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I have an ASP.NET page which takes a number of parameters in the query string:

search.aspx?q=123&source=WebSearch

This would display the first page of search results. Now within the rendering of that page, I want to display a set of links that allow the user to jump to different pages within the search results. I can do this simply by append &page=1 or &page=2 etc.

Where it gets complicated is that I want to preserve the input query string from the original page for every parameter except the one that I'm trying to change. There may be other parameters in the url used by other components and the value I'm trying to replace may or may not already be defined:

search.aspx?q=123&source=WebSearch&page=1&Theme=Blue

In this case to generate a link to the next page of results, I want to change page=1 to page=2 while leaving the rest of the query string unchanged.

Is there a builtin way to do this, or do I need to do all of the string parsing/recombining manually?

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You can't modify the QueryString directly as it is readonly. You will need to get the values, modify them, then put them back together. Try this:

var nameValues = HttpUtility.ParseQueryString(Request.QueryString.ToString());
nameValues.Set("page", "2");
string url = Request.Url.AbsolutePath;
string updatedQueryString = "?" + nameValues.ToString();
Response.Redirect(url + updatedQueryString);

The ParseQueryString method returns a NameValueCollection (actually it really returns a HttpValueCollection which encodes the results, as I mention in an answer to another question). You can then use the Set method to update a value. You can also use the Add method to add a new one, or Remove to remove a value. Finally, calling ToString() on the name NameValueCollection returns the name value pairs in a name1=value1&name2=value2 querystring ready format. Once you have that append it to the URL and redirect.

Alternately, you can add a new key, or modify an existing one, using the indexer:

nameValues["temp"] = "hello!"; // add "temp" if it didn't exist
nameValues["temp"] = "hello, world!"; // overwrite "temp"
nameValues.Remove("temp"); // can't remove via indexer

You may need to add a using System.Collections.Specialized; to make use of the NameValueCollection class.


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