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. :)
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. :)
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?).
%E2%9C%93
.
/
, #
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.