International PHP Conference Berlin 2025

mb_convert_encoding

(PHP 4 >= 4.0.6, PHP 5, PHP 7, PHP 8)

mb_convert_encoding转换字符串,从一个字符编码到另一个字符编码

说明

mb_convert_encoding(array|string $string, string $to_encoding, array|string|null $from_encoding = null): array|string|false

转换 stringfrom_encoding 或当前内部编码转换到 to_encoding。 当参数 stringarray 时,将递归转换它所有的 string 值。

参数

string

要转换的 stringarray

to_encoding

所需的结果编码。

from_encoding

当前用于解释 string 的编码。可以将多个编码指定为 array 或逗号分隔列表,在这种情况下,将使用与 mb_detect_encoding() 相同的算法来猜测正确的编码。

如果 from_encoding 被省略或为 null,则将使用 mbstring.internal_encoding 设置,否则使用 default_charset 设置

有关 to_encodingfrom_encoding 的有效值,请参阅支持的编码

返回值

编码后的 string。 成功时返回编码后的 stringarray, 或者在失败时返回 false

错误/异常

to_encodingfrom_encoding 为无效的编码时, PHP 8.0.0 起将抛出 ValueError; 而在 PHP 8.0.0 之前的版本里,会产生一个 E_WARNING

更新日志

版本 说明
8.2.0 mb_convert_encoding() 将不再返回以下非文本编码:"Base64""QPrint""UUencode""HTML entities""7 bit""8 bit"
8.0.0 现在,当 to_encoding 为无效编码时, mb_convert_encoding() 会抛出 ValueError
8.0.0 现在,当 from_encoding 为无效编码时, mb_convert_encoding() 会抛出 ValueError
8.0.0 现在 from_encoding 可以传入 null。
7.2.0 现在该函数的 string 参数同时能接受 array 类型。 在此之前,仅支持 string

示例

示例 #1 mb_convert_encoding() 示例

<?php
/* 转换内部编码为 SJIS */
$str = mb_convert_encoding($str, "SJIS");

/* 将 EUC-JP 转换成 UTF-7 */
$str = mb_convert_encoding($str, "UTF-7", "EUC-JP");

/* 从 JIS, eucjp-win, sjis-win 中自动检测编码,并转换 str 到 UCS-2LE */
$str = mb_convert_encoding($str, "UCS-2LE", "JIS, eucjp-win, sjis-win");

/* 如果 mbstring.language 是 "Japanese","auto" 扩展成 "ASCII,JIS,UTF-8,EUC-JP,SJIS" */
$str = mb_convert_encoding($str, "EUC-JP", "auto");
?>

参见

添加备注

用户贡献的备注 30 notes

up
71
josip at cubrad dot com
11 years ago
For my last project I needed to convert several CSV files from Windows-1250 to UTF-8, and after several days of searching around I found a function that is partially solved my problem, but it still has not transformed all the characters. So I made ​​this:

function w1250_to_utf8($text) {
// map based on:
// http://konfiguracja.c0.pl/iso02vscp1250en.html
// http://konfiguracja.c0.pl/webpl/index_en.html#examp
// http://www.htmlentities.com/html/entities/
$map = array(
chr(0x8A) => chr(0xA9),
chr(0x8C) => chr(0xA6),
chr(0x8D) => chr(0xAB),
chr(0x8E) => chr(0xAE),
chr(0x8F) => chr(0xAC),
chr(0x9C) => chr(0xB6),
chr(0x9D) => chr(0xBB),
chr(0xA1) => chr(0xB7),
chr(0xA5) => chr(0xA1),
chr(0xBC) => chr(0xA5),
chr(0x9F) => chr(0xBC),
chr(0xB9) => chr(0xB1),
chr(0x9A) => chr(0xB9),
chr(0xBE) => chr(0xB5),
chr(0x9E) => chr(0xBE),
chr(0x80) => '&euro;',
chr(0x82) => '&sbquo;',
chr(0x84) => '&bdquo;',
chr(0x85) => '&hellip;',
chr(0x86) => '&dagger;',
chr(0x87) => '&Dagger;',
chr(0x89) => '&permil;',
chr(0x8B) => '&lsaquo;',
chr(0x91) => '&lsquo;',
chr(0x92) => '&rsquo;',
chr(0x93) => '&ldquo;',
chr(0x94) => '&rdquo;',
chr(0x95) => '&bull;',
chr(0x96) => '&ndash;',
chr(0x97) => '&mdash;',
chr(0x99) => '&trade;',
chr(0x9B) => '&rsquo;',
chr(0xA6) => '&brvbar;',
chr(0xA9) => '&copy;',
chr(0xAB) => '&laquo;',
chr(0xAE) => '&reg;',
chr(0xB1) => '&plusmn;',
chr(0xB5) => '&micro;',
chr(0xB6) => '&para;',
chr(0xB7) => '&middot;',
chr(0xBB) => '&raquo;',
);
return html_entity_decode(mb_convert_encoding(strtr($text, $map), 'UTF-8', 'ISO-8859-2'), ENT_QUOTES, 'UTF-8');
}
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10
Julian Egelstaff
2 years ago
If you have what looks like ISO-8859-1, but it includes "smart quotes" courtesy of Microsoft software, or people cutting and pasting content from Microsoft software, then what you're actually dealing with is probably Windows-1252. Try this:

