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When I am searching a gem in rubygems, I notice that the url is:

https://rubygems.org/search?utf8=✓&query=jekyll-multiple-languages

I want to know what is the purpose of using instead of any other characters.

Any explanation is welcome. :)

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  • 1
    probably it's to detect if something's mangling the URLs somewhere along the way - if something doesn't actually support UTF-8 in the URLs, it'll come through to the server as some other (set of) character(s). But the only people who could answer this for sure would be the developers behind the site. Oct 9, 2014 at 7:54
  • 1 plus point is more readability
    – divyenduz
    Oct 9, 2014 at 7:58
  • You want to know why rubygems.org uses it? Or what’s the meaning of this character in URLs, no matter who uses them?
    – unor
    Oct 11, 2014 at 19:45
  • @unor, I want to know as more as possible about this. :)
    – srain
    Oct 12, 2014 at 1:13
  • probably because it looks cool
    – mukunda
    Dec 7, 2014 at 3:56

1 Answer 1

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The URI standard doesn’t define a specific meaning for it (i.e., it’s not a reserved character), so it just represents (user-defined) data.

Why is rubygems.org using it? Only they can know for sure, but a likely reason could be the following:

According to Gareth’s answer on Programmers SE, Internet Explorer 8 (and older versions) "will submit form data in Latin-1 encoding if possible". As cannot be encoded in Latin-1, IE uses UTF-8 for submitting the form data.

So if that’s the reason, any non-ASCII character would probably do the job, but choosing a checkmark makes sense in that context.
For the same purpose, Ruby on Rails used instead (see What is the _snowman param in Ruby on Rails 3 forms for?).

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  • It's not a valid URL character; see stackoverflow.com/questions/1547899/…
    – Robert
    Dec 7, 2014 at 4:03
  • @Robert: Like any non-ASCII character, you’d have to percent-encode it in URIs, i.e. %E2%9C%93.
    – unor
    Dec 7, 2014 at 4:05
  • @StephanBijzitter: And why is that?
    – unor
    Nov 4, 2015 at 10:10
  • Your third paragraph contradicts your first Nov 4, 2015 at 10:13
  • @StephanBijzitter: I don’t see why. The first paragraph says that it’s not a reserved character (i.e., the URI standard doesn’t define any meaning for it, like it does for /, # etc.). The third paragraph is speculation why the website in question might use this character; the point is that it doesn’t matter which character gets used, as long as it has to be percent-encoded.
    – unor
    Nov 4, 2015 at 10:16

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