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I am retrieving emails and some of my emails have utf encoded text. However even though my page is encoded as utf 8 - in some places when I try to out put utf text I get funny characters like:

=?utf-8?B?Rlc6INqp24zYpyDYotm+INin2LMg2YXYs9qp2LHYp9uB2bkg2qnbjCDZhtmC?= 
=?utf-8?B?2YQg2qnYsdiz2qnYqtuSINuB24zaug==?=

Whereas in other areas of the same page it displays fine. What is going on?

2 Answers 2

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It's not "funny characters", those are legitimate ASCII characters. It's just that the string is MIME encoded for transport, so you'll need to put it through mb_decode_mimeheader.

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    @Ali Good question. I believe if the string is not MIME encoded, mb_decode_mimeheader will just pass it through as-is, so it should be save to use on any string. For the email body you should parse the header for clues as to what transport encoding it was sent in.
    – deceze
    May 27, 2010 at 7:38
  • running it through mime decode leaves normal strings intact however in my case the original encoded string now shows up as a series of question marks.
    – Ali
    May 27, 2010 at 8:25
  • @Ali I think you're quickly getting into very deep waters there. If you need a more complex mail parser, I highly recommend using an existing library that covers all the edge cases. Correct mail parsing is a terrifically complex undertaking. PHP has a PECL extension called Mailparse: php.net/manual/en/book.mailparse.php
    – deceze
    May 27, 2010 at 8:34
  • I think I'm sinking already :S - actually I'm using the Zend framework to build an email interface. And right now seem to find out certain severe limitations that the framework seems to have in this respect.
    – Ali
    May 27, 2010 at 8:40
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You may be seeing undecoded e-mail headers: =? is the starting delimiter, utf-8 means the text is in utf-8 and B means base-64 encoded. ?= is the ending delimiter. So, base64_decode() the part between the question marks and you'll get the content.

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