URI’s API is not necessarily great.
URI::join
will work only if the first one starts out as an absolute URI with protocol, and the later ones are relative in the right ways… except I try to do that and can’t even get that to work.
This at least doesn’t error, but why is it skipping the middle component?
URI::join('http://somewhere.com/resource', './edit', '12?option=test')
I think maybe URI just kind of sucks. It lacks significant API on instances, such as an instance #join
or method to evaluate relative to a base uriURI that you’d expect. It’s just kinda crappy.
I think you’re going to have to write it yourself. Or just use File.join
and other File path methods, after testing all the edge cases you can think of to make sure it does what you want/expect.
edit 9 Dec 2016 I figured out the addressable gem does it very nicely.
base = Addressable::URI.parse("http://example.com")
base + "foo.html"
# => #<Addressable::URI:0x3ff9964aabe4 URI:http://example.com/foo.html>
base = Addressable::URI.parse("http://example.com/path/to/file.html")
base + "relative_file.xml"
# => #<Addressable::URI:0x3ff99648bc80 URI:http://example.com/path/to/relative_file.xml>
base = Addressable::URI.parse("https://example.com/path")
base + "//newhost/somewhere.jpg"
# => #<Addressable::URI:0x3ff9960c9ebc URI:https://newhost/somewhere.jpg>
base = Addressable::URI.parse("http://example.com/path/subpath/file.html")
base + "../up-one-level.html"
=> #<Addressable::URI:0x3fe13ec5e928 URI:http://example.com/path/up-one-level.html>