I am storing Unicode text لاہور in MySQL, I have set tables and columns to utf8_general_ci. The text لاہور is displaying correctly in MySQL. However if I echo that with PHP it shows ?????? on the browser window.
One thing to mention here: I have the whole document in Unicode and all words are displaying correctly, but they are written directly i.e. not coming from MySQL.
Even if I try
$p="لاہور";
echo $p;
It displays لاہور in the browser. Things go wrong only when retrieving from MySQL.
One common cause for this is that your PHP script is being saved with another format (for example ASCII), you must be sure that your PHP script is also saved as UTF-8 or whatever codification you use in your database.
Another possible cause is that MySQL is not returning proper Unicode characters to your script, you may use mysql_query("SET NAMES utf8") or whatever encoding you want to use, before processing your queries, a good way to troubleshot this problem could be converting the string to their respective unicode codes and comparing them to see if they're the same.
It may not always be sufficient to set the content type using meta tags, I usually set it via the header directive as well as below.
header('Content-Type: text/html; charset=utf-8');
Most likely your MySQL connection (as opposed to storage) has not been set to UTF-8, causing the UTF-8 data retrieved from MySQL to be converted to Latin1 (or similar), which cannot represent those characters and they are replaced with a ?.
If you are using mysql_:
mysql_set_charset( 'utf8' );
If you are using mysqli_:
$mysqli->set_charset( 'utf8' );
before you make any queries
If you are using PDO, add charset=utf8 to the connection string.
Related
I have this following
$html = <div>ياں ان کي پرائيويٹ ليمٹڈ کمپنياں ہيں</div>
But it is being stored in the mysql database as following format
تو يہ اسمب
لي ميں غر
يب کو آنے
نہيں
Actually, When I retrieve the data from mysql database and shows it on the webpage it is shown correctly.
But I want to know that Is it the standard format of unicode to store in the database, or the unicode data should be stored as it is (ياں ان کي پرائيويٹ ليمٹڈ کمپنياں ہيں)
When you store unicode in your database...
First off, your database has to be set as 'utf-general', which is not the default. With MySQL, you have to set both the table to utf format, AND individual columns to utf. In addition to this, you have to be sure that your connection is a utf-8 connection, but doing that varies based on what method you use to store the unicode text into your database.
To set your connection's char-set, if you are using Mysqli, you would do this:
$c->set_charset('utf8'); where $c is a Mysqli connection.
Still, you have to change your database charsets like I said before.
EDIT: I honestly don't think it matters MUCH how you store it, though I store it as the actual unicode characters, because that way if some user were to input '& #1610;' into the database, it wouldn't be retrieved as a unicode character by mistake.
EDIT: Here is a good example, if you remove that space between & and #1610; in my answer, it will be mistakenly retrieved from the server as a unicode character, unless you want users to be able to create unicode characters by using a code like that.
Not a perfect example since stackoverflow does that on purpose, and it doesn't work like that really, but the concept is the same.
Something wrong with data charset. I don't know what exactly.
This is workaround. Do it before insert/update:
$str = html_entity_decode($str, ENT_COMPAT, 'UTF-8');
it looks like to me that this is HTML encoding, the way PHP encode unicode to make sure it will display OK on the web page, no matter the page encoding.
Did you tried to fetch the same data using MySQL Workbench?
It seems that somewhere in your PHP code htmlentities is being used on the text -- instead of htmlspecialchars. The difference with htmlentities is that it escapes a lot of non-ASCII characters in the form you see there. Then the result of that is being stored in the database. It's not MySQL's doing.
In theory this shouldn't be necessary. It should be okay to output the plain characters if you set the character set of the page correctly. Aassuming UTF-8, for example, use header('Content-Type: text/html; charset=utf-8'); or <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" value="text/html; charset=utf-8">.
This might result in gibberish (mojibake) if you view the database directly (although it will display fine on the web page) unless you also make sure the character set of the database is set correctly. That means the table columns, table, database, and connection character set all to, probably, utf8mb4_general_bin or utf8_general_bin (or ..._general_ci). In practice getting it all working can be a bit of a nuisance. If you didn't write this code, then probably someone in your code base decided at some point to use htmlentities on it to convert the exotic characters to ASCII HTML entities, to make storage easier. Or sometimes people use htmlentities out of habit when the merer htmlspecialchars would be fine.
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UTF-8 all the way through
okay, this is stupid that I can't figure it out.
Mysql database is set to utf8_general_ci collation. The field i'm having problems with is longtext type.
characters added to the database as é or other accented characters are returning as �.
I run the output through stripslashes and i've tried both with and without html_entity_decode but can find no change in the output. What am I doing wrong?
