Reputation: 549
Is there a standard/good way of converting between urls and windows filenames, in Java?
I am trying to download files, but I want the windows filename to be convertible back to the original filename. Note that the query portion of the url is vital, as I will be downloading different pages that differ only in query.
My current hacky solution is to replace illegal characters (such as '?') with a specific string (such as 'QQ'), but this makes conversion back to url less transparent. Is there a better way?
Upvotes: 17
Views: 11252
Reputation: 79
But is it possible to encode url to filename at all? I mean, can there be the 100% valid solution? I think that converting url to filename is the wrong idea in general, because of different limitations set on urls and filenames:
Max filename length (NTFS filesystem, Unicode, using UTF-16 encoding) - 255
Max URL length (using UTF-8 encoding?) - 2000 chars
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 108859
You could do worse than use URLEncoder to encode the URL:
String url = "http://172.0.0.1:80/foo/bar/baz.txt?black=white";
String filename = URLEncoder.encode(url, "UTF-8");
File file = new File(filename);
The filename becomes the legal win32 name:
http%3A%2F%2F172.0.0.1%3A80%2Ffoo%2Fbar%2Fbaz.txt%3Fblack%3Dwhite
This is a reversible operation:
String original = URLDecoder.decode(filename, "UTF-8");
Upvotes: 24
Reputation: 199195
If you mean to convert an URL encoded to non encoder you could use:
Utility class for HTML form decoding. This class contains static methods for decoding a String from the application/x-www-form-urlencoded MIME format.
See if that's what you need.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 10653
The java.io.File class takes a URI &| filename as a constructor, but contains toURI()
& toURL()
methods as well as getName()
& getPath()
. I assume this would be a valid conversion for you?
Upvotes: 2