encodeURIComponent()
Baseline Widely available
This feature is well established and works across many devices and browser versions. It’s been available across browsers since July 2015.
The encodeURIComponent()
function encodes a URI by replacing each instance of certain characters by one, two, three, or four escape sequences representing the UTF-8 encoding of the character (will only be four escape sequences for characters composed of two surrogate characters). Compared to encodeURI()
, this function encodes more characters, including those that are part of the URI syntax.
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Syntax
encodeURIComponent(uriComponent)
Parameters
uriComponent
-
A string to be encoded as a URI component (a path, query string, fragment, etc.). Other values are converted to strings.
Return value
A new string representing the provided uriComponent
encoded as a URI component.
Exceptions
URIError
-
Thrown if
uriComponent
contains a lone surrogate.
Description
encodeURIComponent()
is a function property of the global object.
encodeURIComponent()
uses the same encoding algorithm as described in encodeURI()
. It escapes all characters except:
A–Z a–z 0–9 - _ . ! ~ * ' ( )
Compared to encodeURI()
, encodeURIComponent()
escapes a larger set of characters. Use encodeURIComponent()
on user-entered fields from forms POST
'd to the server — this will encode &
symbols that may inadvertently be generated during data entry for character references or other characters that require encoding/decoding. For example, if a user writes Jack & Jill
, without encodeURIComponent()
, the ampersand could be interpreted on the server as the start of a new field and jeopardize the integrity of the data.
For application/x-www-form-urlencoded
, spaces are to be replaced by +
, so one may wish to follow a encodeURIComponent()
replacement with an additional replacement of %20
with +
.
Examples
Encoding for Content-Disposition and Link headers
The following example provides the special encoding required within UTF-8 Content-Disposition
and Link
server response header parameters (e.g., UTF-8 filenames):
const fileName = "my file(2).txt";
const header = `Content-Disposition: attachment; filename*=UTF-8''${encodeRFC5987ValueChars(
fileName,
)}`;
console.log(header);
// "Content-Disposition: attachment; filename*=UTF-8''my%20file%282%29.txt"
function encodeRFC5987ValueChars(str) {
return (
encodeURIComponent(str)
// The following creates the sequences %27 %28 %29 %2A (Note that
// the valid encoding of "*" is %2A, which necessitates calling
// toUpperCase() to properly encode). Although RFC3986 reserves "!",
// RFC5987 does not, so we do not need to escape it.
.replace(
/['()*]/g,
(c) => `%${c.charCodeAt(0).toString(16).toUpperCase()}`,
)
// The following are not required for percent-encoding per RFC5987,
// so we can allow for a little better readability over the wire: |`^
.replace(/%(7C|60|5E)/g, (str, hex) =>
String.fromCharCode(parseInt(hex, 16)),
)
);
}
Encoding for RFC3986
The more recent RFC3986 reserves !
, '
, (
, )
, and *
, even though these characters have no formalized URI delimiting uses. The following function encodes a string for RFC3986-compliant URL component format. It also encodes [
and ]
, which are part of the IPv6 URI syntax. An RFC3986-compliant encodeURI
implementation should not escape them, which is demonstrated in the encodeURI()
example.
function encodeRFC3986URIComponent(str) {
return encodeURIComponent(str).replace(
/[!'()*]/g,
(c) => `%${c.charCodeAt(0).toString(16).toUpperCase()}`,
);
}
Encoding a lone surrogate throws
A URIError
will be thrown if one attempts to encode a surrogate which is not part of a high-low pair. For example:
// High-low pair OK
encodeURIComponent("\uD800\uDFFF"); // "%F0%90%8F%BF"
// Lone high-surrogate code unit throws "URIError: malformed URI sequence"
encodeURIComponent("\uD800");
// Lone high-surrogate code unit throws "URIError: malformed URI sequence"
encodeURIComponent("\uDFFF");
You can use String.prototype.toWellFormed()
, which replaces lone surrogates with the Unicode replacement character (U+FFFD), to avoid this error. You can also use String.prototype.isWellFormed()
to check if a string contains lone surrogates before passing it to encodeURIComponent()
.
Specifications
Specification |
---|
ECMAScript Language Specification # sec-encodeuricomponent-uricomponent |
Browser compatibility
BCD tables only load in the browser