ID:               17008
 Updated by:       [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Reported By:      [EMAIL PROTECTED]
-Status:           Analyzed
+Status:           Closed
 Bug Type:         *General Issues
 Operating System: WinXP / Apache 1.3.24
 PHP Version:      4.2.0
 New Comment:

I've committed a fix that adds support for the remaining html4 entities
to the CVS HEAD.
You need to be using the utf-8 encoding for these characters to be
detected/converted.
This change will be in 4.3.0


Previous Comments:
------------------------------------------------------------------------

[2002-05-05 17:46:11] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

The docs also say that iso-8859-1 charset is assumed; there
are no em or en dash characters in that charset.
But you are correct in that the docs are not up to date
with regards to which charsets and to what extent they are
supported.


------------------------------------------------------------------------

[2002-05-05 13:41:14] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

well, then the it's not a bug, but then the documetation is a bit
confusing:

"This function is identical to htmlspecialchars() in all ways, except
that ALL characters which have HTML character entity equivalents are
translated into these entities."

and for em-dash for example there's a — since html 4.0

------------------------------------------------------------------------

[2002-05-05 05:23:39] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

The code in ext/standard/html.c seems to only support 
entities found in the first 8 bits of a given charset, 
including utf-8. Windows code page 1252 is the only 
character set that has em and en dashes in this 8-bit area. 
Hence it is the only character set that will work like you 
expect it to. In other words, you need to use "cp1252" as 
the third argument to htmlentities() and make sure that 
your input string is in cp1252 as well.

Support for full utf-8 entities might be coming in a future 
release. Meanwhile, you can convert utf-8 to HTML's numeric 
character references with PHP's mbstring extension and this 
piece of code:

$f = 0xffff; $convmap = array(
/* <!ENTITY % HTMLlat1 PUBLIC 
    "-//W3C//ENTITIES Latin 1//EN//HTML"> %HTMLlat1; */
         160,  255, 0, $f,
/* <!ENTITY % HTMLsymbol PUBLIC 
    "-//W3C//ENTITIES Symbols//EN//HTML"> %HTMLsymbol; */
         402,  402, 0, $f,  913,  929, 0, $f,  931,  937, 0, $f,
         945,  969, 0, $f,  977,  978, 0, $f,  982,  982, 0, $f,
        8226, 8226, 0, $f, 8230, 8230, 0, $f, 8242, 8243, 0, $f,
        8254, 8254, 0, $f, 8260, 8260, 0, $f, 8465, 8465, 0, $f,
        8472, 8472, 0, $f, 8476, 8476, 0, $f, 8482, 8482, 0, $f,
        8501, 8501, 0, $f, 8592, 8596, 0, $f, 8629, 8629, 0, $f,
        8656, 8660, 0, $f, 8704, 8704, 0, $f, 8706, 8707, 0, $f,
        8709, 8709, 0, $f, 8711, 8713, 0, $f, 8715, 8715, 0, $f,
        8719, 8719, 0, $f, 8721, 8722, 0, $f, 8727, 8727, 0, $f,
        8730, 8730, 0, $f, 8733, 8734, 0, $f, 8736, 8736, 0, $f,
        8743, 8747, 0, $f, 8756, 8756, 0, $f, 8764, 8764, 0, $f,
        8773, 8773, 0, $f, 8776, 8776, 0, $f, 8800, 8801, 0, $f,
        8804, 8805, 0, $f, 8834, 8836, 0, $f, 8838, 8839, 0, $f,
        8853, 8853, 0, $f, 8855, 8855, 0, $f, 8869, 8869, 0, $f,
        8901, 8901, 0, $f, 8968, 8971, 0, $f, 9001, 9002, 0, $f,
        9674, 9674, 0, $f, 9824, 9824, 0, $f, 9827, 9827, 0, $f,
        9829, 9830, 0, $f,    
/* <!ENTITY % HTMLspecial PUBLIC 
    "-//W3C//ENTITIES Special//EN//HTML"> %HTMLspecial; */
/* These ones are excluded to enable HTML: 34, 38, 60, 62 *
/
         338,  339, 0, $f,  352,  353, 0, $f,  376,  376, 0, $f,
         710,  710, 0, $f,  732,  732, 0, $f, 8194, 8195, 0, $f,
        8201, 8201, 0, $f, 8204, 8207, 0, $f, 8211, 8212, 0, $f,
        8216, 8218, 0, $f, 8218, 8218, 0, $f, 8220, 8222, 0, $f,
        8224, 8225, 0, $f, 8240, 8240, 0, $f, 8249, 8250, 0, $f,
        8364, 8364, 0, $f);
echo mb_encode_numericentity($html, $convmap, "UTF-8");

------------------------------------------------------------------------

[2002-05-04 23:10:19] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

if i'm not wrong this function is supposed to encode all those special
characters, right? well, em or en dashes are not encoded. the whole
list of characters that should be encoded can be found here:
http://selfhtml.teamone.de/html/referenz/zeichen.htm#benannte_interpunktion

it's in german, but i guess you can see what i mean.

------------------------------------------------------------------------


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