mirror of
https://github.com/iib0011/omni-tools.git
synced 2025-11-19 14:22:07 +05:30
feat (string): common files between url encoder and decoder
This commit is contained in:
parent
94fdcaef0d
commit
1a327e2a93
2 changed files with 31 additions and 1 deletions
|
|
@ -257,5 +257,31 @@
|
|||
"resultTitle": "Uppercase text",
|
||||
"shortDescription": "Convert text to uppercase",
|
||||
"title": "Convert to Uppercase"
|
||||
},
|
||||
"urlEncode": {
|
||||
"toolInfo": {
|
||||
"description": "Load your string and it will automatically get URL-escaped.",
|
||||
"shortDescription": "Quickly URL-escape a string.",
|
||||
"longDescription": "This tool URL-encodes a string. Special URL characters get converted to percent-sign encoding. This encoding is called percent-encoding because each character's numeric value gets converted to a percent sign followed by a two-digit hexadecimal value. The hex values are determined based on the character's codepoint value. For example, a space gets escaped to %20, a colon to %3a, a slash to %2f. Characters that are not special stay unchanged. In case you also need to convert non-special characters to percent-encoding, then we've also added an extra option that lets you do that. Select the encode-non-special-chars option to enable this behavior.",
|
||||
"title": "String URL encoder"
|
||||
},
|
||||
"encodingOption": {
|
||||
"title": "Encoding Options",
|
||||
"nonSpecialCharPlaceholder": "Encode non-special characters",
|
||||
"nonSpecialCharDescription": "If selected, then all characters in the input string will be converted to URL-encoding (not just special)."
|
||||
},
|
||||
"inputTitle": "Input String",
|
||||
"resultTitle": "Url-escaped String"
|
||||
},
|
||||
"urlDecode": {
|
||||
"toolInfo": {
|
||||
"description": "Load your string and it will automatically get URL-unescaped.",
|
||||
"shortDescription": "Quickly URL-unescape a string.",
|
||||
"longDescription": "This tool URL-decodes a previously URL-encoded string. URL-decoding is the inverse operation of URL-encoding. All percent-encoded characters get decoded to characters that you can understand. Some of the most well known percent-encoded values are %20 for a space, %3a for a colon, %2f for a slash, and %3f for a question mark. The two digits following the percent sign are character's char code values in hex.",
|
||||
"title": "String URL decoder"
|
||||
},
|
||||
|
||||
"inputTitle": "Input String(URL-escaped)",
|
||||
"resultTitle": "Output string"
|
||||
}
|
||||
}
|
||||
|
|
|
|||
Loading…
Add table
Add a link
Reference in a new issue