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$_POST will convert from utf-8 to ä ö ü etc

I am new here, so I apologize if I am doing anything wrong.

I have a form which submits user input onto another page. User is expected to type ä, ö, é, etc... I have placed all of the following in the document:

<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=UTF-8">
header('Content-Type:text/html; charset=UTF-8');
<form action="whatever.php" accept-charset="UTF-8">

I even tried:

ini_set('default_charset', 'UTF-8');

When the other page loads, I need to check what the user input with something like:

if ( $_POST['field'] == $check ) {
  ...
}

But if he inputs something like 'München', PHP will compare 'München' with 'München' and will never trigger TRUE even though it should. Since it is specified UTF-8 everywhere, I am guessing that the server is converting to something else (Windows-1252 as I read on another thread) because it does not support or is not configured to UTF-8. I am using Apache on a local server before I load into production; I have not changed (and don't know how to) any of the default settings. I've been working on a Windows 7, editing with Notepad++ enconding my files in ANSI. If I bin2hex('München') I get '4dc3bc6e6368656e'.

If I echo $_POST['field']; it displays 'München' correctly.

I have researched everywhere for an explanation, all I find is that I should include those tags/headings I already have.

Any help is much appreciated.

like image 218
lungov Avatar asked Jan 25 '12 12:01

lungov


People also ask

How do I change my UTF-8 character set?

Click Tools, then select Web options. Go to the Encoding tab. In the dropdown for Save this document as: choose Unicode (UTF-8). Click Ok.

What is difference between UTF-8 and UTF-8?

UTF-8 uses one byte at the minimum in encoding the characters while UTF-16 uses minimum two bytes. In UTF-8, every code point from 0-127 is stored in a single bytes. Only code points 128 and above are stored using 2,3 or in fact, up to 4 bytes.


2 Answers

You are facing many different problems at the same, let's start with the simplest one.

Problem 1) You say that echo $_POST['field']; will display it correctly? What do you mean with "display"? It can be displayed correctly in two cases:

  • either the field is in UTF-8 and your page has been declared as UTF-8 and the browser is displaying it as UTF-8 or,
  • the field is in Latin-1 and the browser has decided (through the auto-detection heuristics) that your page is in Latin-1.

So, the fact that echo $_POST['field']; is correct tells you nothing.

Problem 2) You are using

<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=UTF-8"/>
header('Content-Type:text/html; charset=UTF-8');

Is this PHP code? If it is, it will be an error because the header must be set before sending out any byte. If you do this you will not set the Content-Type header and PHP should generate a warning.

Problem 3) You are using

<form action="whatever.php" accept-charset="UTF-8">

Some browsers (IE, mostly) ignore accept-charset if they can coerce the data to be sent in ASCII or ISO Latin-1. So the data will be in UTF-8 and declared as ISO Latin-1 or ISO Latin-1 and sent as ISO Latin-1 (but this second case is not your case).

Have a look at https://stackoverflow.com/a/8547004/449288 to see how to solve this problem.

Problem 4) Which strings are you comparing? For example, if you have

$city = "München"
$_POST['city'] == $city

The result of this code will depend on the encoding of the PHP file. If the file is encoded in ISO Latin-1 and the $_POST correctly contains UTF-8 data, the == will compare different bytes and will return false.

like image 96
gioele Avatar answered Sep 30 '22 04:09

gioele


Another solution that may be helpful is in Apache, you can place a directive in your configuration file (httpd.conf) or .htacess called AddDefaultCharset. It looks like this:

AddDefaultCharset utf-8

http://httpd.apache.org/docs/2.0/mod/core.html#adddefaultcharset

That will override any other default charsets.

like image 23
Jeremy Harris Avatar answered Sep 30 '22 05:09

Jeremy Harris