I can't use mkdir to create folders with UTF-8 characters.
<?php
$dir_name = "Depósito";
mkdir($dir_name );
?>
But, when I browse this folder in Windows Explorer, the folder name looks like this:
Depósito
What should I do?
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I can't use mkdir to create folders with UTF-8 characters.
But, when I browse this folder in Windows Explorer, the folder name looks like this:
What should I do?
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Just Caveats (all apply to the solutions below as well):
Worse SolutionsThe following are less attractive solutions, more complicated and with more caveats. On Windows, the PHP filesystem wrapper expects and returns ISO-8859-1 strings for file/directory names. This gives you two choices:
Caveats galore!
This nightmare is why you should probably just transliterate to create filenames. | ||||
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The problem is that Windows uses utf-16 for filesystem strings, whereas Linux and others use different character sets, but often utf-8. You provided a utf-8 string, but this is interpreted as another 8-bit character set encoding in Windows, maybe Latin-1, and then the non-ascii character, which is encoded with 2 bytes in utf-8, is handled as if it was 2 characters in Windows. A normal solution is to keep your source code 100% in ascii, and to have strings somewhere else. However, PHP6 introduces Unicode functions etc., so you might want to have a look at those. | |||||||
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It is possible to interact with the filesystem on Windows using a combo of 8.3 ShortPath and a COM Scripting.FileSystemObject : https://gist.github.com/2665437 It is not bullet proof, as for example ShortPath support can be disabled on NTFS, but it should work quite well for experimenting at least. | ||||
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Try CodeIgniter Text helper from this link Read about convert_accented_characters() function, it can be costumised | |||
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Under Unix and Linux (and possibly under OS X too), the current file system encoding is given by the LC_CTYPE locale parameter (see function setlocale()). For example, it may evaluate to something like "en_US.UTF-8" that means the encoding is UTF-8. Then file names and their paths can be created with fopen() or retrieved by dir() with this encoding. Under Windows, PHP operates as a "non-Unicode aware program", then file names are converted back and forth from the UTF-16 used by the file system (Windows 2000 and later) to the selected "code page". The control panel "Regional and Language Options", tab panel "Formats" sets the code page retrieved by the LC_CTYPE option, while the "Administrative -> Language for non-Unicode Programs" sets the translation code page for file names. In western countries the LC_CTYPE parameter evaluates to something like "language_country.1252" where 1252 is the code page, also known as "Windows-1252 encoding" which is similar (but not exactly equal) to ISO-8859-1. In Japan the 932 code page is usually set instead, and so on for other countries. Under PHP you may create files whose name can be expressed with the current code page. Vice-versa, file names and paths retrieved from the file system are converted from UTF-16 to bytes using the "best-fit" current code page available at: http://www.unicode.org/Public/MAPPINGS/VENDORS/MICSFT/WindowsBestFit/ This mapping is approximated, so some charactes might be mangled in an unpredictable way. For example, "Caffé Brillì.txt" would be returned by dir() as the PHP string "Caff\xE9 Brill\xEC.txt" as expected if the current code page is 1252, while it would return the approximate "Caffe Brilli.txt" on a japanese system because accented vouels are missing from the 932 code page and then replaced with their "best-fit" non-accented vouels. Characters that cannot be translated at all are retrieved as "?" (question mark). In general, under Windows there is no safe way to detect such artifacts. More details are available in my reply to the PHP bug no. 47096 available at: | |||
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