<?php
$cleanText
= mb_convert_encoding($text, 'UTF-8', 'Windows-1252');
?>

The annoying part is that the auto detection (ie: the mb_detect_encoding function) will often think Windows-1252 is ISO-8859-1. Close, but no cigar. This is critical if you're then trying to do unserialize on the resulting text, because the byte count of the string needs to be perfect.
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40
regrunge at hotmail dot it
14 years ago
I've been trying to find the charset of a norwegian (with a lot of ø, æ, å) txt file written on a Mac, i've found it in this way:

<?php
$text
= "A strange string to pass, maybe with some ø, æ, å characters.";

foreach(
mb_list_encodings() as $chr){
echo
mb_convert_encoding($text, 'UTF-8', $chr)." : ".$chr."<br>";
}
?>

The line that looks good, gives you the encoding it was written in.

Hope can help someone
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31
volker at machon dot biz
17 years ago
Hey guys. For everybody who's looking for a function that is converting an iso-string to utf8 or an utf8-string to iso, here's your solution:

public function encodeToUtf8($string) {
return mb_convert_encoding($string, "UTF-8", mb_detect_encoding($string, "UTF-8, ISO-8859-1, ISO-8859-15", true));
}

public function encodeToIso($string) {
return mb_convert_encoding($string, "ISO-8859-1", mb_detect_encoding($string, "UTF-8, ISO-8859-1, ISO-8859-15", true));
}

For me these functions are working fine. Give it a try
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4
Rainer Perske
2 years ago
Text-encoding HTML-ENTITIES will be deprecated as of PHP 8.2.

To convert all non-ASCII characters into entities (to produce pure 7-bit HTML output), I was using:

<?php
echo mb_convert_encoding( htmlspecialchars( $text, ENT_QUOTES, 'UTF-8' ), 'HTML-ENTITIES', 'UTF-8' );
?>

I can get the identical result with:

<?php
echo mb_encode_numericentity( htmlentities( $text, ENT_QUOTES, 'UTF-8' ), [0x80, 0x10FFFF, 0, ~0], 'UTF-8' );
?>

The output contains well-known named entities for some often used characters and numeric entities for the rest.
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11
francois at bonzon point com
16 years ago
aaron, to discard unsupported characters instead of printing a ?, you might as well simply set the configuration directive:

mbstring.substitute_character = "none"

in your php.ini. Be sure to include the quotes around none. Or at run-time with

<?php
ini_set
('mbstring.substitute_character', "none");
?>
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14
aaron at aarongough dot com
16 years ago
My solution below was slightly incorrect, so here is the correct version (I posted at the end of a long day, never a good idea!)

Again, this is a quick and dirty solution to stop mb_convert_encoding from filling your string with question marks whenever it encounters an illegal character for the target encoding.

<?php
function convert_to ( $source, $target_encoding )
{
// detect the character encoding of the incoming file
$encoding = mb_detect_encoding( $source, "auto" );

// escape all of the question marks so we can remove artifacts from
// the unicode conversion process
$target = str_replace( "?", "[question_mark]", $source );

// convert the string to the target encoding
$target = mb_convert_encoding( $target, $target_encoding, $encoding);

// remove any question marks that have been introduced because of illegal characters
$target = str_replace( "?", "", $target );

// replace the token string "[question_mark]" with the symbol "?"
$target = str_replace( "[question_mark]", "?", $target );

return
$target;
}
?>

Hope this helps someone! (Admins should feel free to delete my previous, incorrect, post for clarity)
-A
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9
eion at bigfoot dot com
18 years ago
many people below talk about using
<?php
mb_convert_encode
($s,'HTML-ENTITIES','UTF-8');
?>
to convert non-ascii code into html-readable stuff. Due to my webserver being out of my control, I was unable to set the database character set, and whenever PHP made a copy of my $s variable that it had pulled out of the database, it would convert it to nasty latin1 automatically and not leave it in it's beautiful UTF-8 glory.

