Pesquisar no site de suporte

Evite golpes de suporte. Nunca pedimos que você ligue ou envie uma mensagem de texto para um número de telefone, ou compartilhe informações pessoais. Denuncie atividades suspeitas usando a opção “Denunciar abuso”.

Saiba mais

Esta discussão foi arquivada. Faça uma nova pergunta se precisa de ajuda.

Appears to ignore charset in http-equiv meta directive

  • 3 respostas
  • 2 têm este problema
  • 14 visualizações
  • Última resposta de cor-el

more options

<head> section contains <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1">

but the "micro" symbol is displayed as the white question mark on a black diamond background. In the datastream received this symbol is correctly encoded for iso-8859-1 as hex b5.

The browser reports page text encoding as UFT8 when queried by clicking on favicon on address bar, selecting "more info", then "general". However, page (as transmitted from host) does not contain the text "UTF".

This behaviour was observed on page http://www.8052.com/store/index.phtml?PRODUCTID=9.

Why is this? It appears to me that 1) the browser is ignoring the charset directive, or 2) I have created an override somewhere

<head> section contains <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1"> but the "micro" symbol is displayed as the white question mark on a black diamond background. In the datastream received this symbol is correctly encoded for iso-8859-1 as hex b5. The browser reports page text encoding as UFT8 when queried by clicking on favicon on address bar, selecting "more info", then "general". However, page (as transmitted from host) does not contain the text "UTF". This behaviour was observed on page http://www.8052.com/store/index.phtml?PRODUCTID=9. Why is this? It appears to me that 1) the browser is ignoring the charset directive, or 2) I have created an override somewhere

Solução escolhida

The server sends the file as "Content-Type: text/html; charset=UTF-8" and that prevails over what is specified in the main HTML file.

<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1">

Visitors would have to change the encoding manually from Unicode to Western. Best would be to save the HTML file as Unicode (UTF-8) and re-upload the file.

The characters are in the same position in Unicode.

Only 20-µA current
Intel® BASIC-52
Power down mode reduces current requirements to 20 µA.
Some ±8V power
Ler esta resposta 👍 0

Todas as respostas (3)

more options

Solução escolhida

The server sends the file as "Content-Type: text/html; charset=UTF-8" and that prevails over what is specified in the main HTML file.

<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1">

Visitors would have to change the encoding manually from Unicode to Western. Best would be to save the HTML file as Unicode (UTF-8) and re-upload the file.

The characters are in the same position in Unicode.

Only 20-µA current
Intel® BASIC-52
Power down mode reduces current requirements to 20 µA.
Some ±8V power
more options

Thank you. Very silly of me to have ignored the HTTP headers. They were there, in front of me in the tcpdump I'd done. So, we have a mis-configured server or a user of said server who doesn't understand what he's doing.

This is frightening. I'm increasingly seeing examples of technology being used without any understanding of what it's doing.

Alterado por catsmum em

more options

It is best to keep the server set to Unicode and advice users to make sure that all files are saved as Unicode as well. Unicode should cover all possible characters and shouldn't cause issues with visitors from various countries.