But this byte sequence does represent something different when interpreted with a. That's entirely up to the browser, and it won't do it for all characters, specifically it won't decode particular lookalike characters. This only forces the client which encoding to use to interpret and display the characters.
Ë becomes ã« thank you
Follow edited may 23, 2017 at 11:47.
This is implied by the second quote, but one thing you could add is if one wants to make an educated guess at whether one is looking at a dieresis or an umlaut, one should look if. Not having an inflectional ending or sign, as a noun used as an adjective, or an adjective as an adverb, without the addition of a formative suffix, or an infinitive without the sign. This means when ë is sent to output stream (console) as 11000011 10101011 bits, console sees it as two characters, which in 850 code page (based on your comments) are. The php manual iconv intro has a warning:
Note that the iconv function on some systems may not work as you expect. And iyengar s.r.k., “advanced engineering mathematicsâ€, narosa publications,</li> I have lot a raw html string in database All the text have these.
I've seen similar use with a diaeresis over the e
Ë as in reëxcite, but. And the 'ë' is encoded as 0xeb (235) My guess is that if. The browser may then decide to render it as ë
