If I wish to submit a http get request using System.Net.HttpClient there seems to be no api to add parameters, is this correct?
Is there any simple api available to build the query string that doesn't involve building a name value collection and url encoding those and then finally concatenating them?
I was hoping to use something like RestSharp's api (i.e AddParameter(..))
If I wish to submit a http get request using System.Net.HttpClient
there seems to be no api to add parameters, is this correct?
Yes.
Is there any simple api available to build the query string that
doesn't involve building a name value collection and url encoding
those and then finally concatenating them?
Sure:
var query = HttpUtility.ParseQueryString(string.Empty);
query["foo"] = "bar<>&-baz";
query["bar"] = "bazinga";
string queryString = query.ToString();
will give you the expected result:
foo=bar%3c%3e%26-baz&bar=bazinga
You might also find the UriBuilder class useful:
var builder = new UriBuilder("http://example.com");
builder.Port = -1;
var query = HttpUtility.ParseQueryString(builder.Query);
query["foo"] = "bar<>&-baz";
query["bar"] = "bazinga";
builder.Query = query.ToString();
string url = builder.ToString();
will give you the expected result:
http://example.com/?foo=bar%3c%3e%26-baz&bar=bazinga
that you could more than safely feed to your HttpClient.GetAsync method.
For those who do not want to include System.Web in projects that don't already use it, you can use FormUrlEncodedContent from System.Net.Http and do something like the following:
keyvaluepair version
string query;
using(var content = new FormUrlEncodedContent(new KeyValuePair<string, string>[]{
new KeyValuePair<string, string>("ham", "Glazed?"),
new KeyValuePair<string, string>("x-men", "Wolverine + Logan"),
new KeyValuePair<string, string>("Time", DateTime.UtcNow.ToString()),
})) {
query = content.ReadAsStringAsync().Result;
}
dictionary version
string query;
using(var content = new FormUrlEncodedContent(new Dictionary<string, string>()
{
{ "ham", "Glaced?"},
{ "x-men", "Wolverine + Logan"},
{ "Time", DateTime.UtcNow.ToString() },
})) {
query = content.ReadAsStringAsync().Result;
}
In a ASP.NET Core project you can use the QueryHelpers class, available in the Microsoft.AspNetCore.WebUtilities namespace for ASP.NET Core, or the .NET Standard 2.0 NuGet package for other consumers:
// using Microsoft.AspNetCore.WebUtilities;
var query = new Dictionary<string, string>
{
["foo"] = "bar",
["foo2"] = "bar2",
// ...
};
var response = await client.GetAsync(QueryHelpers.AddQueryString("/api/", query));
TL;DR: do not use accepted version as It's completely broken in relation to handling unicode characters, and never use internal API
I've actually found weird double encoding issue with the accepted solution:
So, If you're dealing with characters which need to be encoded, accepted solution leads to double encoding:
query parameters are auto encoded by using NameValueCollection indexer (and this uses UrlEncodeUnicode, not regular expected UrlEncode(!))
Then, when you call uriBuilder.Uri it creates new Uri using constructor which does encoding one more time (normal url encoding)
That cannot be avoided by doing uriBuilder.ToString() (even though this returns correct Uri which IMO is at least inconsistency, maybe a bug, but that's another question) and then using HttpClient method accepting string - client still creates Uri out of your passed string like this: new Uri(uri, UriKind.RelativeOrAbsolute)
Small, but full repro:
var builder = new UriBuilder
{
Scheme = Uri.UriSchemeHttps,
Port = -1,
Host = "127.0.0.1",
Path = "app"
};
NameValueCollection query = HttpUtility.ParseQueryString(builder.Query);
query["cyrillic"] = "кирилиця";
builder.Query = query.ToString();
Console.WriteLine(builder.Query); //query with cyrillic stuff UrlEncodedUnicode, and that's not what you want
var uri = builder.Uri; // creates new Uri using constructor which does encode and messes cyrillic parameter even more
Console.WriteLine(uri);
// this is still wrong:
var stringUri = builder.ToString(); // returns more 'correct' (still `UrlEncodedUnicode`, but at least once, not twice)
new HttpClient().GetStringAsync(stringUri); // this creates Uri object out of 'stringUri' so we still end up sending double encoded cyrillic text to server. Ouch!
