I have php document signup.php which save the content from form (in form.php document) to MySQL base. The problem arises when I want to reformat the input content. I want do decode UTF-8 charachters like à->a.
$first_name=$_POST['first_name'];
$last_name=$_POST['last_name'];
$course=$_POST['course'];
$chain="prêt-à-porter";
$pattern = array("'é'", "'è'", "'ë'", "'ê'", "'É'", "'È'", "'Ë'", "'Ê'", "'á'", "'à'", "'ä'", "'â'", "'å'", "'Á'", "'À'", "'Ä'", "'Â'", "'Å'", "'ó'", "'ò'", "'ö'", "'ô'", "'Ó'", "'Ò'", "'Ö'", "'Ô'", "'í'", "'ì'", "'ï'", "'î'", "'Í'", "'Ì'", "'Ï'", "'Î'", "'ú'", "'ù'", "'ü'", "'û'", "'Ú'", "'Ù'", "'Ü'", "'Û'", "'ý'", "'ÿ'", "'Ý'", "'ø'", "'Ø'", "'œ'", "'Œ'", "'Æ'", "'ç'", "'Ç'");
$replace = array('e', 'e', 'e', 'e', 'E', 'E', 'E', 'E', 'a', 'a', 'a', 'a', 'a', 'A', 'A', 'A', 'A', 'A', 'o', 'o', 'o', 'o', 'O', 'O', 'O', 'O', 'i', 'i', 'i', 'I', 'I', 'I', 'I', 'I', 'u', 'u', 'u', 'u', 'U', 'U', 'U', 'U', 'y', 'y', 'Y', 'o', 'O', 'a', 'A', 'A', 'c', 'C');
$chain = preg_replace($pattern, $replace, $chain);
echo $chain; // print pret-a-porter
$first_name = preg_replace($pattern, $replace, $first_name);
echo $first_name; // does not change the input!?!
Why it works perfectly for $chain, but for $first_name or $last_name doesnt work?
Also i try
echo $first_name; // print áááááábéééééébšššš
$trans = array("á" => "a", "é" => "e", "š" => "s");
echo strtr("áááááábéééééébšššš", $trans); // print aaaaaabeeeeeebssss
echo strtr($first_name,$trans); // print áááááábéééééébšššš
but the problem, as you can see, is same!
There’s a much easier way to do this, using
iconv– from the user notes, this seems to be what you want to do: characters transliterationBe very conscientious with your character encodings, so you are keeping the same encoding at all stages in the process – front end, form submission, encoding of the source files. Default encoding in PHP and in forms is ISO-8859-1, before PHP 5.4 where it changed to be UTF8 (finally!).
There’s a couple of functions you can play around with for ideas. First is from CakePHP’s inflector class, called
slug:It depends on a
self::$_transliterationarray which is similar to what you were doing in your question – you can see the source for inflector on github.Another is a function I use personally, which comes from here.
What those functions do is transliterate and create ‘slugs‘ from arbitrary text input, which is a very very useful thing to have in your toolchest when making web apps.