Query string
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In the World Wide Web, a query string is the part of a URL that contains data to be passed to CGI programs.
title=Main_page&action=rawWhen a web page is requested via the Hypertext Transfer Protocol, the server locates a file in its file system based on the requested URL. This file may be a regular file or a program. In the second case, the server may (depending on its configuration) run the program, sending its output as the required page. The query string is a part of the URL which is passed to the program. Its use permits data to be passed from the HTTP client (often a browser) to the program which generates the web page.
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A typical URL containing a query string is as follows:
http://server/path/program?query_string
When a server receives a request for such a page, it runs a program (if configured to do so), passing the query_string unchanged to the program. The question mark is used as a separator and is not part of the query string.
A link in a Web page may have a URL that contains a query string. However, the main use of query strings is to contain the content of a Web form. In particular, when a form containing the fields field1, field2, field3 is submitted, the content of the fields is encoded as a query string as follows:
field1=value1&field2=value2&field3=value3...
- The query string is composed of a series of field-value pairs.
- The field-value pairs are each separated by an equal sign.
- The series of pairs is separated by the ampersand, '&'.
For each field of the form, the query string contains a pair field=value. Web forms may include fields that are not visible to the user; these fields are included in the query string when the form is submitted.
This 'name then equal sign then value then ampersand' convention is a W3C recommendation[1]. They also provide a further appendix entry[2] that recommends the use of a semicolon instead of an ampersand.
Technically, the form content is only encoded as a query string when the form submission method is GET. The same encoding is used by default when the submission method is POST, but the result is not sent as a query string, that is, is not added to the action URL of the form. Rather, the string is sent as the body of the request.
Some characters cannot be part of a URL (for example, the space) and some other characters have a special meaning in a URL: for example, the character # is used to locate a point within a page; the character = is used to separate a name from a value. A query string may need to be converted to satisfy these constraints. This can be done using a schema known as URL encoding.
In particular, encoding the query string uses the following rules:
- [a-zA-Z0-9] | '.' | '-' | '~' | '_' are left as-is
- SPACE is encoded as '+'
- All other characters are encoded as %FF hex representation with any non-ASCII characters first encoded as UTF-8 (or other specified encoding)
The encoding of SPACE as '+' and the selection of "as-is" characters distinguishes this encoding from RFC 1738.
As defined in RFC 1738, an URL of scheme http can contain a searchpart following the rest of the URL and separated from it by a ? character. RFC 3986 specifies that the query component of an URI is the part between the ? and the end of the URI or the character #. The term query string is of common usage for referring to this part for the case of HTTP URLs.
If a form is embedded in an HTML page as follows: