UTF-8 Encoding Tips
UTF-8 Encoding Tips
Encoding questions are asked frequently on the mailing list. This is just a collection of tips for using UTF-8. It's a checklist of sorts. Make sure you've done all the things specified here before pitching your computer into the ocean ![]()
Check your database
The database needs to be storing values in UTF-8. If it isn't, then all your effort is wasted. For example, on MySQL that means a db url like
Unknown macro: noformat. Click on this message for details.
And setting your default charset and collation in your my.cnf file

Fonts & CSS
Different fonts may not have all the characters to display the different characters. If you're using a default stylesheet, then the browsers may be displaying differently simply because of fonts. Speaking of stylesheets, you probably want to encode that in UTF-8 also. Start your stylesheet with something like
Unknown macro: noformat. Click on this message for details.
Set eclipse encoding

Use Project Wonder
I think this goes without saying but: Use Wonder. Set encoding in the properties file. Notice it is UTF-8 with a hyphen. It it always UTF-8 with a hyphen... well, except with the MySQL image above because they excel in doing things differently ![]()
Unknown macro: noformat. Click on this message for details.
Set encoding in your page wrapper
Unknown macro: noformat. Click on this message for details.
Localizable strings should be in UTF-16!
Localizable.strings should be encoded in UTF-16. The localizer can detect UTF-16 without error, where it can confuse UTF-8 with other encodings. Pascal says use UTF-16LE if you want to be explicit about things... Especially if you are editing your strings files in an external editor like BBEdit or whatnot. I use the eclipse editor and UTF-16 myself and all seems to work fine for me. So to each his own.
Your tips go here.
It's a wiki, ya know ![]()