You are mixing APIs here, mysql_*
and mysqli_*
doesn't mix. You should stick with mysqli_
(as it seems you are anyway), as mysql_*
functions are deprecated, and removed entirely in PHP7.
Your actual issue is a charset problem somewhere. Here's a few pointers which can help you get the right charset for your application. This covers most of the general problems one can face when developing a PHP/MySQL application.
- ALL attributes throughout your application must be set to UTF-8
- Save the document as UTF-8 w/o BOM (If you're using Notepad++, it's
Format
-> Convert to UTF-8 w/o BOM
)
The header in both PHP and HTML should be set to UTF-8
HTML (inside <head></head>
tags):
<meta charset="UTF-8">
PHP (at the top of your file, before any output):
header('Content-Type: text/html; charset=utf-8');
Upon connecting to the database, set the charset to UTF-8 for your connection-object, like this (directly after connecting)
mysqli_set_charset($conn, "utf8"); /* Procedural approach */
$conn->set_charset("utf8"); /* Object-oriented approach */
This is for mysqli_*
, there are similar ones for mysql_*
and PDO (see bottom of this answer).
Also make sure your database and tables are set to UTF-8, you can do that like this:
ALTER DATABASE databasename CHARACTER SET utf8 COLLATE utf8_unicode_ci;
ALTER TABLE tablename CONVERT TO CHARACTER SET utf8 COLLATE utf8_unicode_ci;
(Any data already stored won't be converted to the proper charset, so you'll need to do this with a clean database, or update the data after doing this if there are broken characters).
- If you're using
json_encode()
, you might need to apply the JSON_UNESCAPED_UNICODE
flag, otherwise it will convert special characters to their hexadecimal equivalent.
Remember that EVERYTHING in your entire pipeline of code needs to be set to UFT-8, otherwise you might experience broken characters in your application.
In addition to this list, there may be functions that has a specific parameter for specifying a charset. The manual will tell you about this (an example is htmlspecialchars()).
There are also special functions for multibyte characters, example: strtolower()
won't lower multibyte characters, for that you'll have to use mb_strtolower()
, see this live demo.
Note 1: Notice that its someplace noted as utf-8
(with a dash), and someplace as utf8
(without it). It's important that you know when to use which, as they usually aren't interchangeable. For example, HTML and PHP wants utf-8
, but MySQL doesn't.
Note 2: In MySQL, "charset" and "collation" is not the same thing, see Difference between Encoding and collation?. Both should be set to utf-8 though; generally collation should be either utf8_general_ci
or utf8_unicode_ci
, see UTF-8: General? Bin? Unicode?.
Note 3: If you're using emojis, MySQL needs to be specified with an utf8mb4
charset instead of the standard utf8
, both in the database and the connection. HTML and PHP will just have UTF-8
.
Setting UTF-8 with mysql_
and PDO
PDO: This is done in the DSN of your object. Note the charset
attribute,
$pdo = new PDO("mysql:host=localhost;dbname=database;charset=utf8", "user", "pass");
mysql_
: This is done very similar to mysqli_*
, but it doesn't take the connection-object as the first argument.
mysql_set_charset('utf8');