So [insert korean characters here] turned into ?????.

I found myself needing to pass by reference (which of course is deprecated/nonexistent in recent versions of PHP)
so instead of
<?php
mb_convert_encode
(&$s,'HTML-ENTITIES','UTF-8');
?>
which worked perfectly until I upgraded, so I had to use
<?php
call_user_func_array
('mb_convert_encoding', array(&$s,'HTML-ENTITIES','UTF-8'));
?>

Hope it helps someone else out
up
3
Stephan van der Feest
19 years ago
To add to the Flash conversion comment below, here's how I convert back from what I've stored in a database after converting from Flash HTML text field output, in order to load it back into a Flash HTML text field:

function htmltoflash($htmlstr)
{
return str_replace("&lt;br /&gt;","\n",
str_replace("<","&lt;",
str_replace(">","&gt;",
mb_convert_encoding(html_entity_decode($htmlstr),
"UTF-8","ISO-8859-1"))));
}
up
3
urko at wegetit dot eu
12 years ago
If you are trying to generate a CSV (with extended chars) to be opened at Exel for Mac, the only that worked for me was:
<?php mb_convert_encoding( $CSV, 'Windows-1252', 'UTF-8'); ?>

I also tried this:

<?php
//Separado OK, chars MAL
iconv('MACINTOSH', 'UTF8', $CSV);
//Separado MAL, chars OK
chr(255).chr(254).mb_convert_encoding( $CSV, 'UCS-2LE', 'UTF-8');
?>

But the first one didn't show extended chars correctly, and the second one, did't separe fields correctly
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1
me at gsnedders dot com
15 years ago
It appears that when dealing with an unknown "from encoding" the function will both throw an E_WARNING and proceed to convert the string from ISO-8859-1 to the "to encoding".
up
1
vasiliauskas dot agnius at gmail dot com
6 years ago
When you need to convert from HTML-ENTITIES, but your UTF-8 string is partially broken (not all chars in UTF-8) - in this case passing string to mb_convert_encoding($string, 'UTF-8', 'HTML-ENTITIES'); - corrupts chars in string even more. In this case you need to replace html entities gradually to preserve character good encoding. I wrote such closure for this job :
<?php
$decode_entities
= function($string) {
preg_match_all("/&#?\w+;/", $string, $entities, PREG_SET_ORDER);
$entities = array_unique(array_column($entities, 0));
foreach (
$entities as $entity) {
$decoded = mb_convert_encoding($entity, 'UTF-8', 'HTML-ENTITIES');
$string = str_replace($entity, $decoded, $string);
}
return
$string;
};
?>
up
2
Daniel Trebbien
15 years ago
Note that `mb_convert_encoding($val, 'HTML-ENTITIES')` does not escape '\'', '"', '<', '>', or '&'.
up
1
katzlbtjunk at hotmail dot com
16 years ago
Clean a string for use as filename by simply replacing all unwanted characters with underscore (ASCII converts to 7bit). It removes slightly more chars than necessary. Hope its useful.

$fileName = 'Test:!"$%&/()=ÖÄÜöäü<<';
echo strtr(mb_convert_encoding($fileName,'ASCII'),
' ,;:?*#!§$%&/(){}<>=`´|\\\'"',
'____________________________');
up
1
bmxmale at qwerty dot re
2 years ago
/**
* Convert Windows-1250 to UTF-8
* Based on https://www.php.net/manual/en/function.mb-convert-encoding.php#112547
*/
class TextConverter
{
private const ENCODING_TO = 'UTF-8';
private const ENCODING_FROM = 'ISO-8859-2';

private array $mapChrChr = [
0x8A => 0xA9,
0x8C => 0xA6,
0x8D => 0xAB,
0x8E => 0xAE,
0x8F => 0xAC,
0x9C => 0xB6,
0x9D => 0xBB,
0xA1 => 0xB7,
0xA5 => 0xA1,
0xBC => 0xA5,
0x9F => 0xBC,
0xB9 => 0xB1,
0x9A => 0xB9,
0xBE => 0xB5,
0x9E => 0xBE
];