Output:
?cyrillic=%u043a%u0438%u0440%u0438%u043b%u0438%u0446%u044f
https://127.0.0.1/app?cyrillic=%25u043a%25u0438%25u0440%25u0438%25u043b%25u0438%25u0446%25u044f
As you may see, no matter if you do uribuilder.ToString() + httpClient.GetStringAsync(string) or uriBuilder.Uri + httpClient.GetStringAsync(Uri) you end up sending double encoded parameter
Fixed example could be:
var uri = new Uri(builder.ToString(), dontEscape: true);
new HttpClient().GetStringAsync(uri);
But this uses obsolete Uri constructor
P.S on my latest .NET on Windows Server, Uri constructor with bool doc comment says "obsolete, dontEscape is always false", but actually works as expected (skips escaping)
So It looks like another bug...
And even this is plain wrong - it send UrlEncodedUnicode to server, not just UrlEncoded what server expects
Update: one more thing is, NameValueCollection actually does UrlEncodeUnicode, which is not supposed to be used anymore and is incompatible with regular url.encode/decode (see NameValueCollection to URL Query?).
So the bottom line is: never use this hack with NameValueCollection query = HttpUtility.ParseQueryString(builder.Query); as it will mess your unicode query parameters. Just build query manually and assign it to UriBuilder.Query which will do necessary encoding and then get Uri using UriBuilder.Uri.
Prime example of hurting yourself by using code which is not supposed to be used like this
You might want to check out Flurl [disclosure: I'm the author], a fluent URL builder with optional companion lib that extends it into a full-blown REST client.
var result = await "https://api.com"
// basic URL building:
.AppendPathSegment("endpoint")
.SetQueryParams(new {
api_key = ConfigurationManager.AppSettings["SomeApiKey"],
max_results = 20,
q = "Don't worry, I'll get encoded!"
})
.SetQueryParams(myDictionary)
.SetQueryParam("q", "overwrite q!")
// extensions provided by Flurl.Http:
.WithOAuthBearerToken("token")
.GetJsonAsync<TResult>();
Check out the docs for more details. The full package is available on NuGet:
PM> Install-Package Flurl.Http
or just the stand-alone URL builder:
PM> Install-Package Flurl
Along the same lines as Rostov's post, if you do not want to include a reference to System.Web in your project, you can use FormDataCollection from System.Net.Http.Formatting and do something like the following:
Using System.Net.Http.Formatting.FormDataCollection
var parameters = new Dictionary<string, string>()
{
{ "ham", "Glaced?" },
{ "x-men", "Wolverine + Logan" },
{ "Time", DateTime.UtcNow.ToString() },
};
var query = new FormDataCollection(parameters).ReadAsNameValueCollection().ToString();
Since I have to reuse this few time, I came up with this class that simply help to abstract how the query string is composed.
public class UriBuilderExt
{
private NameValueCollection collection;
private UriBuilder builder;
public UriBuilderExt(string uri)
{
builder = new UriBuilder(uri);
collection = System.Web.HttpUtility.ParseQueryString(string.Empty);
}
public void AddParameter(string key, string value) {
collection.Add(key, value);
}
public Uri Uri{
get
{
builder.Query = collection.ToString();
return builder.Uri;
}
}
}
The use will be simplify to something like this:
var builder = new UriBuilderExt("http://example.com/");
builder.AddParameter("foo", "bar<>&-baz");
builder.AddParameter("bar", "second");
var uri = builder.Uri;
that will return the uri:
http://example.com/?foo=bar%3c%3e%26-baz&bar=second
Good part of accepted answer, modified to use UriBuilder.Uri.ParseQueryString() instead of HttpUtility.ParseQueryString():
var builder = new UriBuilder("http://example.com");
var query = builder.Uri.ParseQueryString();
query["foo"] = "bar<>&-baz";
query["bar"] = "bazinga";
builder.Query = query.ToString();
string url = builder.ToString();
Darin offered an interesting and clever solution, and here is something that may be another option:
public class ParameterCollection
{
private Dictionary<string, string> _parms = new Dictionary<string, string>();
public void Add(string key, string val)
{
if (_parms.ContainsKey(key))
{
throw new InvalidOperationException(string.Format("The key {0} already exists.", key));
}
_parms.Add(key, val);
}
public override string ToString()
{
var server = HttpContext.Current.Server;
var sb = new StringBuilder();
foreach (var kvp in _parms)
{
if (sb.Length > 0) { sb.Append("&"); }
sb.AppendFormat("{0}={1}",
server.UrlEncode(kvp.Key),
server.UrlEncode(kvp.Value));
}
return sb.ToString();
}
}
and so when using it, you might do this:
var parms = new ParameterCollection();
parms.Add("key", "value");
var url = ...