Cheers
What character encoding does the string have that you try to insert? If it is in ISO-8859-1 you can use the PHP function utf8_encode() to encode it to UTF-8 before inserting it into the database.
http://php.net/manual/en/function.utf8-encode.php
Getting encoding right is really tricky - there are too many layers:
Browser
Page
PHP
MySQL
The SQL command "SET CHARSET utf8" from PHP will ensure that the client side (PHP) will get the data in utf8, no matter how they are stored in the database. Of course, they need to be stored correctly first.
DDL definition vs. real data
Encoding defined for a table/column doesn't really mean that the data are in that encoding. If you happened to have a table defined as utf8 but stored as differtent encoding, then MySQL will treat them as utf8 and you're in trouble. Which means you have to fix this first.
What to check
You need to check in what encoding the data flow at each layer.
Check HTTP headers, headers.
Check what's really sent in body of the request.
Don't forget that MySQL has encoding almost everywhere:
Database
Tables
Columns
Server as a whole
Client
Make sure that there's the right one everywhere.
Conversion
If you receive data in e.g. windows-1250, and want to store in utf-8, then use this SQL before storing:
SET NAMES 'cp1250';
If you have data in DB as windows-1250 and want to retreive utf8, use:
SET CHARSET 'utf8';
Last note:
Don't rely on too "smart" tools to show the data. E.g. phpMyAdmin does (was doing when I was using it) encoding really bad. And it goes through all the layers so it's hard to find out. Also, Internet Explorer had really stupid behavior of "guessing" the encoding based on weird rules. Use simple editors where you can switch encoding. Also, I recommend MySQL Workbench.
I have made code that stores utf-8 in a database.
It shows it well in the browser but looks distorted in the database. Since the functionality seems to work and it doesn't look like I have had any problems with processing the string input, is it any point in 'fixing what is not broken' and make utf-8 characters like Japanese show in the database?
I don't search the database since the strings are serialized anyway.
You have to specify the text encoding of the queries, you are sending to MySQL with for instance
SET NAMES `utf8` COLLATE `utf8_unicode_ci`
If you don't, MySQL may interpret your query with the servers default text-encoding that can be different to UTF-8, e.g. iso-latin. So you will have strings in your tables, that are UTF-8 encoded, but MySQL marked them as iso-latin. That won't have much effect on your code, because MySQL just returns your UTF-8 strings back to you and you ignore the text-encoding. If you view the data in phpMyAdmin or any other application, that sets the connections character encoding, you will end up with distorted strings.
You could on the other hand utf8_decode your query strings and utf8_encode the result's provided by MySQL and don't change the connections text encoding from iso-latin. but if you query a different MySQL server that uses UTF-8 as default text encoding, you will end up with the same problem the other way around. so just set the connection's text encoding once after connecting.
What do you use to access the database. If you use a console just the the encoding in the console to utf-8. If you use GUI software just check the options the set the encoding to utf-8. You can try 'set names' to ser the client encoding.
I have been using php + mysql (phpmyadmin) to construct websites with Chinese contents (utf-8) for a long time.
When inputting forms, and also generate output php from db, the Chinese Words display well; but when I look at the database, although sometimes they are normal chinese characters, but something they are not (become strange strings), that made me notice that, the way that mysql handle and input data is not always utf-8.
Some experts on web mentioned, mysql were used to record the input data by latin1; nevertheless, I note that the existing charset in phpmyadmin is utf-8...
Will there be any solid way to detect the encoding format of chinese characters appeared in a phpmyadmin table cell?
Also, apart from mentioning at header of the page, will there be any method so that I can make sure the data entered to the db is utf-8 but not others?
Thank you.
The biggest problem that people encounter in this regard is that they don't tell MySQL that they're sending/expecting UTF-8 encoded data when connecting to the database, so MySQL thinks it's supposed to handle latin1 encoded data and converts it accordingly. Issue the command SET NAMES utf8 after connecting to the db or use mysql_set_charset.
in my case, it just because htmlentities(); Solution is change echo htmlentities($email_db); to echo htmlentities($email_db, ENT_COMPAT, 'UTF-8');
What is the best Collation for the column that can allow to store accented letters and parse them out perfectly without any encoding error, because whenever I add an accented letter such as é, å, it shows out with an encoding problem on the PHP side, but in the MySQL side it's fine...
How do I get the accented letters display properly?
You get them correctly by matching the encoding on both ends, ie. both your PHP output and your DB should use the same encoding. For European languages I would suggest using UTF-8 for both your scripts and the DB. Just remember that you still have to initialize UTF-8 collation in MySQL using SET NAMES 'utf8' COLLATE 'utf8_general_ci' (so run this query just after you make a connection to the DB and you should be ok).
Perhaps your problem isn't within the database, but within however you're displaying things from PHP? What content encoding are you specifying in your output? You might need to manually send a header to specify that the content is UTF-8 if that's what you're trying to output.
For instance: header("Content-Type: text/html; charset=UTF-8");