Percent-encoding, also known as URL encoding, is a method to
encode arbitrary data in a
Uniform Resource Identifier
A Uniform Resource Identifier (URI) is a unique sequence of characters that identifies a logical or physical resource used by web technologies. URIs may be used to identify anything, including real-world objects, such as people and places, conc ...
(URI) using only the limited
US-ASCII characters legal within a URI. Although it is known as ''URL encoding'', it is also used more generally within the main
Uniform Resource Identifier
A Uniform Resource Identifier (URI) is a unique sequence of characters that identifies a logical or physical resource used by web technologies. URIs may be used to identify anything, including real-world objects, such as people and places, conc ...
(URI) set, which includes both
Uniform Resource Locator (URL) and
Uniform Resource Name (URN). As such, it is also used in the preparation of data of the
application/x-www-form-urlencoded
media type
A media type (also known as a MIME type) is a two-part identifier for file formats and format contents transmitted on the Internet. The Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA) is the official authority for the standardization and publication o ...
, as is often used in the submission of
HTML form data in
HTTP requests.
Percent-encoding in a URI
Types of URI characters
The characters allowed in a URI are either ''reserved'' or ''unreserved'' (or a
percent character as part of a percent-encoding). ''Reserved'' characters are those characters that sometimes have special meaning. For example,
forward slash
The slash is the oblique slanting line punctuation mark . Also known as a stroke, a solidus or several other historical or technical names including oblique and virgule. Once used to mark periods and commas, the slash is now used to represe ...
characters are used to separate different parts of a URL (or more generally, a URI). ''Unreserved'' characters have no such meanings. Using percent-encoding, reserved characters are represented using special character sequences. The sets of reserved and unreserved characters and the circumstances under which certain reserved characters have special meaning have changed slightly with each revision of specifications that govern URIs and URI schemes.
Other characters in a URI must be percent-encoded.
Reserved characters
When a character from the reserved set (a "reserved character") has a special meaning (a "reserved purpose") in a certain context, and a URI scheme says that it is necessary to use that character for some ''other'' purpose, then the character must be ''percent-encoded''. Percent-encoding a reserved character involves converting the character to its corresponding byte value in
ASCII and then representing that value as a pair of
hexadecimal
In mathematics and computing, the hexadecimal (also base-16 or simply hex) numeral system is a positional numeral system that represents numbers using a radix (base) of 16. Unlike the decimal system representing numbers using 10 symbols, hexa ...
digits (if there is a single hex digit, a
leading zero
A leading zero is any 0 digit that comes before the first nonzero digit in a number string in positional notation.. For example, James Bond's famous identifier, 007, has two leading zeros. Any zeroes appearing to the left of the first non-zero d ...
are added). The digits, preceded by a
percent sign (
%
) as an
escape character
In computing and telecommunication, an escape character is a character (computing), character that invokes an alternative interpretation on the following characters in a character sequence. An escape character is a particular case of metacharac ...
, are then used in the URI in place of the reserved character.
(For a non-ASCII character, it is typically converted to its byte sequence in
UTF-8, and then each byte value is represented as above.)
The reserved character
/
, for example, if used in the "path" component of a
URI Uri may refer to:
Places
* Canton of Uri, a canton in Switzerland
* Úri, a village and commune in Hungary
* Uri, Iran, a village in East Azerbaijan Province
* Uri, Jammu and Kashmir, a town in India
* Uri (island), an island off Malakula Islan ...
, has the special meaning of being a
delimiter
A delimiter is a sequence of one or more characters for specifying the boundary between separate, independent regions in plain text, mathematical expressions or other data streams. An example of a delimiter is the comma character, which acts a ...
''between'' path segments. If, according to a given URI scheme,
/
needs to be ''in'' a path segment, then the three characters
%2F
or
%2f
must be used in the segment instead of a raw
/
.
Reserved characters that have no reserved purpose in a particular context may also be percent-encoded but are not semantically different from those that are not.
In the "
query" component of a URI (the part after a
?
character), for example,
/
is still considered a reserved character but it normally has no reserved purpose, unless a particular URI scheme says otherwise. The character does not need to be percent-encoded when it has no reserved purpose.
URIs that differ only by whether a reserved character is percent-encoded or appears literally are normally considered not equivalent (denoting the same resource) unless it can be determined that the reserved characters in question have no reserved purpose. This determination is dependent upon the rules established for reserved characters by individual URI schemes.
Unreserved characters
Characters from the unreserved set never need to be percent-encoded.
URIs that differ only by whether an unreserved character is percent-encoded or appears literally are equivalent by definition, but URI processors, in practice, may not always recognize this equivalence. For example, URI consumers ''should not'' treat
%41
differently from
A
or
%7E
differently from
~
, but some do. For maximal interoperability, URI producers are discouraged from percent-encoding unreserved characters.
Percent character
Because the percent character (
%
) serves as the indicator for percent-encoded octets, it must be percent-encoded as
%25
for that octet to be used as data within a URI.
Arbitrary data
Most URI schemes involve the representation of arbitrary data, such as an
IP address or
file system
In computing, file system or filesystem (often abbreviated to fs) is a method and data structure that the operating system uses to control how data is stored and retrieved. Without a file system, data placed in a storage medium would be one larg ...
path, as components of a URI. URI scheme specifications should, but often don't, provide an explicit mapping between URI characters and all possible data values being represented by those characters.
