I have this code but it only works using english characters
$( "input[name*='Name']" ).attr("placeholder","姓名");
My web page displays other chinese characters just fine and if I change the chinese characters to "Name", it starts working again just fine. Is there something special I have to do here?
In the header, I do see this as the encoding...
<meta http-equiv="content-type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8">
If the script is inline (in the HTML file), then it's using the encoding of the HTML file and you won't have an issue.
If the script is loaded from another file:
Your text editor must save the file in an appropriate encoding such as utf-8 (it's probably doing this already if you're able to save it, close it, and reopen it with the characters still displaying correctly)
Your web server must serve the file with the right http header specifying that it's utf-8 (or whatever the enocding happens to be, as determined by your text editor settings). Here's an example for how to do this with php: Set HTTP header to UTF-8 using PHP
If you can't have your webserver do this, try to set the charset attribute on your script tag (e.g. <script type="text/javascript" charset="utf-8" src="..."></script> > I tried to see what the spec said should happen in the case of mismatching charsets defined by the tag and the http headers, but couldn't find anything concrete, so just test and see if it helps.
If that doesn't work, place your script inline
Related
I tried charset UTF-8 to display the ä, it displayed some square box.
Also i tried with charset ISO-8859-1 to display the ä, it diplayed as ä. (which is correct)
But When combine the above both charset within javascript condition, its not working properly. Refer below code,
<html>
<head>
<script type="text/javascript">
var lang = 'German';
function f(){
if(lang != 'SomeOtherLanguage'){
//here code will execute. And page should display square box. Instead of square box, ä is displayed. Which is wrong. I cant able to find reason.
metaTag = '<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=UTF-8"/>';
}
else
metaTag = '<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=ISO-8859-1"/>';
document.getElementsByTagName('head')[0].innerHTML += metaTag;
}
</script>
</head>
<body onload="f()">
<h1>Latin letter : ä </h1> <br />
</body>
</html>
You can't, the character set is established by the parser, which needs to parse Javascript in order to generate that meta DOM.
You still can use only one character set and convert the data.
What you are attempting to do will never work.
If the raw bytes of your HTML are not encoded as UTF-8 to begin with, you can't claim UTF-8, in a <meta> tag, or an HTTP Content-Type header. You would be lying to the browser/client, and is why you get bad results.
Your code will "work" only when your <meta> tag claims ISO-8859-1 (and there is no Content-Type header to override that) if your HTML is actually encoded in ISO-8859-1. In several (but not all) of the ISO-8859-X charsets, including ISO-8859-1, ä is encoded as byte 0xE4, so your code "works" when claiming ISO-8859-1 if byte 0x34 is present in the HTML's raw data.
In UTF-8, ä is encoded as bytes 0xC3 0xA4 instead. If your HTML contains byte 0xE4, but you claim UTF-8, you get bad results (0xE4 is not a valid byte in UTF-8).
So, your <meta> tag (and HTTP Content-Type header) needs to claim a charset that actually matches the real encoding of the HTML's raw bytes.
If your HTTP server is serving a static HTML file, the file is encoded in a specific charset when the HTML is saved to file. That same charset needs to be specified statically in the <meta> tag (and preferably also in the HTTP Content-Type header). If your HTTP server is generating the HTML dynamically, it needs to encode the HTML in a specific charset for transmission, so it needs to specify that same charset in the generated <meta> tag (and Content-Type header).
In other words, stop trying to lie to the browser/client. Tell the truth, then you won't run into this problem anymore.
So I'm trying to show utf-8 characters coming from JavaScript.
I should have it all:
header
<meta charset="utf-8">
include js
<script type="text/javascript" src="x.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
File x.js is saved as UTF-8 (and also the other files)
It works with all my PHP files, just not when it comes from a simple alert in JavaScript.
alert("Prénom doit être rempli");
Instead the famous '?' characters are showed in the alert box.
Anything I've forgotten?
Here what you need to do: open your file in notepad and save it again (save as) and this time select UTF-8 from save-file-dialog-box. Your issue will be solved
From the spec:
The charset attribute gives the character encoding of the external script resource. The attribute must not be specified if the src attribute is not present. If the attribute is set, its value must be an ASCII case-insensitive match for one of the labels of an encoding, and must specify the same encoding as the charset parameter of the Content-Type metadata of the external file, if any.
(My emphasis.)
So you need to ensure that your server is sending the correct Content-Type header — either with no charset, or with charset=utf-8.
If your server is already sending the charset as part of the Content-Type, that's a good thing: Just remove the charset attribute from the script tag.
