Struct url::PathSegmentsMut
[−]
[src]
pub struct PathSegmentsMut<'a> { // some fields omitted }
Exposes methods to manipulate the path of an URL that is not cannot-be-base.
The path always starts with a /
slash, and is made of slash-separated segments.
There is always at least one segment (which may be the empty string).
Examples:
let mut url = Url::parse("mailto:me@example.com").unwrap(); assert!(url.path_segments_mut().is_err()); let mut url = Url::parse("http://example.net/foo/index.html").unwrap(); url.path_segments_mut().unwrap().pop().push("img").push("2/100%.png"); assert_eq!(url.as_str(), "http://example.net/foo/img/2%2F100%25.png");
Methods
impl<'a> PathSegmentsMut<'a>
fn clear(&mut self) -> &mut Self
Remove all segments in the path, leaving the minimal url.path() == "/"
.
Returns &mut Self
so that method calls can be chained.
Example:
let mut url = Url::parse("https://github.com/servo/rust-url/").unwrap(); url.path_segments_mut().unwrap().clear().push("logout"); assert_eq!(url.as_str(), "https://github.com/logout");
fn pop_if_empty(&mut self) -> &mut Self
Remove the last segment of this URL’s path if it is empty, except if these was only one segment to begin with.
In other words, remove one path trailing slash, if any,
unless it is also the initial slash (so this does nothing if url.path() == "/")
.
Returns &mut Self
so that method calls can be chained.
Example:
let mut url = Url::parse("https://github.com/servo/rust-url/").unwrap(); url.path_segments_mut().unwrap().push("pulls"); assert_eq!(url.as_str(), "https://github.com/servo/rust-url//pulls"); let mut url = Url::parse("https://github.com/servo/rust-url/").unwrap(); url.path_segments_mut().unwrap().pop_if_empty().push("pulls"); assert_eq!(url.as_str(), "https://github.com/servo/rust-url/pulls");
fn pop(&mut self) -> &mut Self
Remove the last segment of this URL’s path.
If the path only has one segment, make it empty such that url.path() == "/"
.
Returns &mut Self
so that method calls can be chained.
fn push(&mut self, segment: &str) -> &mut Self
Append the given segment at the end of this URL’s path.
See the documentation for .extend()
.
Returns &mut Self
so that method calls can be chained.
fn extend<I>(&mut self, segments: I) -> &mut Self where I: IntoIterator, I::Item: AsRef<str>
Append each segment from the given iterator at the end of this URL’s path.
Each segment is percent-encoded like in Url::parse
or Url::join
,
except that %
and /
characters are also encoded (to %25
and %2F
).
This is unlike Url::parse
where %
is left as-is in case some of the input
is already percent-encoded, and /
denotes a path segment separator.)
Note that, in addition to slashes between new segments,
this always adds a slash between the existing path and the new segments
except if the existing path is "/"
.
If the previous last segment was empty (if the path had a trailing slash)
the path after .extend()
will contain two consecutive slashes.
If that is undesired, call .pop_if_empty()
first.
To obtain a behavior similar to Url::join
, call .pop()
unconditionally first.
Returns &mut Self
so that method calls can be chained.
Example:
let mut url = Url::parse("https://github.com/").unwrap(); let org = "servo"; let repo = "rust-url"; let issue_number = "188"; url.path_segments_mut().unwrap().extend(&[org, repo, "issues", issue_number]); assert_eq!(url.as_str(), "https://github.com/servo/rust-url/issues/188");
In order to make sure that parsing the serialization of an URL gives the same URL,
a segment is ignored if it is "."
or ".."
:
let mut url = Url::parse("https://github.com/servo").unwrap(); url.path_segments_mut().unwrap().extend(&["..", "rust-url", ".", "pulls"]); assert_eq!(url.as_str(), "https://github.com/servo/rust-url/pulls");