Interpreted as latin1, FC6265
is übe
. (Ditto for cp1250, cp1256, cp1257, dec8, latin2, latin5, latin7.)
Was @txt
the 3-character string übe
? Or the 6-character string FC6265
?
mysql> SET @in := UNHEX('FC6265');
mysql> SELECT HEX(@in);
+----------+
| HEX(@in) |
+----------+
| FC6265 |
+----------+
mysql> SELECT HEX( CONVERT(@in USING latin1) );
+----------------------------------+
| HEX( CONVERT(@in USING latin1) ) |
+----------------------------------+
| FC6265 |
+----------------------------------+
mysql> SELECT HEX( BINARY(CONVERT(@in USING latin1)) );
+------------------------------------------+
| HEX( BINARY(CONVERT(@in USING latin1)) ) |
+------------------------------------------+
| FC6265 |
+------------------------------------------+
mysql> SELECT HEX( CONVERT(BINARY CONVERT(@in USING latin1) USING utf8) );
+-------------------------------------------------------------+
| HEX( CONVERT(BINARY CONVERT(@in USING latin1) USING utf8) ) |
+-------------------------------------------------------------+
| |
+-------------------------------------------------------------+
1 row in set, 1 warning (0.00 sec)
mysql> SHOW WARNINGS;
+---------+------+-----------------------------------------+
| Level | Code | Message |
+---------+------+-----------------------------------------+
| Warning | 1300 | Invalid utf8 character string: 'FC6265' |
+---------+------+-----------------------------------------+
Using BINARY()
takes away any assumption of what the string is currently encoded as. So it takes the simplest approach and assumes the string is already utf8
.
This is probably the shortest way:
mysql> SELECT CONVERT(CONVERT(@in USING latin1) USING utf8);
+-----------------------------------------------+
| CONVERT(CONVERT(@in USING latin1) USING utf8) |
+-----------------------------------------------+
| übe |
+-----------------------------------------------+
But... what is the charset of the column? If it is latin1, you are making a worse mess. Do not do any changes without first testing further. Here are several cases and the fix for each. Do not rush into one solution before figuring out if you have that case; you are likely to make things worse. See also Trouble with UTF-8 characters; what I see is not what I stored
Example
mysql> CREATE TABLE ube ( c VARCHAR(8) CHARSET latin1 COLLATE latin1_german1_ci );
mysql> INSERT INTO ube (c) VALUES (UNHEX('FC6265'));
mysql> SELECT HEX(c) FROM ube;
+--------+
| HEX(c) |
+--------+
| FC6265 | -- Note the latin1 encoding
+--------+
mysql> ALTER TABLE ube CONVERT TO CHARACTER SET utf8mb4;
Query OK, 1 row affected (0.04 sec)
Records: 1 Duplicates: 0 Warnings: 0 -- Note: no errors
mysql> SELECT HEX(c) FROM ube;
+----------+
| HEX(c) |
+----------+
| C3BC6265 | -- Now utf8mb4 encoding
+----------+