Open GoogleCodeExporter opened 9 years ago
Thanks for reporting this.
Out of curiosity, why are you referencing the GoogleBase dll?
Original comment by ccherub...@google.com
on 6 Oct 2011 at 12:37
It's a leftover from when I was testing it, it is not necessary and can be
removed
Original comment by j...@potentiality.com.au
on 6 Oct 2011 at 1:06
Request from
http://code.google.com/apis/analytics/docs/gdata/gdataExplorer.html looks
(https://www.google.com/analytics/feeds/data?ids=ga%3A5814208&dimensions=ga%3Amo
nth%2Cga%3ApagePath&metrics=ga%3Apageviews&filters=ga%3ApagePath%3D%40%2Fuk%2Fkc
s%2Focd.aspx%3Bga%3ApagePath%3D%40%23h_&start-date=2011-07-01&end-date=2011-10-0
6&max-results=50)
identical to DataQuery.CalculateQuery except # is not URL encoded
( https://www.google.com/analytics/feeds/data?max-results=200&dimensions=ga%3Am
onth%2Cga%3ApagePath&end-date=2011-09-06&filters=ga%3ApagePath%3D%40%2Fuk%2Fkcs%
2Focd.aspx%3Bga%3ApagePath%3D%40#h_&ids=ga%3A5814208&metrics=ga%3Apageviews&star
t-date=2011-06-01)
Original comment by j...@potentiality.com.au
on 6 Oct 2011 at 1:48
I just performed some tests and it looks like the .NET library correctly
encodes the # symbol as %23. The Data Feed Query Explorer also does the same.
Are you using the latest version of the library?
If you still get the exception when using the # symbol in your filter, please
capture the HTTP traffic with Fiddler and share it here so that inspect it.
Thanks
Original comment by ccherub...@google.com
on 21 Oct 2011 at 12:25
Original issue reported on code.google.com by
j...@potentiality.com.au
on 6 Oct 2011 at 12:29