In the World Wide Web, a query string is the part of a URL that contains data to be passed to CGI programs.
When a web page is requested via the HyperText Transfer Protocol, the server locates a file in its file system based on the requested URL. This file may be a regular file or a program. In the second case, the server may (depending on its configuration) run the program, sending its output as the required page. The query string is a part of the URL which is passed to the program. Its use permits data to be passed from the HTTP client (often a browser) to the program which generates the web page.
A typical URL containing a query string is as follows:
http://server/path/program?query_string
When a server receives a request for such a page, it runs a program (if configured to do so), passing the query_string unchanged to the program. The question mark is used as a separator and is not part of the query string.
A link in a Web page may have a URL that contains a query string. However, the main use of query strings is to contain the content of a Web form. In particular, when a form containing the fields field1, field2, field3 is submitted, the content of the fields is encoded as a query string as follows:
field1=value1&field2=value2&field3=value3...
For each field of the form, the query string contains a pair field=value. Web forms may include fields that are not visible to the user; these fields are included in the query string when the form is submitted.
Technically, the form content is only encoded as a query string when the form submission method is GET. The same encoding is used by default when the submission method is POST, but the result is not sent as a query string, that is, is not added to the action URL of the form. Rather, the string is sent as the body of the request.
# is used to locate a point within a page; the character = is used to separate a name from a value. A query string may need to be converted to satisfy these constraints. This can be done using a schema known as URL encoding.
In particular, RFC 1738 specifies that “only alphanumerics, the special characters "$-_.+!*'(),", and reserved characters used for their reserved purposes may be used unencoded within a URL”. All characters in a query string can be replaced by their hexadecimal value precedeed by the symbol %. For example, the equal sign can be replaced by %3D. All characters can be replaced this way; for the characters that are forbidden in a query string, this is not only possible but necessary.
The space character can be also represented by +.
http can contain a searchpart following the rest of the URL and separated from it by a ? character. RFC 3986 specifies that the query component of an URI is the part between the ? and the end of the URI or the character #. The term query string is of common usage for referring to this part for the case of HTTP URLs.
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