private array $mapChrString = [
0x80 => '&euro;',
0x82 => '&sbquo;',
0x84 => '&bdquo;',
0x85 => '&hellip;',
0x86 => '&dagger;',
0x87 => '&Dagger;',
0x89 => '&permil;',
0x8B => '&lsaquo;',
0x91 => '&lsquo;',
0x92 => '&rsquo;',
0x93 => '&ldquo;',
0x94 => '&rdquo;',
0x95 => '&bull;',
0x96 => '&ndash;',
0x97 => '&mdash;',
0x99 => '&trade;',
0x9B => '&rsquo;',
0xA6 => '&brvbar;',
0xA9 => '&copy;',
0xAB => '&laquo;',
0xAE => '&reg;',
0xB1 => '&plusmn;',
0xB5 => '&micro;',
0xB6 => '&para;',
0xB7 => '&middot;',
0xBB => '&raquo;'
];

/**
* @param $text
* @return string
*/
public function execute($text): string
{
$map = $this->prepareMap();

return html_entity_decode(
mb_convert_encoding(strtr($text, $map), self::ENCODING_TO, self::ENCODING_FROM),
ENT_QUOTES,
self::ENCODING_TO
);
}

/**
* @return array
*/
private function prepareMap(): array
{
$maps[] = $this->arrayMapAssoc(function ($k, $v) {
return [chr($k), chr($v)];
}, $this->mapChrChr);

$maps[] = $this->arrayMapAssoc(function ($k, $v) {
return [chr($k), $v];
}, $this->mapChrString);

return array_merge([], ...$maps);
}

/**
* @param callable $function
* @param array $array
* @return array
*/
private function arrayMapAssoc(callable $function, array $array): array
{
return array_column(
array_map(
$function,
array_keys($array),
$array
),
1,
0
);
}
}
up
0
chzhang at gmail dot com
15 years ago
instead of ini_set(), you can try this

mb_substitute_character("none");
up
0
lanka at eurocom dot od dot ua
21 years ago
Another sample of recoding without MultiByte enabling.
(Russian koi->win, if input in win-encoding already, function recode() returns unchanged string)

<?php
// 0 - win
// 1 - koi
function detect_encoding($str) {
$win = 0;
$koi = 0;

for(
$i=0; $i<strlen($str); $i++) {
if(
ord($str[$i]) >224 && ord($str[$i]) < 255) $win++;
if(
ord($str[$i]) >192 && ord($str[$i]) < 223) $koi++;
}

if(
$win < $koi ) {
return
1;
} else return
0;

}

// recodes koi to win
function koi_to_win($string) {

$kw = array(128, 129, 130, 131, 132, 133, 134, 135, 136, 137, 138, 139, 140, 141, 142, 143, 144, 145, 146, 147, 148, 149, 150, 151, 152, 153, 154, 155, 156, 157, 158, 159, 160, 161, 162, 163, 164, 165, 166, 167, 168, 169, 170, 171, 172, 173, 174, 175, 176, 177, 178, 179, 180, 181, 182, 183, 184, 185, 186, 187, 188, 189, 190, 191, 254, 224, 225, 246, 228, 229, 244, 227, 245, 232, 233, 234, 235, 236, 237, 238, 239, 255, 240, 241, 242, 243, 230, 226, 252, 251, 231, 248, 253, 249, 247, 250, 222, 192, 193, 214, 196, 197, 212, 195, 213, 200, 201, 202, 203, 204, 205, 206, 207, 223, 208, 209, 210, 211, 198, 194, 220, 219, 199, 216, 221, 217, 215, 218);
$wk = array(128, 129, 130, 131, 132, 133, 134, 135, 136, 137, 138, 139, 140, 141, 142, 143, 144, 145, 146, 147, 148, 149, 150, 151, 152, 153, 154, 155, 156, 157, 158, 159, 160, 161, 162, 163, 164, 165, 166, 167, 168, 169, 170, 171, 172, 173, 174, 175, 176, 177, 178, 179, 180, 181, 182, 183, 184, 185, 186, 187, 188, 189, 190, 191, 225, 226, 247, 231, 228, 229, 246, 250, 233, 234, 235, 236, 237, 238, 239, 240, 242, 243, 244, 245, 230, 232, 227, 254, 251, 253, 255, 249, 248, 252, 224, 241, 193, 194, 215, 199, 196, 197, 214, 218, 201, 202, 203, 204, 205, 206, 207, 208, 210, 211, 212, 213, 198, 200, 195, 222, 219, 221, 223, 217, 216, 220, 192, 209);