url += "?" + parms;
The RFC 6570 URI Template library I'm developing is capable of performing this operation. All encoding is handled for you in accordance with that RFC. At the time of this writing, a beta release is available and the only reason it's not considered a stable 1.0 release is the documentation doesn't fully meet my expectations (see issues #17, #18, #32, #43).
You could either build a query string alone:
UriTemplate template = new UriTemplate("{?params*}");
var parameters = new Dictionary<string, string>
{
{ "param1", "value1" },
{ "param2", "value2" },
};
Uri relativeUri = template.BindByName(parameters);
Or you could build a complete URI:
UriTemplate template = new UriTemplate("path/to/item{?params*}");
var parameters = new Dictionary<string, string>
{
{ "param1", "value1" },
{ "param2", "value2" },
};
Uri baseAddress = new Uri("http://www.example.com");
Uri relativeUri = template.BindByName(baseAddress, parameters);
Or simply using my Uri extension
Code
public static Uri AttachParameters(this Uri uri, NameValueCollection parameters)
{
var stringBuilder = new StringBuilder();
string str = "?";
for (int index = 0; index < parameters.Count; ++index)
{
stringBuilder.Append(str + parameters.AllKeys[index] + "=" + parameters[index]);
str = "&";
}
return new Uri(uri + stringBuilder.ToString());
}
Usage
Uri uri = new Uri("http://www.example.com/index.php").AttachParameters(new NameValueCollection
{
{"Bill", "Gates"},
{"Steve", "Jobs"}
});
Result
http://www.example.com/index.php?Bill=Gates&Steve=Jobs
To avoid double encoding issue described in taras.roshko's answer and to keep possibility to easily work with query parameters, you can use uriBuilder.Uri.ParseQueryString() instead of HttpUtility.ParseQueryString().
Thanks to "Darin Dimitrov", This is the extension methods.
public static partial class Ext
{
public static Uri GetUriWithparameters(this Uri uri,Dictionary<string,string> queryParams = null,int port = -1)
{
var builder = new UriBuilder(uri);
builder.Port = port;
if(null != queryParams && 0 < queryParams.Count)
{
var query = HttpUtility.ParseQueryString(builder.Query);
foreach(var item in queryParams)
{
query[item.Key] = item.Value;
}
builder.Query = query.ToString();
}
return builder.Uri;
}
public static string GetUriWithparameters(string uri,Dictionary<string,string> queryParams = null,int port = -1)
{
var builder = new UriBuilder(uri);
builder.Port = port;
if(null != queryParams && 0 < queryParams.Count)
{
var query = HttpUtility.ParseQueryString(builder.Query);
foreach(var item in queryParams)
{
query[item.Key] = item.Value;
}
builder.Query = query.ToString();
}
return builder.Uri.ToString();
}
}
HttpClient client = new HttpClient();
var uri = Environment.GetEnvironmentVariable("URL of Api");
var requesturi = QueryHelpers.AddQueryString(uri, "parameter_name",parameter_value);
client.BaseAddress = new Uri(requesturi);
And then you can add request headers also eg:
client.DefaultRequestHeaders.Accept.Add(new MediaTypeWithQualityHeaderValue("application/json"));
client.DefaultRequestHeaders.Add("x-api-key", secretValue);
response syntax eg:
HttpResponseMessage response = client.GetAsync(requesturi).Result;
Hope it will work for you.
My answer doesn't globally differ from the accepted/other answers. I just tried to create an extension method for the Uri type, which takes variable number of parameters.
public static class UriExtensions
{
public static Uri AddParameter(this Uri url, params (string Name, string Value)[] #params)
{
if (!#params.Any())
{
return url;
}
UriBuilder uriBuilder = new(url);
NameValueCollection query = HttpUtility.ParseQueryString(uriBuilder.Query);
foreach (var param in #params)
{
query[param.Name] = param.Value.Trim();
}
uriBuilder.Query = query.ToString();
return uriBuilder.Uri;
}
}
Usage example:
var uri = new Uri("http://someuri.com")
.AddParameter(
("p1.name", "p1.value"),
("p2.name", "p2.value"),
("p3.name", "p3.value"));
I couldn't find a better solution than creating a extension method to convert a Dictionary to QueryStringFormat. The solution proposed by Waleed A.K. is good as well.
