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I've noticed that a lot of websites, when searching or just browsing, will add a get variable called utf and set it equal to a check mark (?utf8=✓).

Two examples are:

  • Dotabuff has its search URL include it. Example: dotabuff.com/search?utf8=✓&q=PPD

  • Bibme also has its search URL include it. Example: bibme.org/mla/website-citation/search?utf8=✓&q=someurl.com

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1 Answer 1

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URIs contain utf8=✓ to force the client to send UTF-8.
It works because the key-value-pair (which is ignored by the target) contains a unicode-only character.

From Is the use of “utf8=✓” preferable to “utf8=true”?:

By default, older versions of IE (<=8) will submit form data in Latin-1 encoding if possible. By including a character that can't be expressed in Latin-1, IE is forced to use UTF-8 encoding for its form submissions, which simplifies various backend processes, for example database persistence.

If the parameter was instead utf8=true then this wouldn't trigger the UTF-8 encoding in these browsers.

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  • 18
    Is there a reason IE would use Latin other than being IE?
    – Jon
    Dec 7, 2014 at 0:29
  • 10
    No, there's no reason for a long time now. Dec 7, 2014 at 0:30
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    In fairness, depending on how the server was set up there's no guarantee that utf8=✓ would actually be ignored by the server, as the server has access to the entire URL. Though if it's a site that's using it, it probably isn't being used for anything by the server.
    – M. Justin
    Nov 18, 2016 at 16:05
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    @Frank for whatever reason all/most IE products (Outlook/OWA for example) default to Latin-1 encoding out of the box unless configured otherwise. I assume interoperability(?) is one of the possible reasons.
    – ffledgling
    Jan 5, 2017 at 11:29
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    GitLab does the same thing. I was like "How is this allowed, with all the URl encoding we usually need to do to escape special characters in the complete URL?" Perfect answer. May 12, 2017 at 17:33

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