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Please can you help me decode this URL so that it displays properly using PHP to output

This is the link http://www.megalithic.co.uk/visits.php?op=site&sid=18341&title=Ōyu

I think it's actually coming through as UTF-8 - ie &title=%C5%8Cyu

$title displays as ÅŒyu

How do I convert this in PHP? I need to use ISO-8859-1 on the page

None of these work

$title=iconv("UTF-8","ISO-8859-1",$title); 
$title=iconv('UTF-8', 'ASCII//TRANSLIT//IGNORE', $title);
$title = utf8_decode($title);
$title = urldecode($title);

Do I need to use the Multibyte MB extension and if so how? Many thanks in advance Andy

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  • that's an output problem. you're dumping $title into a non-utf display. php already urldecodes for you when it builds $_GET, so echo $_GET['title'] is going to a non-utf environment.
    – Marc B
    May 25, 2015 at 17:18
  • What is your iconv implementation (look in phpinfo())? libiconv should work fine and glibc is returning question marks sometimes. May 25, 2015 at 17:22
  • Thanks: iconv support enabled iconv implementation glibc iconv library version 2.12 Directive Local Value Master Value iconv.input_encoding ISO-8859-1 ISO-8859-1 iconv.internal_encoding ISO-8859-1 ISO-8859-1 iconv.output_encoding ISO-8859-1 ISO-8859-1
    – Megalithic
    May 25, 2015 at 18:22
  • echo $_GET['title'] outputs: ÅŒyu - thanks
    – Megalithic
    May 25, 2015 at 18:26

2 Answers 2

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If that link is to your PHP page, and you get the value via $_GET['title'], then it's already decoded from the URL encoding and $_GET['title'] holds a UTF-8 encoded string with the character Ō. This character cannot be encoded in ISO-8859-1. If that is a strict requirement, you'll have to encode the character as HTML entity in order to express it in a strictly ISO-8859-1 encoded page:

echo htmlentities('Ō', ENT_COMPAT | ENT_HTML5, 'UTF-8');
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The character "Ō" is not there in ISO-8859-1, so it is not possible to convert it from UTF-8 with any of the standard charset conversion functions.

It might, however, be possible to write a function that converts to numerical HTML encodings, like Ō for "Ō".

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