I get an UTF-8 string from db, and trying to echo its first character:
$title = $model->title;
echo $title[0];
I get: �
What's wrong?
$first_char = mb_substr($title, 0, 1);
You need to use PHP's multibyte string functions to properly handle Unicode strings:
http://www.php.net/manual/en/ref.mbstring.php
http://www.php.net/manual/en/function.mb-substr.php
You'll also need to specify the character encoding in the <head>
of your HTML:
<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=UTF-8" />
or:
<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=UTF-16" />
li_directory
(id
, title
, text
, examples
, time
) VALUES (1, 'Акраверш', '', 1321708954),
$title="Акраверш"; echo mb_substr($title, 0, 1,'UTF-16');
There are several things you need to consider:
header('Content-Type: utf-8');
]mb_internal_encoding("UTF-8");
mb_substr
instead of array index notation$title[0]
. @PaulS said "you should be using mb_substr
", but can someone confirm you must use mb_substr
? And if so, shouldn't we edit this accepted answer to add this crucial point?
As previously mentioned in other questions, with PHP, when attempting to get a substring, it doesn't understand multibyte characters (as you get with UTF8 for example).
What the other answers don't mention is that you should hint the encoding you would like to use for the mb_substr
So, for example, I use this:
mb_substr( "Sunday", 0, 1,'UTF8'); // Returns S
mb_substr( "воскресенье", 0, 1,'UTF8'); // Returns в
mb_internal_encoding
returns.
Apr 5, 2019 at 15:14
PHP strings doesn't understand multibyte strings by default, the array like indexing will chop of the first byte and if that happen not to be in the ascii range you get this result.
Use mb_substr method.