$end = strlen($string);
$pos = 0;
do {
$c = ord($string[$pos]);
if (
$c>128) {
$string[$pos] = chr($kw[$c-128]);
}

} while (++
$pos < $end);

return
$string;
}

function
recode($str) {

$enc = detect_encoding($str);
if (
$enc==1) {
$str = koi_to_win($str);
}

return
$str;
}
?>
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-1
nicole
8 years ago
// convert UTF8 to DOS = CP850
//
// $utf8_text=UTF8-Formatted text;
// $dos=CP850-Formatted text;

// have fun

$dos = mb_convert_encoding($utf8_text, "CP850", mb_detect_encoding($utf8_text, "UTF-8, CP850, ISO-8859-15", true));
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-1
Tom Class
19 years ago
Why did you use the php html encode functions? mbstring has it's own Encoding which is (as far as I tested it) much more usefull:

HTML-ENTITIES

Example:

$text = mb_convert_encoding($text, 'HTML-ENTITIES', "UTF-8");
up
-1
Daniel
9 years ago
If you are attempting to convert "UTF-8" text to "ISO-8859-1" and the result is always returning in "ASCII", place the following line of code before the mb_convert_encoding:

mb_detect_order(array('UTF-8', 'ISO-8859-1'));

It is necessary to force a specific search order for the conversion to work
up
-2
mac.com@nemo
18 years ago
For those wanting to convert from $set to MacRoman, use iconv():

<?php

$string
= iconv('UTF-8', 'macintosh', $string);

?>

('macintosh' is the IANA name for the MacRoman character set.)
up
-2
David Hull
17 years ago
As an alternative to Johannes's suggestion for converting strings from other character sets to a 7bit representation while not just deleting latin diacritics, you might try this:

<?php
$text
= iconv($from_enc, 'US-ASCII//TRANSLIT', $text);
?>

The only disadvantage is that it does not convert "ä" to "ae", but it handles punctuation and other special characters better.
--
David
up
-3
aofg
17 years ago
When converting Japanese strings to ISO-2022-JP or JIS on PHP >= 5.2.1, you can use "ISO-2022-JP-MS" instead of them.
Kishu-Izon (platform dependent) characters are converted correctly with the encoding, as same as with eucJP-win or with SJIS-win.
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-2
jamespilcher1 - hotmail
20 years ago
be careful when converting from iso-8859-1 to utf-8.

even if you explicitly specify the character encoding of a page as iso-8859-1(via headers and strict xml defs), windows 2000 will ignore that and interpret it as whatever character set it has natively installed.

for example, i wrote char #128 into a page, with char encoding iso-8859-1, and it displayed in internet explorer (& mozilla) as a euro symbol.

it should have displayed a box, denoting that char #128 is undefined in iso-8859-1. The problem was it was displaying in "Windows: western europe" (my native character set).

this led to confusion when i tried to convert this euro to UTF-8 via mb_convert_encoding()

IE displays UTF-8 correctly- and because PHP correctly converted #128 into a box in UTF-8, IE would show a box.

so all i saw was mb_convert_encoding() converting a euro symbol into a box. It took me a long time to figure out what was going on.
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-4
StigC
16 years ago
For the php-noobs (like me) - working with flash and php.

Here's a simple snippet of code that worked great for me, getting php to show special Danish characters, from a Flash email form:

<?php
// Name Escape
$escName = mb_convert_encoding($_POST["Name"], "ISO-8859-1", "UTF-8");

// message escape
$escMessage = mb_convert_encoding($_POST["Message"], "ISO-8859-1", "UTF-8");

// Headers.. and so on...
?>
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-4
nospam at nihonbunka dot com
16 years ago
rodrigo at bb2 dot co dot jp wrote that inconv works better than mb_convert_encoding, I find that when converting from uft8 to shift_jis
$conv_str = mb_convert_encoding($str,$toCS,$fromCS);
works while
$conv_str = iconv($fromCS,$toCS.'//IGNORE',$str);
removes tildes from $str.
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-3
gullevek at gullevek dot org
14 years ago
If you want to convert japanese to ISO-2022-JP it is highly recommended to use ISO-2022-JP-MS as the target encoding instead. This includes the extended character set and avoids ? in the text. For example the often used "1 in a circle" ① will be correctly converted then.
up
-3
rodrigo at bb2 dot co dot jp
16 years ago
For those who can´t use mb_convert_encoding() to convert from one charset to another as a metter of lower version of php, try iconv().

