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I have a uri string like: http://example.com/file?a=1&b=2&c=string%20param

Is there an existing function that would convert query parameter string into a dictionary same way as ASP.NET Context.Request does it.

I'm writing a console app and not a web-service so there is no Context.Request to parse the URL for me.

I know that it's pretty easy to crack the query string myself but I'd rather use a FCL function is if exists.

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5 Answers

up vote 35 down vote accepted

You can use:

var queryString = string.Join(string.Empty, url.Split('?').Skip(1));
System.Web.HttpUtility.ParseQueryString(queryString)

MSDN

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8  
But you'll need to add a reference to System.Web.dll. – SLaks May 21 '10 at 18:28
As another answer say, ParseQueryString will add 'example.com/file?a'; as the first key. – Rune Oct 25 '12 at 10:58
Updated with new code. Strangely enough, this answer seems to be very popular. – Tejs Nov 6 '12 at 21:47

This should work:

string url = "http://example.com/file?a=1&b=2&c=string%20param";
string querystring = url.Substring(url.IndexOf('?'));
System.Collections.Specialized.NameValueCollection parameters = 
   System.Web.HttpUtility.ParseQueryString(querystring);

According to MSDN. Not the exact collectiontype you are looking for, but nevertheless useful.

Edit: Apparently, if you supply the complete url to ParseQueryString it will add 'http://example.com/file?a' as the first key of the collection. Since that is probably not what you want, I added the substring to get only the relevant part of the url.

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You could reference System.Web in your console application and then look for the Utility functions that split the URL parameters.

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Have a look at HttpUtility.ParseQueryString() It'll give you a NameValueCollection instead of a dictionary, but should still do what you need.

The other option is to use string.Split().

    string url = @"http://example.com/file?a=1&b=2&c=string%20param";
    string[] parts = url.Split(new char[] {'?','&'});
    ///parts[0] now contains http://example.com/file
    ///parts[1] = "a=1"
    ///parts[2] = "b=2"
    ///parts[3] = "c=string%20param"
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Use this:

string uri = ...;
string queryString = new System.Uri(uri).Query;
var queryDictionary = System.Web.HttpUtility.ParseQueryString(queryString);

This code by Tejs isn't the 'proper' way to get the query string from the URI:

string.Join(string.Empty, uri.Split('?').Skip(1));
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