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Many URI schemes include one or more attribute/value pairs as part of the URI value. For example scheme://server/path?query=string&is=there has two attributes – query=string and is=there – in its query part.

A #GUriParamsIter structure represents an iterator that can be used to iterate over the attribute/value pairs of a URI query string. #GUriParamsIter structures are typically allocated on the stack and then initialized with g_uri_params_iter_init(). See the documentation for g_uri_params_iter_init() for a usage example.

record

Hierarchy

  • UriParamsIter

Index

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Constructors

Properties

name: string

Methods

  • init(params: string, length: number, separators: string, flags: UriParamsFlags): void
  • Initializes an attribute/value pair iterator.

    The iterator keeps pointers to the params and separators arguments, those variables must thus outlive the iterator and not be modified during the iteration.

    If %G_URI_PARAMS_WWW_FORM is passed in flags, + characters in the param string will be replaced with spaces in the output. For example, foo=bar+baz will give attribute foo with value bar baz. This is commonly used on the web (the https and http schemes only), but is deprecated in favour of the equivalent of encoding spaces as %20.

    Unlike with g_uri_parse_params(), %G_URI_PARAMS_CASE_INSENSITIVE has no effect if passed to flags for g_uri_params_iter_init(). The caller is responsible for doing their own case-insensitive comparisons.

    GUriParamsIter iter;
    GError *error = NULL;
    gchar *unowned_attr, *unowned_value;

    g_uri_params_iter_init (&iter, "foo=bar&baz=bar&Foo=frob&baz=bar2", -1, "&", G_URI_PARAMS_NONE);
    while (g_uri_params_iter_next (&iter, &unowned_attr, &unowned_value, &error))
    {
    g_autofree gchar *attr = g_steal_pointer (&unowned_attr);
    g_autofree gchar *value = g_steal_pointer (&unowned_value);
    // do something with attr and value; this code will be called 4 times
    // for the params string in this example: once with attr=foo and value=bar,
    // then with baz/bar, then Foo/frob, then baz/bar2.
    }
    if (error)
    // handle parsing error

    Parameters

    • params: string

      a %-encoded string containing attribute=value parameters

    • length: number

      the length of params, or -1 if it is nul-terminated

    • separators: string

      the separator byte character set between parameters. (usually &, but sometimes ; or both &;). Note that this function works on bytes not characters, so it can't be used to delimit UTF-8 strings for anything but ASCII characters. You may pass an empty set, in which case no splitting will occur.

    • flags: UriParamsFlags

      flags to modify the way the parameters are handled.

    Returns void

  • next(): [boolean, string, string]
  • Advances iter and retrieves the next attribute/value. %FALSE is returned if an error has occurred (in which case error is set), or if the end of the iteration is reached (in which case attribute and value are set to %NULL and the iterator becomes invalid). If %TRUE is returned, g_uri_params_iter_next() may be called again to receive another attribute/value pair.

    Note that the same attribute may be returned multiple times, since URIs allow repeated attributes.

    Returns [boolean, string, string]

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