I had this problem converting to japanese charset:

$txt=mb_convert_encoding($txt,'SJIS',$this->encode);

And I could fix it by using this:

$txt = iconv('UTF-8', 'SJIS', $txt);

Maybe it´s helpfull for someone else! ;)
up
-3
phpdoc at jeudi dot de
18 years ago
I\&#039;d like to share some code to convert latin diacritics to their
traditional 7bit representation, like, for example,

- &agrave;,&ccedil;,&eacute;,&icirc;,... to a,c,e,i,...
- &szlig; to ss
- &auml;,&Auml;,... to ae,Ae,...
- &euml;,... to e,...

(mb_convert \&quot;7bit\&quot; would simply delete any offending characters).

I might have missed on your country\&#039;s typographic
conventions--correct me then.
&lt;?php
/**
* @args string $text line of encoded text
* string $from_enc (encoding type of $text, e.g. UTF-8, ISO-8859-1)
*
* @returns 7bit representation
*/
function to7bit($text,$from_enc) {
$text = mb_convert_encoding($text,\&#039;HTML-ENTITIES\&#039;,$from_enc);
$text = preg_replace(
array(\&#039;/&szlig;/\&#039;,\&#039;/&amp;(..)lig;/\&#039;,
\&#039;/&amp;([aouAOU])uml;/\&#039;,\&#039;/&amp;(.)[^;]*;/\&#039;),
array(\&#039;ss\&#039;,\&quot;$1\&quot;,\&quot;$1\&quot;.\&#039;e\&#039;,\&quot;$1\&quot;),
$text);
return $text;
}
?&gt;

Enjoy :-)
Johannes

==
[EDIT BY danbrown AT php DOT net: Author provided the following update on 27-FEB-2012.]
==

An addendum to my &quot;to7bit&quot; function referenced below in the notes.
The function is supposed to solve the problem that some languages require a different 7bit rendering of special (umlauted) characters for sorting or other applications. For example, the German &szlig; ligature is usually written &quot;ss&quot; in 7bit context. Dutch &yuml; is typically rendered &quot;ij&quot; (not &quot;y&quot;).

The original function works well with word (alphabet) character entities and I&#039;ve seen it used in many places. But non-word entities cause funny results:
E.g., &quot;&copy;&quot; is rendered as &quot;c&quot;, &quot;&shy;&quot; as &quot;s&quot; and &quot;&amp;rquo;&quot; as &quot;r&quot;.
The following version fixes this by converting non-alphanumeric characters (also chains thereof) to &#039;_&#039;.

&lt;?php
/**
* @args string $text line of encoded text
* string $from_enc (encoding type of $text, e.g. UTF-8, ISO-8859-1)
*
* @returns 7bit representation
*/
function to7bit($text,$from_enc) {
$text = preg_replace(/W+/,&#039;_&#039;,$text);
$text = mb_convert_encoding($text,&#039;HTML-ENTITIES&#039;,$from_enc);
$text = preg_replace(
array(&#039;/&szlig;/&#039;,&#039;/&amp;(..)lig;/&#039;,
&#039;/&amp;([aouAOU])uml;/&#039;,&#039;/&yuml;/&#039;,&#039;/&amp;(.)[^;]*;/&#039;),
array(&#039;ss&#039;,&quot;$1&quot;,&quot;$1&quot;.&#039;e&#039;,&#039;ij&#039;,&quot;$1&quot;),
$text);
return $text;
}
?&gt;

Enjoy again,
Johannes
up
-4
Stephan van der Feest
19 years ago
Here's a tip for anyone using Flash and PHP for storing HTML output submitted from a Flash text field in a database or whatever.

Flash submits its HTML special characters in UTF-8, so you can use the following function to convert those into HTML entity characters:

function utf8html($utf8str)
{
return htmlentities(mb_convert_encoding($utf8str,"ISO-8859-1","UTF-8"));
}
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