Issue
I use @RequestParam
to get the parameter value,but I find the if I pass the value like 'name=abc&def&id=123',I will get the name value 'abc' instead of 'abc&def'. I find the encode and decode the parameter value can solve my problem.But I have to write the encode and decode mehtod in every controller method,Do spring have the global mehtod that decode every @RequestParam
value?When using @RequestParam
, is it necessary to encode and decode every value?
Here is my code:
@PostMapping("/getStudent")
public Student getStudent(
@RequestParam String name,
@RequestParam String id) {
name= URLDecoder.decode(name, "UTF-8");
//searchStudent
return Student;
}
@PostMapping("/getTeacher")
public teacher getTeacher(
@RequestParam String name,
@RequestParam String teacherNo) {
name= URLDecoder.decode(name, "UTF-8");
//searchTeacher
return teacher;
}
Somebody say the the Spring will have already done this,but I have try,the result is not right.Only use curl cmd is ok,but java code is not ok.
@PostMapping(value = "/example")
public String handleUrlDecode1(@RequestParam String param) {
//print ello%26test
System.out.println("/example?param received: " + param);
return "success";
}
@GetMapping(value = "/request")
public String request() {
String url = "http://127.0.0.1:8080/example?param=ello%26test";
System.out.println(url);
RestTemplate restTemplate = new RestTemplate();
return restTemplate.postForObject(url, null, String.class);
}
Solution
You must create an HTTP entity and send the headers and parameter in body.
@GetMapping(value = "/request")
public String request() {
String url = "http://127.0.0.1:8080/example";
System.out.println(url);
RestTemplate restTemplate = new RestTemplate();
HttpHeaders headers = new HttpHeaders();
headers.setContentType(MediaType.APPLICATION_FORM_URLENCODED);
MultiValueMap<String, String> map= new LinkedMultiValueMap<String, String>();
map.add("param","ello&test");
map.add("id","ab&c=def");
HttpEntity<MultiValueMap<String, String>> request = new HttpEntity<MultiValueMap<String, String>>(map, headers);
return restTemplate.postForObject(url, request, String.class);
}
Answered By - flower
Answer Checked By - Clifford M. (JavaFixing Volunteer)