214
votes

I'm trying to parse some HTML using DOMDocument, but when I do, I suddenly lose my encoding (at least that is how it appears to me).

$profile = "<div><p>various japanese characters</p></div>";
$dom = new DOMDocument();
$dom->loadHTML($profile); 

$divs = $dom->getElementsByTagName('div');

foreach ($divs as $div) {
    echo $dom->saveHTML($div);
}

The result of this code is that I get a bunch of characters that are not Japanese. However, if I do:

echo $profile;

it displays correctly. I've tried saveHTML and saveXML, and neither display correctly. I am using PHP 5.3.

What I see:

ã¤ãªãã¤å·ã·ã«ã´ã«ã¦ãã¢ã¤ã«ã©ã³ãç³»ã®å®¶åº­ã«ã9人åå¼ã®5çªç®ã¨ãã¦çã¾ãããå½¼ãå«ãã¦4人ã俳åªã«ãªã£ããç¶è¦ªã¯æ¨æã®ã»ã¼ã«ã¹ãã³ã§ãæ¯è¦ªã¯éµä¾¿å±ã®å®¢å®¤ä¿ã ã£ããé«æ ¡æ代ã¯ã­ã£ãã£ã®ã¢ã«ãã¤ãã«å¤ãã¿ãæè²è³éãåããªããã«ããªãã¯ç³»ã®é«æ ¡ã¸é²å­¦ã

What should be shown:

イリノイ州シカゴにて、アイルランド系の家庭に、9人兄弟の5番目として生まれる。彼を含めて4人が俳優になった。父親は木材のセールスマンで、母親は郵便局の客室係だった。高校時代はキャディのアルバイトに勤しみ、教育資金を受けながらカトリック系の高校へ進学

EDIT: I've simplified the code down to five lines so you can test it yourself.

$profile = "<div lang=ja><p>イリノイ州シカゴにて、アイルランド系の家庭に、</p></div>";
$dom = new DOMDocument();
$dom->loadHTML($profile);
echo $dom->saveHTML();
echo $profile;

Here is the html that is returned:

<div lang="ja"><p>イリノイ州シカゴã«ã¦ã€ã‚¢ã‚¤ãƒ«ãƒ©ãƒ³ãƒ‰ç³»ã®å®¶åº­ã«ã€</p></div>
<div lang="ja"><p>イリノイ州シカゴにて、アイルランド系の家庭に、</p></div>
13
Thanks. I checked all those and nothing helped. I don't get ????, but some other strange text. I'll try to paste it here, but don't know how the site will display it.Slightly A.
Try using utf8_encodeWebnet
Tried with no success. Returned the same characters as before.Slightly A.

13 Answers

585
votes

DOMDocument::loadHTML will treat your string as being in ISO-8859-1 unless you tell it otherwise. This results in UTF-8 strings being interpreted incorrectly.

If your string doesn't contain an XML encoding declaration, you can prepend one to cause the string to be treated as UTF-8:

$profile = '<p>イリノイ州シカゴにて、アイルランド系の家庭に、9</p>';
$dom = new DOMDocument();
$dom->loadHTML('<?xml encoding="utf-8" ?>' . $profile);
echo $dom->saveHTML();

If you cannot know if the string will contain such a declaration already, there's a workaround in SmartDOMDocument which should help you:

$profile = '<p>イリノイ州シカゴにて、アイルランド系の家庭に、9</p>';
$dom = new DOMDocument();
$dom->loadHTML(mb_convert_encoding($profile, 'HTML-ENTITIES', 'UTF-8'));
echo $dom->saveHTML();

This is not a great workaround, but since not all characters can be represented in ISO-8859-1 (like these katana), it's the safest alternative.

80
votes

The problem is with saveHTML() and saveXML(), both of them do not work correctly in Unix. They do not save UTF-8 characters correctly when used in Unix, but they work in Windows.

The workaround is very simple:

If you try the default, you will get the error you described

$str = $dom->saveHTML(); // saves incorrectly

All you have to do is save as follows:

$str = $dom->saveHTML($dom->documentElement); // saves correctly

This line of code will get your UTF-8 characters to be saved correctly. Use the same workaround if you are using saveXML().


Update

As suggested by "Jack M" in the comments section below, and verified by "Pamela" and "Marco Aurélio Deleu", the following variation might work in your case:

$str = utf8_decode($dom->saveHTML($dom->documentElement));

Note

  1. English characters do not cause any problem when you use saveHTML() without parameters (because English characters are saved as single byte characters in UTF-8)

  2. The problem happens when you have multi-byte characters (such as Chinese, Russian, Arabic, Hebrew, ...etc.)

I recommend reading this article: http://coding.smashingmagazine.com/2012/06/06/all-about-unicode-utf8-character-sets/. You will understand how UTF-8 works and why you have this problem. It will take you about 30 minutes, but it is time well spent.

