utils (version 3.6.2)

URLencode: Encode or Decode a (partial) URL

Description

Functions to percent-encode or decode characters in URLs.

Usage

URLencode(URL, reserved = FALSE, repeated = FALSE)
URLdecode(URL)

Arguments

URL

a character string.

reserved

logical: should ‘reserved’ characters be encoded? See ‘Details’.

repeated

logical: should apparently already-encoded URLs be encoded again?

Value

A character string.

Details

Characters in a URL other than the English alphanumeric characters and - _ . ~ should be encoded as % plus a two-digit hexadecimal representation, and any single-byte character can be so encoded. (Multi-byte characters are encoded byte-by-byte.) The standard refers to this as ‘percent-encoding’.

In addition, ! $ & ' ( ) * + , ; = : / ? @ # [ ] are reserved characters, and should be encoded unless used in their reserved sense, which is scheme specific. The default in URLencode is to leave them alone, which is appropriate for file:// URLs, but probably not for http:// ones.

An ‘apparently already-encoded URL’ is one containing %xx for two hexadecimal digits.

References

Internet STD 66 (formerly RFC 3986), https://tools.ietf.org/html/std66

Examples

Run this code
# NOT RUN {
(y <- URLencode("a url with spaces and / and @"))
URLdecode(y)
(y <- URLencode("a url with spaces and / and @", reserved = TRUE))
URLdecode(y)

URLdecode(z <- "ab%20cd")
c(URLencode(z), URLencode(z, repeated = TRUE)) # first is usually wanted
# }

Run the code above in your browser using DataCamp Workspace