Simply calling ToString()
on the NameValueCollection
will return the name value pairs in a name1=value1&name2=value2
querystring ready format. Note that NameValueCollection
types don't actually support this and it's misleading to suggest this, but the behavior works here due to the internal type that's actually returned, as explained below.
Thanks to @mjwills for pointing out that the HttpUtility.ParseQueryString
method actually returns an internal HttpValueCollection
object rather than a regular NameValueCollection
(despite the documentation specifying NameValueCollection
). The HttpValueCollection
automatically encodes the querystring when using ToString()
, so there's no need to write a routine that loops through the collection and uses the UrlEncode
method. The desired result is already returned.
With the result in hand, you can then append it to the URL and redirect:
var nameValues = HttpUtility.ParseQueryString(Request.QueryString.ToString());
string url = Request.Url.AbsolutePath + "?" + nameValues.ToString();
Response.Redirect(url);
Currently the only way to use a HttpValueCollection
is by using the ParseQueryString
method shown above (other than reflection, of course). It looks like this won't change since the Connect issue requesting this class be made public has been closed with a status of "won't fix."
As an aside, you can call the Add
, Set
, and Remove
methods on nameValues
to modify any of the querystring items before appending it. If you're interested in that see my response to another question.
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