Each line is a string
 4
 minutes
 12
 minutes
 16
 minutes
I was able to remove
Alright - I think I've got a handle on this now - I want to expand on some of the encoding errors that people are getting at:
This seems to be an advanced case of Mojibake, but here is what I think is going on. MikeAinOz's original suspicion that this is UTF-8 data is probably true. If we take the following UTF-8 data:
4 minutes
Now, remove the HTML entity, and replace it with the character it actually corresponds with: U+00A0. (It's a non-breaking space, so I can't exactly "show" you. You get the string: "4 minutes". Encode this as UTF-8, and you get the following byte sequence:
characters: 4 [nbsp] m i n ...
bytes : 34 C2 A0 6D 69 6E ...
(I'm using [nbsp] above to mean a literal non-breaking space (the character, not the HTML entity
, but the character that represents. It's just white-space, and thus, difficult.) Note that the [nbsp]/U+00A0 (non-breaking space) takes 2 bytes to encode in UTF-8.
Now, to go from byte stream back to readable text, we should decode using UTF-8, since that's what we encoded in. Let us use ISO-8859-1 ("latin1") - if you use the wrong one, this is almost always it.
bytes : 34 C2 A0 6D 69 6E ...
characters: 4 Â [nbsp] m i n ...
And switch the raw non-breaking space into its HTML entity representation, and you get what you have.
So, either your PHP stuff is interpreting your text in the wrong character set, and you need to tell it otherwise, or you are outputting the result somehow in the wrong character set. More code would be useful here -- where are you getting the data you're passing to this loadHTML, and how are you going about getting the output you're seeing?
Some background: A "character encoding" is just a means of going from a series of characters, to a series of bytes. What bytes represent "é"? UTF-8 says C3 A9
, whereas ISO-8859-1 says E9
. To get the original text back from a series of bytes, we must know what we encoded it with. If we decode C3 A9
as UTF-8 data, we get "é" back, if we (mistakenly) decode it as ISO-8859-1, we get "é". Junk. In psuedo-code:
utf8-decode ( utf8-encode ( text-data ) ) // OK
iso8859_1-decode ( iso8859_1-encode ( text-data ) ) // OK
iso8859_1-decode ( utf8-encode ( text-data ) ) // Fails
utf8-decode ( iso8859_1-encode ( text-data ) ) // Fails
This isn't PHP code, and isn't your fix... it's just the crux of the problem. Somewhere, over the large scale, that's happening, and things are confused.