// Go 1.5 introduced the RawPath field to hold the encoded form of Path.
// The Parse function sets both Path and RawPath in the URL it returns,
// and URL's String method uses RawPath if it is a valid encoding of Path,
-// by calling the EncodedPath method.
+// by calling the EscapedPath method.
//
// In earlier versions of Go, the more indirect workarounds were that an
// HTTP server could consult req.RequestURI and an HTTP client could
goto Error
}
// RawPath is a hint as to the encoding of Path to use
- // in url.EncodedPath. If that method already gets the
+ // in url.EscapedPath. If that method already gets the
// right answer without RawPath, leave it empty.
// This will help make sure that people don't rely on it in general.
if url.EscapedPath() != rest && validEncodedPath(rest) {
//
// If u.Opaque is non-empty, String uses the first form;
// otherwise it uses the second form.
-// To obtain the path, String uses u.EncodedPath().
+// To obtain the path, String uses u.EscapedPath().
//
// In the second form, the following rules apply:
// - if u.Scheme is empty, scheme: is omitted.