Iskanje po podpori

Izogibajte se prevarantski tehnični podpori. Nikoli vam ne bomo naročili, da pokličete telefonsko številko ali nam pošljete osebne podatke. Sumljivo dejavnost prijavite z gumbom »Prijavi zlorabo«.

Več o tem

html 5 charset issue

  • 1 odgovor
  • 6 ima to težavo
  • 3 ogledi
  • Zadnji odgovor od gnittala

more options

We have an application using html5. The server returns an accepted charset of utf-8. On the page is the following meta-tag: <meta charset="utf-8">.

When inputting "special"characters (é, è, à, etc) and submitting the form, firefox translates this to these characters: éÃ. Further examination tells us that these are utf-8 representations of the iso-8859-1 values for the given characters. (we are using firefox on windows)

When putting the accept-charset on the html-form, the issue is solved. However when reading the html5 spec, it seems to me that firefox should interpret either the server response or the meta-tag and submit the content as utf-8.

We have the same issue in chrome, however in IE it seems to work.

We have an application using html5. The server returns an accepted charset of utf-8. On the page is the following meta-tag: <meta charset="utf-8">. When inputting "special"characters (é, è, à, etc) and submitting the form, firefox translates this to these characters: éÃ. Further examination tells us that these are utf-8 representations of the iso-8859-1 values for the given characters. (we are using firefox on windows) When putting the accept-charset on the html-form, the issue is solved. However when reading the html5 spec, it seems to me that firefox should interpret either the server response or the meta-tag and submit the content as utf-8. We have the same issue in chrome, however in IE it seems to work.

Vsi odgovori (1)

more options

Hello,

Can you please confirm the following

  1. The file is saved with UTF-8 encoding
  2. Are the pages getting served by server side scripting (PHP etc) or is it a HTML+JS single page application
  3. Is it possible for you to provide a sample of the <meta> tag you are using

Like you mentioned, if you did provide the charset in the meta tag, it is not required to set the charset for the form (provided the charset is the same), but the browser should be able to identify the charset properly.

Can you please check these links to see if having the charset within the first 512/1024 bytes of the page is causing this issue

  1. Setting default encoding of a page to UTF-8
  2. Charset identified wrongly as Western-8859-1 for a UTF-8 page
  3. Details on MetaCharSetAttribute
  4. Meta on MDN

Thank you