Unicode C++
Unicode C++
curl with Variable Substitution in a JSON Request Body
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This example shows how to use variables inside a JSON request body using the {{variable_name}} syntax. When the HTTP request’s Content-Type indicates JSON, Chilkat automatically applies proper JSON escaping to each substituted value, ensuring the resulting JSON remains valid.Chilkat Unicode C++ Downloads
#include <CkStringBuilderW.h>
#include <CkHttpCurlW.h>
void ChilkatSample(void)
{
bool success = false;
// Variable names are enclosed between {{ and }}
// Important: The variable {{var_name}} should be placed inside the quotes.
// This is correct:
// curl -X POST https://api.example.com/messages \
// -H "Content-Type: application/json" \
// -d '{"text":"{{message}}"}'
// This is incorrect:
// -d '{"text":{{message}}}'
CkStringBuilderW sbCurl;
sbCurl.AppendLn(L"curl -X POST https://api.example.com/messages \\");
sbCurl.AppendLn(L" -H \"Content-Type: application/json\" \\");
sbCurl.AppendLn(L" -d '{\"text\":\"{{message}}\"}'");
CkHttpCurlW curl;
// In this example, the value we'll provide for the "message" variable
// will contain chars that require JSON escaping.
curl.SetVar(L"message",L"He said \"Hello, world!\"");
// To demonstrate how the variables are replaced, this example does not execute the curl command.
// Instead, it generates the raw HTTP request that would be sent if the curl command were run.
CkStringBuilderW sbRawRequest;
success = curl.ToRawRequest(sbCurl.getAsString(),sbRawRequest);
if (success == false) {
wprintf(L"%s\n",curl.lastErrorText());
return;
}
wprintf(L"%s\n",sbRawRequest.getAsString());
// The output is shown below.
// Notice that the quote chars around "Hello World!" are properly JSON escaped.
// POST /messages HTTP/1.1
// Host: api.example.com
// Content-Type: application/json
// Content-Length: 36
//
// {"text":"He said \"Hello, world!\""}
}