Follow my solution:
Create the extension method:
public static class DictionaryExt
{
public static string ToQueryString<TKey, TValue>(this Dictionary<TKey, TValue> dictionary)
{
return ToQueryString<TKey, TValue>(dictionary, "?");
}
public static string ToQueryString<TKey, TValue>(this Dictionary<TKey, TValue> dictionary, string startupDelimiter)
{
string result = string.Empty;
foreach (var item in dictionary)
{
if (string.IsNullOrEmpty(result))
result += startupDelimiter; // "?";
else
result += "&";
result += string.Format("{0}={1}", item.Key, item.Value);
}
return result;
}
}
And them:
var param = new Dictionary<string, string>
{
{ "param1", "value1" },
{ "param2", "value2" },
};
param.ToQueryString(); //By default will add (?) question mark at begining
//"?param1=value1¶m2=value2"
param.ToQueryString("&"); //Will add (&)
//"¶m1=value1¶m2=value2"
param.ToQueryString(""); //Won't add anything
//"param1=value1¶m2=value2"
Related
My variable langURL currently returns a non-friendly url like so: http://localhost:57299/link/457fee1669e348febf67ecb57b281945.aspx?epslanguage=de-AT
Is it possible to get a friendly url?
public static IHtmlString HrefLangLinks(this PageData currentPage)
{
var availablePageLanguages = currentPage.ExistingLanguages.Select(culture => culture.Name).ToArray();
var Output = "";
var langURL = "";
foreach (string listitem in availablePageLanguages)
{
langURL = EPiServer.Web.UriUtil.AddLanguageSelection(currentPage.LinkURL, listitem);
Output += "<link href=\"" + langURL + "\" hreflang=\"" + listitem + "\" rel=\"alternate\" >";
}
// Dictionary<String, String>
return new HtmlString(Output.ToString());
}
For each page I would like to get the friendly urls with the language flag as well, for example:
/
/de-DE
/en-DE
Luckily we don't need to deal with the LinkURL property anymore. Instead, I would use the UrlResolver for this.
Your code could be quickly rewritten to something like this:
public static IHtmlString HrefLangLinks(this PageData currentPage)
{
// StringBuilder usually performs better than concatenating a variable number of strings.
var sb = new StringBuilder;
foreach (string language in currentPage.ExistingLanguages.Select(culture => culture.Name))
{
// Get the URL to the page in the individual languages, respecting the
// website language settings (sometimes a language is bound to another hostname)
string url = UrlResolver.Current.GetUrl(currentPage.ContentLink, language);
sb.AppendLine($"<link href=\"{url}\" hreflang=\"{language}\" rel=\"alternate\"/>");
}
return new MvcHtmlString(sb.ToString());
}
But I usually implement something like this as a Razor helper.
Yes this is possible.
Try this:
public string GetExternalUrl(string linkUrl)
{
var result = string.Empty;
try
{
var url = new UrlBuilder(linkUrl);
Global.UrlRewriteProvider.ConvertToExternal(url, linkUrl, Encoding.UTF8);
result = url.ToString();
}
catch (Exception)
{
}
return result;
}
I'm trying to access Azure Cosmos DB using Table API.
The challenge is, despite creating SharedKeyLite, server is still returning Unauthorized - seems like SharedKeyLite is not supported or I'm generating the signature or headers wrong.
Here is the code
static readonly string storageAccountName = "accountName";
static readonly string storageAccountKey = "xxxx";
static readonly string uri = "https://accountName.table.cosmosdb.azure.com/Contacts()";
static readonly string utc_date = DateTime.UtcNow.ToString("r");
static void Main(string[] args)
{
Console.WriteLine(GetResult().Result);
}
static async Task<string> GetResult()
{
// Set this to whatever payload you desire. Ours is null because
// we're not passing anything in.