Binary data
Since the publication of RFC 1738 in 1994 it has been specified that schemes that provide for the representation of
binary data in a URI must divide the data into 8-bit bytes and percent-encode each byte in the same manner as above. Byte value 0x0F, for example, should be represented by
%0F
, but byte value 0x41 can be represented by
A
, or
%41
. The use of unencoded characters for alphanumeric and other unreserved characters is typically preferred, as it results in shorter URLs.
Character data
The procedure for percent-encoding binary data has often been extrapolated, sometimes inappropriately or without being fully specified, to apply to character-based data. In the
World Wide Web's formative years, when dealing with data characters in the ASCII repertoire and using their corresponding bytes in ASCII as the basis for determining percent-encoded sequences, this practice was relatively harmless; it was just assumed that characters and bytes mapped one-to-one and were interchangeable. The need to represent characters outside the ASCII range, however, grew quickly, and URI schemes and protocols often failed to provide standard rules for preparing character data for inclusion in a URI. Web applications consequently began using different multi-byte,
stateful
In information technology and computer science, a system is described as stateful if it is designed to remember preceding events or user interactions; the remembered information is called the state of the system.
The set of states a system can oc ...
, and other non-ASCII-compatible encodings as the basis for percent-encoding, leading to ambiguities and difficulty interpreting URIs reliably.
For example, many URI schemes and protocols based on RFCs 1738 and 2396 presume that the data characters will be converted to bytes according to some unspecified
character encoding before being represented in a URI by unreserved characters or percent-encoded bytes. If the scheme does not allow the URI to provide a hint as to what encoding was used, or if the encoding conflicts with the use of ASCII to percent-encode reserved and unreserved characters, then the URI cannot be reliably interpreted. Some schemes fail to account for encoding at all and instead just suggest that data characters map directly to URI characters, which leaves it up to implementations to decide whether and how to percent-encode data characters that are in neither the reserved nor unreserved sets.
Arbitrary character data is sometimes percent-encoded and used in non-URI situations, such as for password-obfuscation programs or other system-specific translation protocols.
Current standard
The generic URI syntax recommends that new URI schemes that provide for the representation of character data in a URI should, in effect, represent characters from the unreserved set without translation and should convert all other characters to bytes according to
UTF-8, and then percent-encode those values. This suggestion was introduced in January 2005 with the publication of RFC 3986. URI schemes introduced before this date are not affected.
Not addressed by the current specification is what to do with encoded character data. For example, in computers, character data manifests in encoded form, at some level, and thus could be treated as either binary or character data when being mapped to URI characters. Presumably, it is up to the URI scheme specifications to account for this possibility and require one or the other, but in practice, few, if any, actually do.
Non-standard implementations
There exists a non-standard encoding for Unicode characters:
%u''xxxx''
, where ''xxxx'' is a
UTF-16 code unit represented as four hexadecimal digits. This behavior is not specified by any RFC and has bee
rejectedby the W3C. The 13th edition of
ECMA-262 still includes an
escape
function that uses this syntax, which applies
UTF-8 encoding to a string, then percent-escapes the resulting bytes.
The application/x-www-form-urlencoded type
When data that has been entered into HTML
forms is submitted, the form field names and values are encoded and sent to the server in an HTTP request message using method
GET or
POST, or, historically, via
email. The encoding used by default is based on an early version of the general URI percent-encoding rules,
with a number of modifications such as
newline
Newline (frequently called line ending, end of line (EOL), next line (NEL) or line break) is a control character or sequence of control characters in character encoding specifications such as ASCII, EBCDIC, Unicode, etc. This character, or a ...
normalization and replacing spaces with
+
instead of
%20
. The
media type
A media type (also known as a MIME type) is a two-part identifier for file formats and format contents transmitted on the Internet. The Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA) is the official authority for the standardization and publication o ...
of data encoded this way is
application/x-www-form-urlencoded
, and it is currently defined in the HTML and
XForms specifications. In addition, the
CGI specification contains rules for how web servers decode data of this type and make it available to applications.
When HTML form data is sent in an HTTP GET request, it is included in the
query component of the request URI using the same syntax described above. When sent in an HTTP
POST request or via email, the data is placed in the body of the message, and
application/x-www-form-urlencoded
is included in the message's Content-Type header.
See also
*
Internationalized Resource Identifier
*
Punycode
*
Binary-to-text encoding for a comparison of various encoding algorithms
*
Shellcode
References
External links
The following specifications all discuss and define reserved characters, unreserved characters, and percent-encoding, in some form or other:
* /
STD
Sexually transmitted infections (STIs), also referred to as sexually transmitted diseases (STDs) and the older term venereal diseases, are infections that are spread by sexual activity, especially vaginal intercourse, anal sex, and oral sex ...
66 (plu
errata, the current generic URI syntax specification.
* (obsolete, plu
errata and RFC 2732 (plu
errata together comprised the previous version of the generic URI syntax specification.
* (mostly obsolete) and RFC 1808 (obsolete), which define
URLs.
* {{IETF RFC, 1630, link=no (obsolete), the first generic URI syntax specification.
W3C Guidelines on Naming and Addressing: URIs, URLs, ...
Various implementations:
DevPal URL encoder– online developer tools that support URL encoding.
Online URL encoder and decoder– encodes or decodes URLs within the browser.
URL Encoder online– a website with various options to convert files or texts into URL-encoded format.
URL Encode and Decode - Online– a website with various options to convert files or texts into URL-encoded format.
URI schemes
Internet Standards
Binary-to-text encoding formats