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I have a bizarre problem: Somewhere in my HTML/PHP code there's a hidden, invisible character that I can't seem to get rid of. By copying it from Firebug and converting it I identified it as  or 'Zero width no-break space'. It shows up as non-empty text node in my website and is causing a serious layout problem.

The problem is, I can't get rid of it. I can't see it in my files even when turning Invisibles on (d'uh). I can't seem to find it, no search tool seems to pick up on it. I rewrote my code around where it could be, but it seems to be somewhere deeper in one of the framework files.

Any good tools to find characters by charcode across files or something like that? (Mac OS X)

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Don't blame yourself too much. If a layout breaks because of a zero-width, non-breaking space, the renderer is misunderstanding either the sero-width or the non-breaking part. – MSalters Jul 2 at 15:23
That's debatable I suppose. The non-breaking space connected two proper whitespace characters, so it's supposed to render something I guess. And that something happened to be squished inbetween two full-width, no-margin DIVs, which is why it showed up very prominently. I rather blame Microsoft for inventing BOMs to begin with. ;-) – deceze Jul 3 at 0:47

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You don't get the character in the editor, because you can't find it in text editors. #FEFF or #FFFE are so-called byte-order marks. They are a Microsoft invention to tell in a Unicode file, in which order multi-byte characters are stored.

To get rid of it, tell your editor to save the file either as ANSI/ISO-8859 or as Unicode without BOM. If your editor can't do so, you'll either have to switch editors (sadly) or use some kind of truncation tool like, e.g., a hex editor that allows you to see how the file really looks.

On googleing, it seems, that TextWrangler has a "UTF-8, no BOM" mode. Otherwise, if you're comfortable with the terminal, you can use Vim:

:set nobomb

and save the file. Presto!

The characters are always the very first in a text file. Editors with support for the BOM will not, as I mentioned, show it to you at all.

Cheers,

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Now that would explain it, but no insult necessary. Weird that it translates into a proper character in the browser. I'll look for that... – deceze Jul 1 at 8:02
Sorry, the 'you don't get it' was no insult, it should terminate in a comma. My apologies! – Boldewyn Jul 1 at 8:07
Yep, that was indeed it. I wonder where that came from, as my editor (TextMate) doesn't save BOMs... – deceze Jul 1 at 8:08
I saw that before, but it usually rendered as garbage on top of the page. Seems it's harder to find when it's in the middle of a page...? Anyway, thanks! :) – deceze Jul 1 at 8:12
It can occur in the middle of a page, when you use PHP's include statement with a BOM-started file to include. Otherwise it should usually not appear (although it is a standard Unicode character and can be used as such). – Boldewyn Jul 1 at 8:25
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use notepad plus plus.. there is an option to show all characters

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As stated, I'm more looking for a Mac OS X (or UNIX) tool. – deceze Jul 1 at 7:34
yep i missed that... i think i saw some where it can be run using Crossover. not pretty solution though – Umair Ahmed Jul 1 at 7:37
Btw: Notepad++ has an option to save Unicode files without BOM. Just in case you're gonna switch to Windows ;-) – Boldewyn Jul 1 at 11:39
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vi or vim will show up any non-EOL characters.

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Anything that can search across files? I already skimmed all the places I suspected it in. – deceze Jul 1 at 7:40
grep could probably do it... but with unicode characters, it's a little hard, because you never know what encoding the file is in, and hence what to pass to grep. – Matthew Scharley Jul 1 at 7:42
Don't have too much experience with grep, would this be the correct usage? kk:trunk deceze$ grep -R '/\xFEFF/' . – deceze Jul 1 at 7:52
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I'm pretty sure Textwrangler will do it.

EDIT: VersionTracker link as Bare Bones site seems to be down again.

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I'm not a Mac user, but my general advice would be: when all else fails, use a hex editor. Very useful in such cases.

See "Comparison of hex editors" in WikiPedia.

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It's a byte-order mark. Under Mac OS X: open terminal window, go to your sources and type:

grep -rn $'\xFEFF' *

It will show you the line numbers and filenames containing BOM.

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Since it almost certainly are the first two bytes of the file, the problem is to get it away. I'm not quite experienced with awk, but it should be a one-liner with it to remove the first two bytes of a file. – Boldewyn Jul 1 at 8:27

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