NAME

Apache2::API::Query - utf8 compliant URI query string manipulation

SYNOPSIS

# Constructor - using a GET query string
$qq = Apache2::API::Query->new($query_string);
# OR Constructor - using a hashref of key => value parameters
$qq = Apache2::API::Query->new($cgi->Vars);
# OR Constructor - using an array of successive keys and values
$qq = Apache2::API::Query->new(@params);

# Clone the current object
$qq2 = $qq->clone;

# Revert back to the initial constructor state (to do it all again)
$qq->revert;

# Remove all occurrences of the given parameters
$qq->strip('page', 'next');

# Remove all parameters except the given ones
$qq->strip_except('pagesize', 'order');

# Remove all empty/undefined parameters
$qq->strip_null;

# Replace all occurrences of the given parameters
$qq->replace(page => $page, foo => 'bar');

# Set the argument separator to use for output (default: unescaped '&')
$qq->separator(';');

# Output the current query string
print "$qq";           # OR $qq->stringify;
# Stringify with explicit argument separator
$qq->stringify(';');

# Output the current query string with a leading '?'
$qq->qstringify;
# Stringify with a leading '?' and an explicit argument separator
$qq->qstringify(';');

# Get a flattened hash/hashref of the current parameters
#   (single item parameters as scalars, multiples as an arrayref)
my %qq = $qq->hash;

# Get a non-flattened hash/hashref of the current parameters
#   (parameter => arrayref of values)
my %qq = $qq->hash_arrayref;

# Get the current query string as a set of hidden input tags
print $qq->hidden;

# Check whether the query has changed since construction
if ($qq->has_changed) {
  print "changed version: $qq\n";
}

VERSION

v0.1.0

DESCRIPTION

This module simply inherits from URI::Query and changed 2 subroutines to make them compliant with utf8 strings being fed to URI::Query.

The 2 subroutines modified are: _parse_qs and _init_from_arrayref

URI::Query does, otherwise, a very good job, but does not utf8 decode data from query strings after having url decoded it.

When, encoding data as query string, it does utf8 encode it before url encoding them, but not the other way around. So this module provides a temporary fix and is likely to be removed in the future when the module maintainer will have fixed this.

The rest below is taken from URI::Query documentation and is copied here for convenience.

CONSTRUCTOR

Apache2::API::Query objects can be constructed from scalar query strings ('foo=1&bar=2&bar=3'), from a hashref which has parameters as keys, and values either as scalars or arrayrefs of scalars (to handle the case of parameters with multiple values e.g. { foo => '1', bar => [ '2', '3' ] }), or arrays composed of successive parameters-value pairs e.g. ('foo', '1', 'bar', '2', 'bar', '3'). For instance:

# Constructor - using a GET query string
$qq = Apache2::API::Query->new($query_string);

# Constructor - using an array of successive keys and values
$qq = Apache2::API::Query->new(@params);

# Constructor - using a hashref of key => value parameters,
# where values are either scalars or arrayrefs of scalars
$qq = Apache2::API::Query->new($cgi->Vars);

Apache2::API::Query also handles CGI.pm-style hashrefs, where multiple values are packed into a single string, separated by the "\0" (null) character.

All keys and values are URI unescaped at construction time, and are stored and referenced unescaped. So a query string like:

group=prod%2Cinfra%2Ctest&op%3Aset=x%3Dy

is stored as:

'group'     => 'prod,infra,test'
'op:set'    => 'x=y'

You should always use the unescaped/normal variants in methods i.e.

$qq->replace('op:set'  => 'x=z');

NOT:

$qq->replace('op%3Aset'  => 'x%3Dz');

You can also construct a new Apache2::API::Query object by cloning an existing one:

$qq2 = $qq->clone;

MODIFIER METHODS

All modifier methods change the state of the Apache2::API::Query object in some way, and return $self, so they can be used in chained style e.g.

$qq->revert->strip('foo')->replace(bar => 123);

Note that Apache2::API::Query stashes a copy of the parameter set that existed at construction time, so that any changes made by these methods can be rolled back using 'revert()'. So you don't (usually) need to keep multiple copies around to handle incompatible changes.

revert()

Revert the current parameter set back to that originally given at construction time i.e. discard all changes made since construction.

strip($param1, $param2, ...)

Remove all occurrences of the given parameters and their values from the current parameter set.

strip_except($param1, $param2, ...)

Remove all parameters EXCEPT those given from the current parameter set.

strip_null()

Remove all parameters that have a value of undef from the current parameter set.

replace($param1 => $value1, $param2, $value2, ...)

Replace the values of the given parameters in the current parameter set with these new ones. Parameter names must be scalars, but values can be either scalars or arrayrefs of scalars, when multiple values are desired.

Note that 'replace' can also be used to add or append, since there's no requirement that the parameters already exist in the current parameter set.

strip_like($regex)

Remove all parameters whose names match the given (qr-quoted) regex e.g.

$qq->strip_like(qr/^utm/)

Does NOT match against parameter values.

separator($separator)

Set the argument separator to use for output. Default: '&'.

ACCESSOR METHODS

has_changed()

If the query is actually changed by any of the modifier methods (strip, strip_except, strip_null, strip_like, or replace) it sets an internal changed flag which can be access by:

$qq->has_changed

revert() resets the has_changed flag to false.

OUTPUT METHODS

"$qq", stringify(), stringify($separator)

Return the current parameter set as a conventional param=value query string, using $separator as the separator if given. e.g.

foo=1&bar=2&bar=3

Note that all parameters and values are URI escaped by stringify(), so that query-string reserved characters do not occur within elements. For instance, a parameter set of:

'group'     => 'prod,infra,test'
'op:set'    => 'x=y'

will be stringified as:

group=prod%2Cinfra%2Ctest&op%3Aset=x%3Dy
qstringify(), qstringify($separator)

Convenience method to stringify with a leading '?' e.g.

?foo=1&bar=2&bar=3
hash()

Return a hash (in list context) or hashref (in scalar context) of the current parameter set. Single-item parameters have scalar values, while while multiple-item parameters have arrayref values e.g.

{
    foo => 1,
    bar => [ 2, 3 ],
}
hash_arrayref()

Return a hash (in list context) or hashref (in scalar context) of the current parameter set. All values are returned as arrayrefs, including those with single values e.g.

{
    foo => [ 1 ],
    bar => [ 2, 3 ],
}
hidden()

Returns the current parameter set as a concatenated string of hidden input tags, one per parameter-value e.g.

<input type="hidden" name="foo" value="1" />
<input type="hidden" name="bar" value="2" />
<input type="hidden" name="bar" value="3" />

AUTHOR

Jacques Deguest <jack@deguest.jp>

CREDITS

Gavin Carr <gavin@openfusion.com.au> for his version of URI::Query

SEE ALSO

Apache2::API::Request

COPYRIGHT & LICENSE

Copyright (c) 2023 DEGUEST Pte. Ltd.

You can use, copy, modify and redistribute this package and associated files under the same terms as Perl itself.