Byte[] requestPayload = null;
var requestDateString = DateTime.UtcNow.ToString("R", CultureInfo.InvariantCulture);
var requestUri = new Uri(uri);
DateTime now = DateTime.UtcNow;
//Instantiate the request message with a null payload.
using (var httpRequestMessage = new HttpRequestMessage(HttpMethod.Get, uri)
{ Content = (requestPayload == null) ? null : new ByteArrayContent(requestPayload) })
{
ConstructHeaders(httpRequestMessage.Headers, requestDateString);
string authorizationHeader = GenerateSharedKeyLite(storageAccountKey, storageAccountName, uri,requestDateString);
httpRequestMessage.Headers.Authorization = new AuthenticationHeaderValue("SharedKeyLite", authorizationHeader);
// Send the request.
using (HttpResponseMessage httpResponseMessage = await new HttpClient().SendAsync(httpRequestMessage))
{
string json = await httpResponseMessage.Content.ReadAsStringAsync();
return json;
}
}
}
These are the headers I"m adding, expansion of ConstructHeaders method.
Refer this link for request parameters
//Construct the headers
static void ConstructHeaders(HttpRequestHeaders headers, string now)
{
headers.Add("x-ms-date", now);
headers.Add("x-ms-version", "2017-04-17");
// If you need any additional headers, add them here before creating
// the authorization header.
headers.Accept.Add(new MediaTypeWithQualityHeaderValue("application/json"));
if (headers.Contains("DataServiceVersion"))
headers.Remove("DataServiceVersion");
headers.Add("DataServiceVersion", "3.0;NetFx");
if (headers.Contains("MaxDataServiceVersion"))
headers.Remove("MaxDataServiceVersion");
headers.Add("MaxDataServiceVersion", "3.0;NetFx");
}
And this is the method that creates the SharedKeyLite
//Created Shared Key Lite
static string GenerateSharedKeyLite(string accessKey, string account, string url, string date)
{
var uri = new Uri(url);
var canonicalizedResourceString = uri.PathAndQuery;
var queryStart = canonicalizedResourceString.IndexOf('?');
if (queryStart > -1)
{
if (queryStart < canonicalizedResourceString.Length - 1)
{
var path = canonicalizedResourceString.Substring(0, queryStart);
var parameters = HttpUtility.ParseQueryString(canonicalizedResourceString.Substring(queryStart + 1));
var sb = new StringBuilder();
foreach (var keyOri in parameters.Keys)
{
var value = parameters[keyOri];
var key = keyOri.ToLowerInvariant();
sb.Append("\n");
sb.Append(key);
sb.Append(":");
sb.Append(value);
}
canonicalizedResourceString = canonicalizedResourceString + sb.ToString();
}
else
{
canonicalizedResourceString = canonicalizedResourceString.Substring(0, canonicalizedResourceString.Length - 1);
}
}
canonicalizedResourceString = $"/{account}{canonicalizedResourceString}";
var stringToSign = $"{date}\n{canonicalizedResourceString}";
var signedSignature = string.Empty;
using (var hmac = new HMACSHA256(Convert.FromBase64String(accessKey)))
{
var outputBytes = hmac.ComputeHash(Encoding.UTF8.GetBytes(stringToSign));
var signature = Convert.ToBase64String(outputBytes);
return $"{account}:{signature}";
}
}
Any Help? Ideally I want to perform the odata query using simple.odata, but first trying to make this work using HttpClient
Just copy your code and it works on my side. If you haven't modified your code, please make sure your storageAccountName and storageAccountKey are correct.
BTW, in method GenerateSharedKeyLite there's no need to add query parameters to canonicalizedResourceString for entity operation. You only need to add comp if you want to operate component info for table or service. See constructing-the-canonicalized-resource-string.
The query string should include the question mark and the comp parameter (for example, ?comp=metadata). No other parameters should be included on the query string.
I am using the following method to post to a web service. When I use it, I constantly get a 400 error. If I use the same data that I pass in though using Posty, the service returns the expected data
public static async Task<T> SendData<T>(string apiToUse, params string[] data)
{
var url = string.Format("{0}/{1}", Constants.BaseTestUrl, apiToUse);
dynamic t;
var kvp = new Dictionary<string, string>();
for (var i = 0; i < data.Length; i += 2)
{
kvp.Add(data[i], data[i + 1]);
}
var dta = new FormUrlEncodedContent(kvp);
dta.Headers.ContentType = new MediaTypeHeaderValue("multipart/form-data");
using (var client = new HttpClient())
{
var result = client.PostAsync(url, dta).Result;
//result.Content.Headers.ContentType = new MediaTypeHeaderValue("multipart/form-data");
var rv = result.Content.ReadAsStringAsync().Result;
t = JsonConvert.DeserializeObject<T>(rv);
}
return t;
}
In my test example, I pass into the param string[] data the two keys and two values.
