mysql_client_encoding

(PHP 4 >= 4.3.0, PHP 5)

mysql_client_encoding문자셋을 반환

설명

string mysql_client_encoding ([ resource $link_identifier ] )

MySQL로부터 character_set 변수값을 반환한다.

인수

link_identifier

MySQL 연결. 지정하지 않으면 mysql_connect()로 연 마지막 연결을 사용합니다. 연결이 없으면, 인수 없이 mysql_connect()를 호출하여 연결을 만듭니다. 연결이 성립되지 않으면 E_WARNING 등급의 오류를 생성합니다.

반환값

현재 접속의 기본 문자셋을 반환한다.

예제

Example #1 mysql_client_encoding() 예제

<?php
$link    
mysql_connect('localhost''mysql_user''mysql_password');
$charset mysql_client_encoding($link);

echo 
"The current character set is: $charset\n";
?>

위 예제의 출력 예시:

The current character set is: latin1

참고

add a note add a note

User Contributed Notes 13 notes

up
1
Wio at psitrax dot de
18 years ago
If you set the encoding in my.cnf like

[mysqld]
init_connect='SET NAMES utf8'

note that the content of init_connect  is not executed for users that have the SUPER privilege - ie root!
up
1
roy dot the dot geek+php at gmail dot com
17 years ago
f you think "set names utf8" for each connection is too trouble, you can modify my.cnf of MySQL to solve the problem forever. In my.cnf, add the line "default-character-set=utf8" in both [mysqld] and [client] sections:

[client]
default-character-set=utf8

[mysqld]
default-character-set=utf8

The MySQL will use utf8 after you restart it.
up
1
romain at dardour dot com
18 years ago
I couldn't get any luck with all the stuff mentioned below, and despite having an unicode DB, and setting all my field to utf8_general_ci...
After looking around, I found that this page: http://dev.mysql.com/tech-resources/articles/4.1/unicode.html was adding the fields with an extra info before each value:

<?
mysql_query
("INSERT INTO table SET field = _utf8'value'");
?>
Mind the "_utf8" before the field value, and outside of the quotes.

This works for me wether in an Insert or an Update statement.

No need here for a <? mysql_query("SET NAMES utf8"); ?> before each query, or to change anything in the config files (that was important since I don't have access to these).
up
-1
info at jantichy dot cz
19 years ago
Notice the difference between following two SQL statements:

SET NAMES 'charset_name'
SET CHARACTER SET charset_name

For more detail see
http://dev.mysql.com/doc/mysql/en/Charset-connection.html
up
-1
Pedro Pereira
18 years ago
All I had to do to save utf8 data with php mysql_query() was to go to the php.ini and put default_charset = "utf-8". Without this I had the same problems some of you have. Plus, all my mysql charsets vars are in 'utf8'. (Changed them with Mysql Admin Tool)

Didnt use any mysql SET **** command at all.

Mysql 4.1.20
PHP 4.4.4
Win XP

Hope this help some of you.
up
-1
zayfod at yahoo dot com
18 years ago
The right lines to put in /etc/my.cnf (or other MySQL options file) are:

[client]
init-command="SET NAMES utf8"

Unfortuantely the PHP mysql_connect() function does not use MySQL options files so this is not a sollution for changing the default connection character set for mysqlclient library v4.1+.

The only working sollution remains:

mysql_query("SET NAMES utf8", $conn);

(of course /ext/mysql/php_mysql.c can always be patched ;] )
up
-1
alamakota at mises dot pl
18 years ago
There's no 'character_set' variable available in MySQL. You can check it yourself in MySQL online documentation or by running MySQL query "SHOW VARIABLES LIKE 'character_set%';".
This must be an error in PHP manual, unless I'm missing something.
up
-2
php at quarkus dot de
17 years ago
Please note that even if you set the charset by issuing the two mentioned SQL statements (set names, set character set) mysql_client_encoding still deliveres the old result.

Default for me is latin1. After switching to UTF8 mysql_client_encoding still returns latin1. The charset switched to UTF8 successfully, though.
up
-2
vrbcik
18 years ago
I have had problems with encoding after export of tables (from hosting - via PhpMyAdmin) and import them to other machine (my notebook - via PhpMyAdmin too). In PhpMyAdmin the encoding of all data was shown correctly, not that good with the web pages (data pulled via php).
The first point is indication, that the data was imported correctly, but php script has got other character set than MySql is sending.

The script's character set is set in header: <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=ISO-8859-2">. MySql setting was latin1.

Then following code helped me:

<?php
mysql_query
("SET CHARACTER SET 'latin2'", $conn);
?>
up
-3
devos at montp dot inserm dot fr
17 years ago
I use mysql 3.23 and none of the above worked for me. Looking at http://dev.mysql.com/tech-resources/articles/4.1/unicode.html as advised by romain at dardour dot com, I tried to include the following header in my php scripts, and all the funy characters disapeared. Hope it will help.

<?php header("Content-type: text/html; charset=latin1");?>

(my mysql character was latin1)
up
-4
Anonymous
18 years ago
A very easy way to always get results in UTF-8 is to make a common function to connect to DB and in that function set character set to utf-8.

function OpenConn() {
  global $link;
  $link = mysql_connect ("localhost", "username", "password")
      or die(sendError('Could not connect to DB'));
  mysql_select_db ("dbName");
  //
  // Set character set to UTF-8
  //
  mysql_query("SET CHARACTER SET 'utf8'", $link);
}
up
-6
black at scene-si dot org
20 years ago
the above (as it seems to be vaguely indicated in the mysql manual) works only with mysql 4.1+
up
-7
stian at grytoyr dot net
20 years ago
If you experience weird problems, like some UTF-8 characters (the Unicode character &#x010D and a few others in my case) seemingly being changed to garbage by mysql_query, you may need to do something like this before your actual query:

<?php
mysql_query
("SET NAMES 'utf8'", $conn);
?>

Took me days to figure that one out...
To Top