmentPattern.Replace(me.AbsoluteUri, "$1$3")) : null;
}

Upvotes: 2

Mentor
Mentor

Reputation: 3355

To remove the last segment of Request.Url it is enough to subtract from absolute uri the length of last segment.

string uriWithoutLastSegment = Request.Url.AbsoluteUri.Remove(
  Request.Url.AbsoluteUri.Length - Request.Url.Segments.Last().Length );

Upvotes: 11

Oded
Oded

Reputation: 499212

Use the Uri class to parse the URI - you can access all the segments using the Segments property and rebuild the URI without the last segment.

var uri = new Uri(myString);

var noLastSegment = string.Format("{0}://{1}", uri.Scheme, uri.Authority);

for(int i = 0; i < uri.Segments.Length - 1; i++)
{
   noLastSegment += uri.Segments[i];
}

noLastSegment = noLastSegment.Trim("/".ToCharArray()); // remove trailing `/`

As an alternative to getting the scheme and host name, as suggested by Dour High Arch in his comment:

var noLastSegment = uri.GetComponents(UriComponents.SchemeAndServer, 
                                      UriFormat.SafeUnescaped);

Upvotes: 20

spender
spender

Reputation: 120508

Much the same as @Oded's answer, but using a UriBuilder instead:

var uri = new Uri("http://www.example.com/admin/users.aspx/deleteUser");
var newSegments = uri.Segments.Take(uri.Segments.Length - 1).ToArray();
newSegments[newSegments.Length-1] = 
    newSegments[newSegments.Length-1].TrimEnd('/');
var ub=new UriBuilder(uri);
ub.Path=string.Concat(newSegments);
//ub.Query=string.Empty;  //maybe?
var newUri=ub.Uri;

Upvotes: 17

marc wellman
marc wellman

Reputation: 5886

Well the trivial solution would be to iterate char by char from the end of the string towards its beginning and search for the first '/' to come (I guess that also came into your mind).

Try this:

string url = "http://www.example.com/admin/users.aspx/deleteUser";

for (int i = url.Length - 1; i >= 0; i--) {

    if (url[i] == '/') return url.Substring(0, i - 1);
}

Upvotes: 0

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