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Hello,

I'm using PHP to handle text from a variety of sources. I don't anticipate it will be anything other than UTF-8, ISO-8859-1, or perhaps WINDOWS-1252. If it's anything other than one of those, I just need to make sure the text gets turned into a valid UTF-8 string, even if characters are lost. Does the //TRANSLIT option of iconv solve this? For example, would this code ensure that a string is safe to insert into a UTF-8 encoded document (or database)?

function make_safe_for_utf8_use($string) {

    $encoding = mb_detect_encoding($string, "UTF-8,ISO-8859-1,WINDOWS-1252");

    if ($encoding != 'UTF-8') {
        return iconv($encoding, 'UTF-8//TRANSLIT', $string);
    } else {
        return $string;
    }
}

Thanks very much, Brian

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3 Answers

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UTF-8 can store any Unicode character. If your encoding is anything else at all, including ISO-8859-1 or Windows-1252, UTF-8 can store every character in it. So you don't have to worry about losing any characters when you convert a string from any other encoding to UTF-8.

Further, both ISO-8859-1 and Windows-1252 are single-byte encodings where any byte is valid. It is not technically possible to distinguish between them. I would chose Windows-1252 as your default match for non-UTF-8 sequences, as the only bytes that decode differently are the range 0x80-0x9F. These decode to various characters like smart quotes and the Euro in Windows-1252, whereas in ISO-8859-1 they are invisible control characters which are almost never used. Web browsers may sometimes say they are using ISO-8859-1, but often they will really be using Windows-1252.

would this code ensure that a string is safe to insert into a UTF-8 encoded document

You would certainly want to set the optional ‘strict’ parameter to TRUE for this purpose. But I'm not sure this actually covers all invalid UTF-8 sequences. The function does not claim to check a byte sequence for UTF-8 validity explicitly. There have been known cases where mb_detect_encoding would guess UTF-8 incorrectly before, though I don't know if that can still happen in strict mode.

If you want to be sure, do it yourself using the W3-recommended regex:

if (preg_match('%^(?:
      [\x09\x0A\x0D\x20-\x7E]            # ASCII
    | [\xC2-\xDF][\x80-\xBF]             # non-overlong 2-byte
    | \xE0[\xA0-\xBF][\x80-\xBF]         # excluding overlongs
    | [\xE1-\xEC\xEE\xEF][\x80-\xBF]{2}  # straight 3-byte
    | \xED[\x80-\x9F][\x80-\xBF]         # excluding surrogates
    | \xF0[\x90-\xBF][\x80-\xBF]{2}      # planes 1-3
    | [\xF1-\xF3][\x80-\xBF]{3}          # planes 4-15
    | \xF4[\x80-\x8F][\x80-\xBF]{2}      # plane 16
)*$%xs', $string)
    return $string;
else
    return iconv('CP1252', 'UTF-8', $string);
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Thanks very much. I know developers always comment on the slowness of regexes - how careful should I be using this in big loops with lots of text? For example, a loop that iterates 200 times and cleanses text of 10,000 characters on each iteration. – Brian Oct 6 at 15:56
Whilst I'm not a fan of regex, in this case it shouldn't be that bad. Regex gets slow when you have successive or nested ?/*/+ sequences that can cause it to have to backtrack looking for different ways to match. That won't happen in this case. – bobince Oct 6 at 16:09
Excellent. So when using iconv as you describe above, if I specify CP1252 as the input charset, and the string is something other than CP1252 or ISO-8859-1, it will return a UTF-8 safe string, although some characters may be lost. Is that correct? – Brian Oct 6 at 16:25
It will return a UTF-8-safe string, yes. Non-ASCII characters will come as the wrong characters, but not dangerous ones. – bobince Oct 6 at 18:36
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Have a look at http://www.phpwact.org/php/i18n/charsets for a guide about charsets. This page links to a page specifically for utf8.

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Not sure if this would achieve the same thing, but couldn't you just use utf8_encode() on all text without worrying about detection? If the text is already UTF-8, it won't hurt it. And if it's not, it will be converted. If you've already thought about doing this, is there a reason this wouldn't work for you?

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utf8_encode is not idempotent for byte sequences that are already UTF-8. Instead it converts them to UTF-8 as if they were previously ISO-8859-1; so you'll get eg. ‘α’ instead of 'α'. – bobince Oct 6 at 16:13

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