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forceutf8 ========= PHP Class Encoding featuring popular \ForceUTF8\Encoding::toUTF8() function --formerly known as forceUTF8()-- that fixes mixed encoded strings. Description =========== If you apply the PHP function utf8_encode() to an already-UTF8 string it will return a garbled UTF8 string. This class addresses this issue and provides a handy static function called \ForceUTF8\Encoding::toUTF8(). You don't need to know what the encoding of your strings is. It can be Latin1 (iso 8859-1), Windows-1252 or UTF8, or the string can have a mix of them. \ForceUTF8\Encoding::toUTF8() will convert everything to UTF8. Sometimes you have to deal with services that are unreliable in terms of encoding, possibly mixing UTF8 and Latin1 in the same string. Update: I've included another function, \ForceUTF8\Encoding::fixUTF8(), which will fix the double (or multiple) encoded UTF8 string that looks garbled. Usage: ====== use \ForceUTF8\Encoding; $utf8_string = Encoding::toUTF8($utf8_or_latin1_or_mixed_string); $latin1_string = Encoding::toLatin1($utf8_or_latin1_or_mixed_string); also: $utf8_string = Encoding::fixUTF8($garbled_utf8_string); Examples: use \ForceUTF8\Encoding; echo Encoding::fixUTF8("Fédération Camerounaise de Football\n"); echo Encoding::fixUTF8("Fédération Camerounaise de Football\n"); echo Encoding::fixUTF8("Fédération Camerounaise de Football\n"); echo Encoding::fixUTF8("Fédération Camerounaise de Football\n"); will output: Fédération Camerounaise de Football Fédération Camerounaise de Football Fédération Camerounaise de Football Fédération Camerounaise de Football Install via composer: ===================== Edit your composer.json file to include the following: ```json { "require": { "neitanod/forceutf8": "dev-master" } } ```