I moved data from MySQL 4 (they were originally set to latin2 encoding
) to MySQL 5 and set encoding to utf-8
. It
I had this problem recently (I hope its the same problem you are having), I tried many ways but at the end what worked was really simple.
Convert your dumped SQL file to UTF-8 format and then import it.
BW: I used Notepad++ for the conversion.
Put .htaccess file in your web-site root with content: AddDefaultCharset UTF-8
and
in your dbconfig set after connection to db:
mysql_query("SET NAMES 'utf8'");
When you show UTF8 characters on a website but tell the browser to interpret them as Latin1 (or Latin2) you see this kind of gibberish: ß
When you show Latin1 (or Latin2) characters on a website, but tell the browser to interpret them as UTF8, you see question marks.
So my guess is that you switched everything to UTF8 (I mean, you told the DB Engine, the web server and the browser you would be using UTF8), but you didn't actually convert the strings to UTF8.
Do what @Darkerstar said. Convert your dump to UTF8 (Notepad++ can do that easily) and import it again.
On my server, adding these to my php file had no effect:
ini_set('default_charset','utf-8');
mysql_set_charset('utf8');
header('Content-type: text/html; charset=utf-8');
But everything worked perfectly once I added this to the top of my php file:
$mysqli->query("SET NAMES 'utf8'");
Note: I am using encoding utf8_general_ci
in my database, but utf8_unicode_ci
works the same for me.
Hope that helps.
mysql_query("SET NAMES UTF8");
adding this line at the end of my "connection.php" solved my problem.
My connection file's complete code is:
<?php
# FileName="Connection_php_mysql.htm"
# Type="MYSQL"
# HTTP="true"
$hostname_test = "localhost";
$database_test = "test";
$username_test = "username";
$password_test = "password";
$test = mysql_pconnect($hostname_test, $username_test, $password_test) or trigger_error(mysql_error(),E_USER_ERROR);
mysql_query("SET NAMES UTF8");
?>
My database collation is "utf8_general_ci".
Pages are "dreamweaver default utf8" and "unicode normalisation form=C (Canonical Decomposition)".
You don't have to set your PHP and HTML files to utf-8.
You just have to set your output encoding to UTF-8 and the browser will display appropriately.
In HTML:
<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=UTF-8" />
In PHP:
header('Content-Type: text/html; charset=UTF-8');
When you get a string that is UTF-8 from the MySQL table, it will be UTF-8 all the way to browser output unless you convert the encoding. It's the way that the browser inteprets it.