vote up 3 vote down star
1

I am in the process of fixing some bad UTF8 encoding. I am currently using PHP 5 and MySQL

In my database I have a few instances of bad encodings that print like: î

  • The database collation is
  • utf8_general_ci PHP is using a proper
  • UTF8 header Notepad++ is set to use
  • UTF8 without BOM database management is handled in phpMyAdmin
  • not all cases of accented characters are broken

What I need is some sort of function that will help me map the instances of î, í, ü and others like it to their proper accented UTF8 characters.

flag

70% accept rate
Perhaps you could list the characters those are supposed to represent? And maybe a hex dump? – Managu Aug 28 at 2:35
A quick look seems to suggest that your strings might have been "double" utf-8 encoded. I.e. encoded in utf-8, those bytes taken as unicode characters, and the result encoded in utf-8. Going backwards: "î"="\xC3\x83\xC2\xAE" <-(utf-8)- "\xC3\xAE" <-(utf-8)- "\xEE" = "î". Or perhaps not -- not much data to diagnose here. – Managu Aug 28 at 2:46
It is possible that it was double encoded. Is there a safe way to programatically check this, and if so what is the best way to safely decode the double encoding? – Jayrox Aug 28 at 3:10

4 Answers

vote up 4 vote down

I've had to try to 'fix' a number of UTF8 broken situations in the past, and unfortunately it's never easy, and often rather impossible.

Unless you can determine exactly how it was broken, and it was always broken in that exact same way, then it's going to be hard to 'undo' the damage.

If you want to try to undo the damage, your best bet would be to start writing some sample code, where you attempt numerous variations on calls to mb_convert_encoding() to see if you can find a combination of 'from' and 'to' that fixes your data. In the end, it's often best to not even bother worrying about fixing the old data because of the pain levels involved, but instead to just fix things going forward.

However, before doing this, you need to make sure that you fix everything that is causing this issue in the first place. You've already mentioned that your DB table collation and editors are set properly. But there are more places where you need to check to make sure that everything is properly UTF-8:

  • Make sure that you are serving your HTML as UTF-8:
    • header("Content-Type: text/html; charset=utf-8");
  • Change your PHP default charset to utf-8:
    • ini_set("default_charset", 'utf-8');
  • If your database doesn't ALWAYS talk in utf-8, then you may need to tell it on a per connection basis to ensure it's in utf-8 mode, in MySQL you do that by issuing:
    • charset utf8
  • You may need to tell your webserver to always try to talk in UTF8, in Apache this command is:
    • AddDefaultCharset UTF-8
  • Finally, you need to ALWAYS make sure that you are using PHP functions that are properly UTF-8 complaint. This means always using the mb_* styled 'multibyte aware' string functions. It also means when calling functions such as htmlspecialchars(), that you include the appropriate 'utf-8' charset parameter at the end to make sure that it doesn't encode them incorrectly.

If you miss up on any one step through your whole process, the encoding can be mangled and problems arise. Once you get in the 'groove' of doing utf-8 though, this all becomes second nature. And of course, PHP6 is supposed to be fully unicode complaint from the getgo, which will make lots of this easier (hopefully)

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

I know this isn't very elegant, but after it was mentioned that the strings may be double encoded, I made this function:

function fix_double encoding($string)
{
	$utf8_chars = explode(' ', 'À Á Â Ã Ä Å Æ Ç È É Ê Ë Ì Í Î Ï Ð Ñ Ò Ó Ô Õ Ö × Ø Ù Ú Û Ü Ý Þ ß à á â ã ä å æ ç è é ê ë ì í î ï ð ñ ò ó ô õ ö');
	$utf8_double_encoded = array();
	foreach($utf8_chars as $utf8_char)
	{
    		$utf8_double_encoded[] = utf8_encode(utf8_encode($utf8_char));
	}
	$string = str_replace($utf8_double_encoded, $utf8_chars, $string);
	return $string;
}

This seems to work perfectly to remove the double encoding I am experiencing. I am probably missing some of the characters that could be an issue to others. However, for my needs it is working perfectly.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

It looks like your utf-8 is being interpreted as iso8859-1 or Win-1250 at some point.

When you say "In my database I have a few instances of bad encodings" - how did you check this? Through your app, phpmyadmin or the command line client? Are all utf-8 encodings showing up like this or only some? Is it possible you had the encodings wrong and it has been incorrectly converted from iso8859-1 to utf-8 when it was utf-8 already?

link|flag
I use phpmyadmin for database management. And no, not all cases are badly encoded. – Jayrox Aug 28 at 3:09
vote up 0 vote down

The way is to convert to binary and then to correct encoding

link|flag

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.