16
votes

Make sure the real source file is saved as UTF-8 (You may even want to try the non-recommended BOM Chars with UTF-8 to make sure).

Also in case of HTML, make sure you have declared the correct encoding using meta tags:

<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8">

If it's a CMS (as you've tagged your question with Joomla) you may need to configure appropriate settings for the encoding.

12
votes

This took me a while to figure out but here's my answer.

Before using DomDocument I would use file_get_contents to retrieve urls and then process them with string functions. Perhaps not the best way but quick. After being convinced Dom was just as quick I first tried the following:

$dom = new DomDocument('1.0', 'UTF-8');
if ($dom->loadHTMLFile($url) == false) { // read the url
    // error message
}
else {
    // process
}

This failed spectacularly in preserving UTF-8 encoding despite the proper meta tags, php settings and all the rest of the remedies offered here and elsewhere. Here's what works:

$dom = new DomDocument('1.0', 'UTF-8');
$str = file_get_contents($url);
if ($dom->loadHTML(mb_convert_encoding($str, 'HTML-ENTITIES', 'UTF-8')) == false) {
}

etc. Now everything's right with the world. Hope this helps.

10
votes

You could prefix a line enforcing utf-8 encoding, like this:

@$doc->loadHTML('<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>' . "\n" . $profile);

And you can then continue with the code you already have, like:

$doc->saveXML()
5
votes

You must feed the DOMDocument a version of your HTML with a header that make sense. Just like HTML5.

$profile ='<?xml version="1.0" encoding="'.$_encoding.'"?>'. $html;

maybe is a good idea to keep your html as valid as you can, so you don't get into issues when you'll start query... around :-) and stay away from htmlentities!!!! That's an an necessary back and forth wasting resources. keep your code insane!!!!

4
votes

Use it for correct result

$dom = new DOMDocument();
$dom->loadHTML('<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8">' . $profile);
echo $dom->saveHTML();
echo $profile;

This operation

mb_convert_encoding($profile, 'HTML-ENTITIES', 'UTF-8');

It is bad way, because special symbols like &lt ; , &gt ; can be in $profile, and they will not convert twice after mb_convert_encoding. It is the hole for XSS and incorrect HTML.

4
votes

Works finde for me:

$dom = new \DOMDocument;
$dom->loadHTML(utf8_decode($html));
...
return  utf8_encode( $dom->saveHTML());
1
votes

The only thing that worked for me was the accepted answer of

$profile = '<p>イリノイ州シカゴにて、アイルランド系の家庭に、9</p>';
$dom = new DOMDocument();
$dom->loadHTML('<?xml encoding="utf-8" ?>' . $profile);
echo $dom->saveHTML();

HOWEVER

This brought about new issues, of having <?xml encoding="utf-8" ?> in the output of the document.

The solution for me was then to do

foreach ($doc->childNodes as $xx) {
    if ($xx instanceof \DOMProcessingInstruction) {
        $xx->parentNode->removeChild($xx);
    }
}

Some solutions told me that to remove the xml header, that I had to perform

$dom->saveXML($dom->documentElement);

This didn't work for me as for a partial document (e.g. a doc with two <p> tags), only one of the <p> tags where being returned.

1
votes

Use correct header for UTF-8

Don't get satisfied by "it works".

@cmbuckley in his accepted answer advised to set <?xml encoding="utf-8" ?> to the document. However to use XML declaration in HTML document is a bit weird. HTML is not XML (unless it is XHTML) and it can confuse browsers and other software on the way to client (may be source of the failures reported by others).

I successfully used HTML5 declaration:

$profile = '<p>イリノイ州シカゴにて、アイルランド系の家庭に、9</p>';
$dom = new DOMDocument();
$dom->loadHTML('<!DOCTYPE html><meta charset="UTF-8">' . $profile);
echo $dom->saveHTML();

If you use other standard, use correct header, the DOMDocument follows the standards quite pedantically and seems to support HTML5, too (if not in your case, try to update the libxml extension).

0
votes

Can also encode like below.... gathered from https://davidwalsh.name/domdocument-utf8-problem

$profile = '<p>イリノイ州シカゴにて、アイルランド系の家庭に、9</p>';
$dom = new DOMDocument();
$dom->loadHTML(mb_convert_encoding($profile, 'HTML-ENTITIES', 'UTF-8'));
echo $dom->saveHTML();
0
votes

This worked for me.

In php.ini file, change the following property.

Before:

mbstring.encoding_transration = On

After:

mbstring.encoding_transration = Off
0
votes

The problem is that when you add a parameter to DOMDocument::saveHTML() function, you lose the encoding. In a few cases, you'll need to avoid the use of the parameter and use old string function to find what your are looking for.

I think the previous answer works for you, but since this workaround didn't work for me, I'm adding that answer to help people who may be in my case.