Function iri_string::validate::fragment [−][src]
Expand description
Validates IRI fragment.
This validator corresponds to RiFragmentStr
and RiFragmentString
types.
Note that the first #
character in an IRI is not a part of a fragment.
For example, https://example.com/#foo
has a fragment foo
, not #foo
.
Examples
This type can have an IRI fragment.
Note that the IRI foo://bar/baz#qux
has the fragment qux
, not #qux
.
use iri_string::{spec::UriSpec, validate::fragment};
assert!(fragment::<UriSpec>("").is_ok());
assert!(fragment::<UriSpec>("foo").is_ok());
assert!(fragment::<UriSpec>("foo/bar").is_ok());
assert!(fragment::<UriSpec>("/foo/bar").is_ok());
assert!(fragment::<UriSpec>("//foo/bar").is_ok());
assert!(fragment::<UriSpec>("https://user:pass@example.com:8080").is_ok());
assert!(fragment::<UriSpec>("https://example.com/").is_ok());
Some characters and sequences cannot used in a fragment.
use iri_string::{spec::UriSpec, validate::fragment};
// `<` and `>` cannot directly appear in an IRI reference.
assert!(fragment::<UriSpec>("<not allowed>").is_err());
// Broken percent encoding cannot appear in an IRI reference.
assert!(fragment::<UriSpec>("%").is_err());
assert!(fragment::<UriSpec>("%GG").is_err());
// Hash sign `#` cannot appear in an IRI fragment.
assert!(fragment::<UriSpec>("#hash").is_err());