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Home/ Questions/Q 287441
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 12, 20262026-05-12T05:43:33+00:00 2026-05-12T05:43:33+00:00

The system I’m running on is Windows XP, with JRE 1.6. I do this

  • 0

The system I’m running on is Windows XP, with JRE 1.6.

I do this :

public static void main(String[] args) {
    try {
        System.out.println(new File("C:\\test a.xml").toURI().toURL());
    } catch (Exception e) {
        e.printStackTrace();
    }       
}

and I get this : file:/C:/test%20a.xml

How come the given URL doesn’t have two slashes before the C: ? I expected file://C:.... Is it normal behaviour?


EDIT :

From Java source code : java.net.URLStreamHandler.toExternalForm(URL)

    result.append(":");
    if (u.getAuthority() != null && u.getAuthority().length() > 0) {
        result.append("//");
        result.append(u.getAuthority());
    }

It seems that the Authority part of a file URL is null or empty, and thus the double slash is skipped. So what is the authority part of a URL and is it really absent from the file protocol?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-12T05:43:33+00:00Added an answer on May 12, 2026 at 5:43 am

    That’s an interesting question.

    First things first: I get the same results on JRE6. I even get that when I lop off the toURL() part.

    RFC2396 does not actually require two slashes. According to section 3:

    The URI syntax is dependent upon the
    scheme. In general, absolute URI are
    written as follows:

    <scheme>:<scheme-specific-part>
    

    Having said that, RFC2396 has been superseded by RFC3986, which states

    The generic URI syntax consists of a
    hierarchical sequence of omponents
    referred to as the scheme, authority,
    path, query, and fragment.

      URI         = scheme ":" hier-part [ "?" query ] [ "#" fragment ]
    
      hier-part   = "//" authority path-abempty
                  / path-absolute
                  / path-rootless
                  / path-empty
    

    The scheme and path components are
    required, though the path may be empty
    (no characters). When authority is
    present, the path must either be empty
    or begin with a slash (“/”) character.
    When authority is not present, the
    path cannot begin with two slash
    characters (“//”). These restrictions
    result in five different ABNF rules
    for a path (Section 3.3), only one of
    which will match any given URI
    reference.

    So, there you go. Since file URIs have no authority segment, they’re forbidden from starting with //.

    However, that RFC didn’t come around until 2005, and Java references RFC2396, so I don’t know why it’s following this convention, as file URLs before the new RFC have always had two slashes.

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