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In my database there is a field which stores Arabic names. Field type is VARCHAR.

When I run SELECT statement in SQL Editor to get records then it shows me value ãÇ äÇá which is actually ما نال

Problem is when I am displaying this value in ASP.Net, it is displayed as ÒÃ õÃß. I have changed page encoding to UTF-8 but no luck. How do I display Arabic names properly in ASP.Net that are stored in VARCHAR field? Please note field type cannot be changed in database.

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  • If the database has the proper collation, you should be getting the proper value in the string - check that. As for the page output, you'll find that it's quite tricky to ensure that it's actually in UTF-8 - some of the issues occur on the ASP.NET side, some in your code, some on the browser side. Does yourInputString.ToCharArray().Select(i => (int)i) produce the expected code points (e.g. 1605, 1575, 32, 1606, 1575, 1604)?
    – Luaan
    Jun 23, 2015 at 12:06
  • Yes I am getting points 201, 195, 32, 245, 195, 223. Jun 23, 2015 at 12:26
  • Okay, that's bad. That means you don't actually have the unicode characters - your database/table/column collation is wrong. This means that you'll have to either fix the collation, or find the proper encoding to re-encode the C# string.
    – Luaan
    Jun 23, 2015 at 12:31
  • Ok I changed column type to NVARCHAR but same issue. What to do now? Jun 23, 2015 at 12:35
  • Your data is already botched, so nvarchar doesn't save you - it's too late for that, basically. Do you have a way of exporting the data in the proper encoding and then converting them to their proper nvarchar representation?
    – Luaan
    Jun 23, 2015 at 12:43

2 Answers 2

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Your collation is wrong - you're storing arabic-collated data in a non-arabic-collated varchar column.

However, you should be able to force the correct collation just for the select by using the collate keyword. A quick sample:

select [Text] collate Arabic_CI_AI_KS_WS from YourTable;

If this doesn't help, the data has already been inserted incorrectly in the table. That's a bit of a problem.

First, you have to find the proper mis-encodings that lead to where you are now. The problem is, it's pretty likely you're actually dealing with a MS SQL-specific encoding, which probably will not be easy to handle in .NET.

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  • I am actually using Sybase. Jun 23, 2015 at 12:41
  • @FrankMartin How close that is to MS SQL depends mostly on the version :D What version are you using?
    – Luaan
    Jun 23, 2015 at 12:44
  • I am using Adaptive Server Enterprise/15.7/EBF 22774 :) Jun 23, 2015 at 12:45
  • I created a new table with NVARCHAR field type, entered one Arabic name and it has same issue. Jun 23, 2015 at 13:08
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    @FrankMartin I can't really help you much, I don't have any environment to test this. Have you used a unicode literal to enter the name (N'ما نال' on MS SQL)? Could it be that the application you're editing handles the encoding wrong? I couldn't find any encoding that would encode your string the way you're suggesting... how are you filling the database in the first place?
    – Luaan
    Jun 23, 2015 at 13:32
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Found the solution. Use

KeepOrgMultibyte=1

in Sybase connection string in web.config. Example given below.

<add name="Sybase" connectionString="Data Source='192.168.0.70';Port=9100;UID='myuser';PWD='mypassword';Database='mydatabase';KeepOrgMultibyte=1;"/>

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