Struct form_urlencoded::Serializer [−][src]
pub struct Serializer<'a, T: Target> { /* fields omitted */ }Expand description
Implementations
Create a new application/x-www-form-urlencoded serializer for the given target.
If the target is non-empty,
its content is assumed to already be in application/x-www-form-urlencoded syntax.
Create a new application/x-www-form-urlencoded serializer
for a suffix of the given target.
If that suffix is non-empty,
its content is assumed to already be in application/x-www-form-urlencoded syntax.
Remove any existing name/value pair.
Panics if called after .finish().
Set the character encoding to be used for names and values before percent-encoding.
Serialize and append a name/value pair.
Panics if called after .finish().
Serialize and append a name of parameter without any value.
Panics if called after .finish().
Serialize and append a number of name/value pairs.
This simply calls append_pair repeatedly.
This can be more convenient, so the user doesn’t need to introduce a block
to limit the scope of Serializer’s borrow of its string.
Panics if called after .finish().
pub fn extend_keys_only<I, K>(&mut self, iter: I) -> &mut Self where
I: IntoIterator,
I::Item: Borrow<K>,
K: AsRef<str>,
pub fn extend_keys_only<I, K>(&mut self, iter: I) -> &mut Self where
I: IntoIterator,
I::Item: Borrow<K>,
K: AsRef<str>,
Serialize and append a number of names without values.
This simply calls append_key_only repeatedly.
This can be more convenient, so the user doesn’t need to introduce a block
to limit the scope of Serializer’s borrow of its string.
Panics if called after .finish().
If this serializer was constructed with a string, take and return that string.
use form_urlencoded;
let encoded: String = form_urlencoded::Serializer::new(String::new())
.append_pair("foo", "bar & baz")
.append_pair("saison", "Été+hiver")
.finish();
assert_eq!(encoded, "foo=bar+%26+baz&saison=%C3%89t%C3%A9%2Bhiver");Panics if called more than once.