Thanks. it works now

On 2/6/07, Pje <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

I think you need to save your file in UTF-8 too. This setting will depend
in which text editor you are using.

Hope it helps.

On 2/5/07, Jon Ege Ronnenberg <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> I bow for you. You're absolutely right and utf8_decode() was just what I
> needed! Still I don't get why setting charset to UTF-8 doesn't show the
> danish characters correct in a web page then.
>
>  On 2/5/07, Fil <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >
> > > What do you mean the by UTF-8 contains all characters?
> >
> > utf-8 is an encoding for unicode characters, see
> > http://da.wikipedia.org/wiki/UTF-8
> > http://da.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unicode
> >
> > The unicode norm contains all characters that exist in all languages
> > known
> > to humanity.
> >
> > > UTF-8 does not contain the danish letter æ,ø, and å. ISO 8859-1
> > does.
> >
> > Yes it does, but they are not encoded the same way. In iso-latin, a
> > few
> > accentuated characters exist, and are encoded on a single byte. In
> > UTF8
> > these will be represented by two bytes.
> >
> > > Anyway I usually develop apps with .NET but this particular projects
> > is in
> > > PHP and I haven't seen any functions to iso encode with but I think
> > I'll
> > > write my own little function. That seems to be the only way.
> >
> > You can probably use utf8_decode(), see
> > http://www.php.net/manual/da/function.utf8-decode.php
> >
> > -- Fil
> >
> >
> > _______________________________________________
> > jQuery mailing list
> > [email protected]
> > http://jquery.com/discuss/
> >
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> jQuery mailing list
> [email protected]
> http://jquery.com/discuss/
>
>

_______________________________________________
jQuery mailing list
[email protected]
http://jquery.com/discuss/


_______________________________________________
jQuery mailing list
[email protected]
http://jquery.com/discuss/

Reply via email to