Automatically decompress gzip response via WebClient.DownloadData

WebClient uses HttpWebRequest under the covers. And HttpWebRequest supports gzip/deflate decompression. See HttpWebRequest AutomaticDecompression property

However, WebClient class does not expose this property directly. So you will have to derive from it to set the property on the underlying HttpWebRequest.

class MyWebClient : WebClient
{
    protected override WebRequest GetWebRequest(Uri address)
    {
        HttpWebRequest request = base.GetWebRequest(address) as HttpWebRequest;
        request.AutomaticDecompression = DecompressionMethods.Deflate | DecompressionMethods.GZip;
        return request;
    }
}

Depending on your situation, it may be simpler to do the decompression yourself.

using System.IO.Compression;
using System.Net;

try
{
    var client = new WebClient();
    client.Headers[HttpRequestHeader.AcceptEncoding] = "gzip";
    var responseStream = new GZipStream(client.OpenRead(myUrl), CompressionMode.Decompress);
    var reader = new StreamReader(responseStream);
    var textResponse = reader.ReadToEnd();

    // do stuff

}

I created all the temporary variables for clarity. This can all be flattened to only client and textResponse.

Or, if simplicity is the goal, you could even do this using ServiceStack.Text by Demis Bellot:

using ServiceStack.Text;

var resp = "some url".GetJsonFromUrl();

(There are other .Get*FromUrl extension methods)