So this is the code:
<script type="text/javascript" charset="UTF-8">
function loadScript("http://www.qppstudio.net/individualdays/noscroll/2012-08-15.js") {
document.write('<script type="text/javascript" charset="UTF-8" src="', url, '">', '<', '/', 'script>');
}
</script>
Included in page header:
<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8">
Page displays unicode characters without any problems expect for the part where posted javascript writes to page. Is the script changed somehow while being downloaded between different domains?
Probably. This is the first time that I've seen the charset attribute. I'm not sure what you try to achieve with it. If the server sends you file with iso-latin-1 encoding but you tell the browser the file has UTF-8 encoding, what should happen? The browser won't convert the file from one encoding to the other; the best that you could hope for is that the browser tries to interpret the byte stream as UTF-8 which will not work.
The correct solution is to configure the server to send the files with the correct encoding in the HTTP response header. The browser will look for this information and read the byte stream with the encoding specified there.
Don't forget to actually send the bytes in the correct encoding! This means: File reading, copying to the output stream + setting the encoding headers, everything must work perfectly or you will have odd bugs.
I am in the process of internationalizing a website, and I need to allow for a user to input Chinese characters into a search textbox. This text will end up being analyzed on the backend, so I need to ensure that I can accept the text encoded as UTF-8 via javascript (everything is done through AJAX). For testing purposes, I have an alert box being popped up with the text I enter every time a search is done, and when some Chinese text is entered in, I get 'undefined' returned. With English the word I entered is returned back, as expected. How can I ensure that all text in the textbox is encoded with UTF-8?
Make sure of the following:
Your HTML and JS documents are UTF-8 encoded.
You are sending a Content-type header with appropriate (UTF-8) value for both your HTML and JS files.
The meta tag charset defined in your HTML is also, appropriately, UTF-8.
Avoid using the built-in escape method; it is not UTF-8 (multibyte character) aware.
<head>
<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8">
</head>
html5
<meta charset="UTF-8" />
this will encode the entire page.
I want to read a file from my server with javascript and display it's content in a html page.
The file is in ANSI charset, and it has romanian characters.. I want to display those characters in the way they are :D not in different black symbols..
So I think my problem is the charset.. I have a get request that takes the content of the file, like this:
function IO(U, V) {//LA MOD String Version. A tiny ajax library. by, DanDavis
var X = !window.XMLHttpRequest ? new ActiveXObject('Microsoft.XMLHTTP') : new XMLHttpRequest();
X.open(V ? 'PUT' : 'GET', U, false );
X.setRequestHeader('Content-Type', 'Charset=UTF-8');
X.send(V ? V : '');return X.responseText;}
As far as I know the romanian characters are included in UTF-8 charset so I set the charset of the request header to utf-8.. the file is in utf-8 format and I have the meta tag that tells the browser that the page has utf-8 content..
<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=UTF-8">
So if I query the server the direct file, the browser shows me the romanian characters but if I display the content of the page through this script, I see only symbols instead of characters..
So what I am doing wrong?
Thank you!
PS: I want this to work on Firefox at least not necessarily in all browsers..
While my initial assumption was the same as T.J. Crowder's, a quick chat established that the OP uses some hosting service and cannot easily change the Content-Type headers.
The files were sent as text/plain or text/html without any Charset paramter, hence the browser interprets them as UTF-8 (which is the default).
So saving the files in UTF-8 (instead of ANSI/Windows-1252) did the trick.
You need to ensure that the HTTP response returning the file data has the correct charset identified on it. You have to do that server-side, I don't think you can force it from the client. (When you set the content type in the request header, you're setting the content type of the request, not the response.) So for instance, the response header from the server would be along the lines of:
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=windows-1252
...if by "ANSI" you mean the Windows-1252 charset. That should tell the browser what it needs to do to decode the response text correctly before handing it to the JavaScript layer.
One problem, though: As far as I can tell, Windows-1252 doesn't have the full Romanian alphabet. So if you're seeing characters like Ș, ș, Ţ, ţ, etc., that suggests the source text is not in Windows-1252. Now, perhaps it's okay to drop the diacriticals on those in Romanian (I wouldn't know) and so if your source text just uses S and T instead of Ș and Ţ, etc., it could still be in Windows-1252. Or it may be ISO-8859 or ISO-8859-2 (both of which drop some diacriticals) or possibly ISO-8859-16 (which has full Romanian support). Details here.
So the first thing to do is determine what character set the source text is actually in.