On Sat, Oct 10, 2009 at 11:40 PM, James Colannino <ja...@colannino.org> wrote:
>
> Hey everyone.  I'd been troubled for a while by the fact that inserting
> cut-pasted special characters such as &auml; caused truncation when passed to
> MySQL, then discovered that it was because I was cutting and pasting unicode
> values into non-unicode Latin-1 strings.
>
> Since Latin-1 also has equivalent values, I was hoping that filtering my mixed
> unicode/non-unicode string through utf8_decode() would solve the problem, but
> instead, where the unicode character used to be, I now get a '?', followed by 
> a
> few characters being taken out of the middle.  I'm guessing that this is 
> because
> utf8_decode() assumes the whole string is unicode and therefore removes a 
> bunch
> of extra bytes from the string and corrupts it.  At least, that's my guess.  I
> could be very wrong (I have pretty much no experience with different character
> sets...)
>
> My question is, what's a good way to translate unicode characters in a
> non-unicode string to their Latin-1 equivalents?  I need to be able to do this
> in order to sanitize a fairly common form of input.
>
> Thanks!
>
> James
>
> --
> PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/)
> To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php
>

Have you tried iconv or mb_string? Is it a  option to update the
database to use UTF-8?

Andrew

--
PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/)
To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php

Reply via email to