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I have a multi-byte text of 156 characters encoded in UTF-8 format and verified by PHP function mb_strlen($text, 'UTF-8') to be of 156 length. I was expecting to be able to store all of it with VARCHAR(156). But a good portion of the text got truncated.

This is my original text:

위키백과, 백과사전.

대수(λ -, lambda -)는 함. 1930년대 다. 함수 s(x, y) = xx + 입력 x 것이다. x ↦ x 와 y ↦ y 는 변수의 이름은. 또한 (x, y) ↦ xx + yy 와 (u, v) ↦ uu + v*v 는.123456

This is what I got in MySQL:

위키백과, 백과사전.

대수(λ -, lambda -)는 함. 1930년대 다. 함수 s(x, y) = x*x + ìž…ë ¥ x 것ì´ë‹¤. x ↦ x 와 y ↦ y 는 변수ì

This is what is generated upon querying on my web page:

위키백과, 백과사전.

대수(λ -, lambda -)는 함. 1930년대 다. 함수 s(x, y) = x*x + 입력 x 것이다. x ↦ x 와 y ↦ y 는 변수�

There is a similar question on Stack Overflow, but it does not seem to address my question. Note that the table CHARSET=utf8 collation have been changed to UTF-8, General CI and column collation uses table default. I am using MySQL version 5.5.14 with system variables as shown:

+--------------------------+----------------------------------------+
| Variable_name            | Value                                  |
+--------------------------+----------------------------------------+
| character_set_client     | utf8                                   |
| character_set_connection | utf8                                   |
| character_set_database   | utf8                                   |
| character_set_filesystem | binary                                 |
| character_set_results    | utf8                                   |
| character_set_server     | utf8                                   |
| character_set_system     | utf8                                   |
| character_sets_dir       | /usr/local/mysql/share/mysql/charsets/ |
| collation_connection     | utf8_general_ci                        |
| collation_database       | utf8_general_ci                        |
| collation_server         | utf8_general_ci                        |
+--------------------------+----------------------------------------+

UPDATE:

After running mysqli_query($cxn, "SET NAMES utf8") on PHP script as suggested by Homer6, it did take in the full 156 characters and renders as per my original text.

But now what is generated on my web page becomes:

????, ????. ??(? -, lambda -)? ?. 1930?? ?. ?? s(x, y) = xx + ?? x ???. x ? x ? y ? y ? ??? ???. ?? (x, y) ? xx + yy ? (u, v) ? uu + v*v ?.123456

Can anyone help me?

4
  • See stackoverflow.com/questions/1997540/…
    – user166390
    Nov 13, 2011 at 6:52
  • @pst, I have already checked and even put up the link in my question. It only confirms that version 5 is counting characters. Nov 13, 2011 at 6:56
  • What language are you posting?
    – Homer6
    Nov 13, 2011 at 6:58
  • When you see in your output a multiple-byte UTF-8 character is being cut-off. Nov 13, 2011 at 7:59

3 Answers 3

2

Can you try quadrupling the size to 624? I think the size is in bytes, not characters. And UTF-8 can be between 1 and 4 bytes.

See http://unicode.org/faq/utf_bom.html

Also, are you setting

SET NAMES 'utf8';

before you run your query?

Or, for Korean, what happens if you set

mysql_query( 'SET NAMES euckr_korean_ci' );

before your query?

http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.1/en/charset-asian-sets.html

12
  • 1
    It says character, in the manual Nov 13, 2011 at 6:50
  • 1 and 6 ? What's your source?
    – Homer6
    Nov 13, 2011 at 6:52
  • @pst "UTF-8 encodes each of the 1,112,064[7] code points in the Unicode character set using one to four 8-bit bytes" from en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UTF-8
    – chacham15
    Nov 13, 2011 at 6:55
  • @ Homer, do you mean I have to SET NAMES every time I run a query. If yes, I haven't done so. If no, I have and system variables are showing all UTF-8. Nov 13, 2011 at 7:06
  • 1
    @Ben Huh: The problem is not with the server, but with the client. When the client connects, it chooses the default character set (defined in my.cnf ON THE CLIENT SIDE), which is by default latin1. You must always set the characters set after connecting to the server. See also php.net/manual/en/function.mysql-set-charset.php Nov 13, 2011 at 11:14
1

It depends what version of MySQL you have. In MySQL 4 and earlier, the length is in bytes. In MySQL 5 and later, the length is in characters.

Also, the column needs to be set to utf8_unicode_ci for MySQL 5 to properly count the number of characters.

0

Im pretty sure that mb_strlen returns the number of characters, not the size of the string.

Although UTF-8 is 1 byte per ascii character, this is not true for other languages/character sets. The number of characters until the 1930 is about 45. This makes sense because Korean characters take 3 bytes per character (i think)

You must also explicitly set the character set to utf8, see http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.0/en/string-type-overview.html

You can alter the table with: ALTER TABLE tbl_name CONVERT TO CHARACTER SET charset_name;

Run SHOW CREATE TABLE [TABLE_NAME]; to see what character set the column has. I.e. it should print out 'column_name' varchar(156) character set utf8 default NULL,

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  • the number 156 in VARCHAR(156) refers to character, not bytes. Therefore I am using mb_strlen instead of strlen. Nov 13, 2011 at 6:53
  • not generically true, some systems like microsofts sql server have a special data type for utf encoded strings (nvarchar). in mysql you have to explicitly set the character set to utf8. see dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.0/en/string-type-overview.html
    – chacham15
    Nov 13, 2011 at 6:57
  • I have stated above that all my encoding and collation related system variables and table collation have been changed to UTF-8, General CI. Is that not sufficient to set the character set in my database? Nov 13, 2011 at 7:03
  • I would check that it actually affected your table, because it sounds like it didn't. I.e. that you're table is actually encoded in utf8
    – chacham15
    Nov 13, 2011 at 7:05
  • 1
    not the collation, the character set. try recreating the table (try it with explicitly setting the character set like above)
    – chacham15
    Nov 13, 2011 at 7:42

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