UrlEncode
From CometWiki
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">" encodes to ">" | ">" encodes to ">" | ||
"&" encodes to "&" | "&" encodes to "&" | ||
- | " " encodes to "+" | + | " " encodes to "+" |
+ | " " encodes to "%20" | ||
";" encodes to "%3B" | ";" encodes to "%3B" | ||
"?" encodes to "%3F" | "?" encodes to "%3F" |
Revision as of 19:24, 4 June 2016
THIS FUNCTION HAS NOT BEEN IMPLEMENTED YET!!!!
Changes characters from plain text to characters acceptable for html...
""" encodes to """ " "<" encodes to "<" ">" encodes to ">" "&" encodes to "&" " " encodes to "+" " " encodes to "%20" ";" encodes to "%3B" "?" encodes to "%3F" "/" encodes to "%2F" ":" encodes to "%3A" "#" encodes to "%23" "&" encodes to "%26" "=" encodes to "%3D" "+" encodes to "%2B" "$" encodes to "%24" "," encodes to "%2C" "%" encodes to "%25" "<" encodes to "%3C" ">" encodes to "%3E" "~" encodes to "%7E" "%" encodes to "%25" Note that because the <space> character is very commonly used, a special code ( the "+" sign) has been reserved as its URL encoding. Thus the string "A B" can be URL encoded as either "A%20B" or "A+B".