Setting a WebRequest's body data
With HttpWebRequest.GetRequestStream
Code example from http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/d4cek6cc.aspx
string postData = "firstone=" + inputData;
ASCIIEncoding encoding = new ASCIIEncoding ();
byte[] byte1 = encoding.GetBytes (postData);
// Set the content type of the data being posted.
myHttpWebRequest.ContentType = "application/x-www-form-urlencoded";
// Set the content length of the string being posted.
myHttpWebRequest.ContentLength = byte1.Length;
Stream newStream = myHttpWebRequest.GetRequestStream ();
newStream.Write (byte1, 0, byte1.Length);
From one of my own code:
var request = (HttpWebRequest)WebRequest.Create(uri);
request.Credentials = this.credentials;
request.Method = method;
request.ContentType = "application/atom+xml;type=entry";
using (Stream requestStream = request.GetRequestStream())
using (var xmlWriter = XmlWriter.Create(requestStream, new XmlWriterSettings() { Indent = true, NewLineHandling = NewLineHandling.Entitize, }))
{
cmisAtomEntry.WriteXml(xmlWriter);
}
try
{
return (HttpWebResponse)request.GetResponse();
}
catch (WebException wex)
{
var httpResponse = wex.Response as HttpWebResponse;
if (httpResponse != null)
{
throw new ApplicationException(string.Format(
"Remote server call {0} {1} resulted in a http error {2} {3}.",
method,
uri,
httpResponse.StatusCode,
httpResponse.StatusDescription), wex);
}
else
{
throw new ApplicationException(string.Format(
"Remote server call {0} {1} resulted in an error.",
method,
uri), wex);
}
}
catch (Exception)
{
throw;
}
Update
See my other SO answer.
Original
var request = (HttpWebRequest)WebRequest.Create("https://example.com/endpoint");
string stringData = ""; // place body here
var data = Encoding.Default.GetBytes(stringData); // note: choose appropriate encoding
request.Method = "PUT";
request.ContentType = ""; // place MIME type here
request.ContentLength = data.Length;
var newStream = request.GetRequestStream(); // get a ref to the request body so it can be modified
newStream.Write(data, 0, data.Length);
newStream.Close();
The answers in this topic are all great. However i'd like to propose another one. Most likely you have been given an api and want that into your c# project. Using Postman, you can setup and test the api call there and once it runs properly, you can simply click 'Code' and the request that you have been working on, is written to a c# snippet. like this:
var client = new RestClient("https://api.XXXXX.nl/oauth/token");
client.Timeout = -1;
var request = new RestRequest(Method.POST);
request.AddHeader("Authorization", "Basic N2I1YTM4************************************jI0YzJhNDg=");
request.AddHeader("Content-Type", "application/x-www-form-urlencoded");
request.AddHeader("Content-Type", "application/x-www-form-urlencoded");
request.AddParameter("grant_type", "password");
request.AddParameter("username", "[email protected]");
request.AddParameter("password", "XXXXXXXXXXXXX");
IRestResponse response = client.Execute(request);
Console.WriteLine(response.Content);
The code above depends on the nuget package RestSharp, which you can easily install.