andrewducker: (overwhelming firepower)
andrewducker ([personal profile] andrewducker) wrote2011-11-24 08:07 am

Anyone here know much about Java?

I have user input for a URL field. I want them to be able to enter anything from "http://andrewducker.wordpress.com/xmlrpc.php" to "andrewducker.wordpress.com" and be able to end up at the same end point.

I've wasted a couple of hours messing around with the various constructors for URL and not got to anywhere satisfactory, should I just do string checking and construct it myself?

I should make it clear - I always want the /xmlrpc.php bit to be what's on the end of the URL, that's a Wordpress standard, so I don't need to do any complex discovery. I just need to append that if it's not there.

I was hoping that someone would have written a class that could append bits of URLs together, but the basic stuff in the built in URL class doesn't quite cut it.

[identity profile] strawberryfrog.livejournal.com 2011-11-24 09:39 am (UTC)(link)
If that was c#, I would not use a regex - I'd
1) construct a Uri from the string
2) read off some of the properties of the uri. Something like uri.Scheme + uri.Host + "/xmlrpc.php" should be what you want (unless port numbers are involved).
Edited 2011-11-24 09:39 (UTC)

[identity profile] strawberryfrog.livejournal.com 2011-11-24 09:50 am (UTC)(link)
Good point. That is in the "AbsolutePath" property but you might have to massage it - remove everything after the last slash and substitute "xmlrpc.php"