The only thing that I can see that is different is that on posty I have the Content-Type defined before I click send (which I have also done here).
This is driving me somewhat insane, so any pointers would be appreciated.
It's hard to provide a complete answer without exactly knowing how the request should look like. Can you try / adjust the code as follows:
var kvp = string.Empty;
for (var i = 0; i < data.Length; i += 2)
{
kvp += string.Format("{0}={1}; ", data[i], data[i+1]);
}
// remove last ';' character
kvp = kvp.TrimEnd(new char[] { ' ', ';' });
var dta = new MultipartFormDataContent();
dta.Add(new StringContent(kvp));
The change consists in using MultipartFormDataContent to comply with the request format. Obviously, this code is just for testing. Additional validation and content creation (kvp) should be done before placing it into production.
I am trying to pass List as a parameter to web Api , Using below code;
Client Side
public async Task<ActionResult>BatchUpdatePartial(MVCxGridViewBatchUpdateValues<NewWorkItem, int> batchValues)
{
var updatedItems = new List<NewWorkItem>();
string url = "http://localhost:9198/api/values";
foreach (var item in batchValues.Update)
{
if (batchValues.IsValid((item)))
{
var updatedVals = new NewWorkItem();
updatedVals.CPK_ID = item.CPK_ID;
updatedVals.BYR_ID = item.BYR_ID;
updatedVals.P_ID = item.P_ID;
updatedVals.CPK_PRI_FLG = item.CPK_PRI_FLG;
updatedItems.Add(updatedVals);
}
else
batchValues.SetErrorText(item, "Correct Vallidation Errors");
}
using (var client = new WebClient())
{
client.Headers[HttpRequestHeader.ContentType] = "application/json";
client.Encoding = System.Text.Encoding.UTF8;
string serialisedData = JsonConvert.SerializeObject(updatedItems);
string response = client.UploadString(url, serialisedData);
Object result = JsonConvert.DeserializeObject(response);
}
return PartialView("_GridViewPartial", NewWorkItem.GridData);
}
Server Side
public string Post([FromBody]string[] values)
{
string seperator = ",";
string data = string.Join(seperator, values.ToList<string>());
string result = string.Format("Succesfully uploaded: {0}", data);
return result;
}
But I am always getting NULL inside the values at server side ?
Can you please suggest me solution ?
Thanks
Unfortunately, you are not actually sending a string[] the way your POST method expects. You are sending serializedData, which is, by your own definition, a serialization of updatedItems. updatedItems is a list of a reference type - you do not provide the definition of it here, but I guarantee you it is not going to serialize the same way a string does.
You will need to change updatedItems to be List<string> or something similar.
What is the nicest way of replacing the host-part of an Uri using .NET?
I.e.:
string ReplaceHost(string original, string newHostName);
//...
string s = ReplaceHost("http://oldhostname/index.html", "newhostname");
Assert.AreEqual("http://newhostname/index.html", s);
//...
string s = ReplaceHost("http://user:pass#oldhostname/index.html", "newhostname");
Assert.AreEqual("http://user:pass#newhostname/index.html", s);
//...
string s = ReplaceHost("ftp://user:pass#oldhostname", "newhostname");
Assert.AreEqual("ftp://user:pass#newhostname", s);
//etc.
System.Uri does not seem to help much.
System.UriBuilder is what you are after...
string ReplaceHost(string original, string newHostName) {
var builder = new UriBuilder(original);
builder.Host = newHostName;
return builder.Uri.ToString();
}
As #Ishmael says, you can use System.UriBuilder. Here's an example:
// the URI for which you want to change the host name
var oldUri = Request.Url;
// create a new UriBuilder, which copies all fragments of the source URI
var newUriBuilder = new UriBuilder(oldUri);
// set the new host (you can set other properties too)
newUriBuilder.Host = "newhost.com";
// get a Uri instance from the UriBuilder
var newUri = newUriBuilder.Uri;