0

I have an parameter values like this:

user = {id: 1, name="tester", age="23"}

Can I pass the entire object as one of parameters in HTTP.GET request? If yes, how can I test it in my postman?

fancylynn
  • 139
  • 1
  • 12

1 Answers1

1

You can use different ways - PHP's serialize function:

$user = array(
    "id" => 1,
    "name" => "tester",
    "age" => 23
);

echo serialize($user);
echo '</br>';
echo var_dump(unserialize($_GET['user']));

Which results in the call URL:

?user=a:3:{s:2:%22id%22;i:1;s:4:%22name%22;s:6:%22tester%22;s:3:%22age%22;i:23;}

Or you could simply json_encode the object:

$user = array(
    "id" => 1,
    "name" => "tester",
    "age" => 23
);

echo json_encode($user);
echo '</br>';
var_dump(json_decode($_GET['user']));

Which results in the call URL:

?user={"id":1,"name":"tester","age":23}

This will work as long as the parameters in the URL are safe. If you can't be sure that it will be the case, you can urlencode the parameter:

$user = array(
    "id" => 1,
    "name" => "tester",
    "age" => 23
);

echo urlencode(json_encode($user));
echo '</br>';
var_dump(json_decode(urldecode($_GET['user'])));

Which will result in the encoded URL:

?user=%7B%22id%22%3A1%2C%22name%22%3A%22tester%22%2C%22age%22%3A23%7D

PHP was only used as an example here - but json and urlencoding is available in almost every language used nowadays.

maio290
  • 6,440
  • 1
  • 21
  • 38