STINNER Victor <[email protected]> added the comment:
Oops, I missed this issue. I just marked my bpo-42975 issue as a duplicate of
this one.
My message:
urllib.parse.parse_qsl() uses "&" *and* ";" as separators:
>>> urllib.parse.parse_qsl("a=1&b=2&c=3")
[('a', '1'), ('b', '2'), ('c', '3')]
>>> urllib.parse.parse_qsl("a=1&b=2;c=3")
[('a', '1'), ('b', '2'), ('c', '3')]
But the W3C standards evolved and now suggest against considering semicolon
(";") as a separator:
https://www.w3.org/TR/2014/REC-html5-20141028/forms.html#url-encoded-form-data
"This form data set encoding is in many ways an aberrant monstrosity, the
result of many years of implementation accidents and compromises leading to a
set of requirements necessary for interoperability, but in no way representing
good design practices. In particular, readers are cautioned to pay close
attention to the twisted details involving repeated (and in some cases nested)
conversions between character encodings and byte sequences."
"To decode application/x-www-form-urlencoded payloads (...) Let strings be the
result of strictly splitting the string payload on U+0026 AMPERSAND characters
(&)."
Maybe we should even go further in Python 3.10 and only split at "&" by
default, but let the caller to opt-in for ";" separator as well.
----------
nosy: +vstinner
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