mb_detect_encoding

(PHP 4 >= 4.0.6, PHP 5, PHP 7, PHP 8)

mb_detect_encodingDetect character encoding

Description

mb_detect_encoding(string $string, array|string|null $encodings = null, bool $strict = false): string|false

Detects the most likely character encoding for string string from an ordered list of candidates.

Automatic detection of the intended character encoding can never be entirely reliable; without some additional information, it is similar to decoding an encrypted string without the key. It is always preferable to use an indication of character encoding stored or transmitted with the data, such as a "Content-Type" HTTP header.

This function is most useful with multibyte encodings, where not all sequences of bytes form a valid string. If the input string contains such a sequence, that encoding will be rejected, and the next encoding checked.

Parameters

string

The string being inspected.

encodings

A list of character encodings to try, in order. The list may be specified as an array of strings, or a single string separated by commas.

If encodings is omitted or null, the current detect_order (set with the mbstring.detect_order configuration option, or mb_detect_order() function) will be used.

strict

Controls the behaviour when string is not valid in any of the listed encodings. If strict is set to false, the closest matching encoding will be returned; if strict is set to true, false will be returned.

The default value for strict can be set with the mbstring.strict_detection configuration option.

Return Values

The detected character encoding, or false if the string is not valid in any of the listed encodings.

Changelog

Version Description
8.2.0 mb_detect_encoding() will no longer return the following non text encodings: "Base64", "QPrint", "UUencode", "HTML entities", "7 bit" and "8 bit".

Examples

Example #1 mb_detect_encoding() example

<?php
// Detect character encoding with current detect_order
echo mb_detect_encoding($str);

// "auto" is expanded according to mbstring.language
echo mb_detect_encoding($str, "auto");

// Specify "encodings" parameter by list separated by comma
echo mb_detect_encoding($str, "JIS, eucjp-win, sjis-win");

// Use array to specify "encodings" parameter
$encodings = [
"ASCII",
"JIS",
"EUC-JP"
];
echo
mb_detect_encoding($str, $encodings);
?>

Example #2 Effect of strict parameter

<?php
// 'áéóú' encoded in ISO-8859-1
$str = "\xE1\xE9\xF3\xFA";

// The string is not valid ASCII or UTF-8, but UTF-8 is considered a closer match
var_dump(mb_detect_encoding($str, ['ASCII', 'UTF-8'], false));
var_dump(mb_detect_encoding($str, ['ASCII', 'UTF-8'], true));

// If a valid encoding is found, the strict parameter does not change the result
var_dump(mb_detect_encoding($str, ['ASCII', 'UTF-8', 'ISO-8859-1'], false));
var_dump(mb_detect_encoding($str, ['ASCII', 'UTF-8', 'ISO-8859-1'], true));
?>

The above example will output:

string(5) "UTF-8"
bool(false)
string(10) "ISO-8859-1"
string(10) "ISO-8859-1"

In some cases, the same sequence of bytes may form a valid string in multiple character encodings, and it is impossible to know which interpretation was intended. For instance, among many others, the byte sequence "\xC4\xA2" could be:

  • "Ä¢" (U+00C4 LATIN CAPITAL LETTER A WITH DIAERESIS followed by U+00A2 CENT SIGN) encoded in any of ISO-8859-1, ISO-8859-15, or Windows-1252
  • "ФЂ" (U+0424 CYRILLIC CAPITAL LETTER EF followed by U+0402 CYRILLIC CAPITAL LETTER DJE) encoded in ISO-8859-5
  • "Ģ" (U+0122 LATIN CAPITAL LETTER G WITH CEDILLA) encoded in UTF-8

Example #3 Effect of order when multiple encodings match

<?php
$str
= "\xC4\xA2";

// The string is valid in all three encodings, so the first one listed will be returned
var_dump(mb_detect_encoding($str, ['UTF-8', 'ISO-8859-1', 'ISO-8859-5']));
var_dump(mb_detect_encoding($str, ['ISO-8859-1', 'ISO-8859-5', 'UTF-8']));
var_dump(mb_detect_encoding($str, ['ISO-8859-5', 'UTF-8', 'ISO-8859-1']));
?>

The above example will output:

string(5) "UTF-8"
string(10) "ISO-8859-1"
string(10) "ISO-8859-5"

See Also

add a note

User Contributed Notes 20 notes

up
84
Gerg Tisza
13 years ago
If you try to use mb_detect_encoding to detect whether a string is valid UTF-8, use the strict mode, it is pretty worthless otherwise.

<?php
$str
= 'áéóú'; // ISO-8859-1
mb_detect_encoding($str, 'UTF-8'); // 'UTF-8'
mb_detect_encoding($str, 'UTF-8', true); // false
?>
up
20
mta59066 at gmail dot com
2 years ago
The documentation is no longer correct for php8.1 and mb_detect_encoding no longer supports order of encodings. The example outputs given in the documentation are also no longer correct for php8.1. This is somewhat explained here https://github.com/php/php-src/issues/8279

I understand the previous ambiguity in these functions, but in my option 8.1 should have deprecated mb_detect_encoding and mb_detect_order and came up with different functions. It now tries to find the encoding that will use the least amount of space regardless of the order, and I am not sure who needs that.

Below is an example function that will do what mb_detect_encoding was doing prior to the 8.1 change.

<?php

function mb_detect_enconding_in_order(string $string, array $encodings): string|false
{
foreach(
$encodings as $enc) {
if (
mb_check_encoding($string, $enc)) {
return
$enc;
}
}
return
false;
}

?>
up
4
geompse at gmail dot com
1 year ago
Major undocumented breaking change since 8.1.7
https://3v4l.org/BLjZ3

Make sure to replace mb_detect_encoding with a loop of calls to mb_check_encoding
up
21
Chrigu
19 years ago
If you need to distinguish between UTF-8 and ISO-8859-1 encoding, list UTF-8 first in your encoding_list:
mb_detect_encoding($string, 'UTF-8, ISO-8859-1');

if you list ISO-8859-1 first, mb_detect_encoding() will always return ISO-8859-1.
up
19
chris AT w3style.co DOT uk
18 years ago
Based upon that snippet below using preg_match() I needed something faster and less specific. That function works and is brilliant but it scans the entire strings and checks that it conforms to UTF-8. I wanted something purely to check if a string contains UTF-8 characters so that I could switch character encoding from iso-8859-1 to utf-8.

I modified the pattern to only look for non-ascii multibyte sequences in the UTF-8 range and also to stop once it finds at least one multibytes string. This is quite a lot faster.

<?php

function detectUTF8($string)
{
return
preg_match('%(?:
[\xC2-\xDF][\x80-\xBF] # non-overlong 2-byte
|\xE0[\xA0-\xBF][\x80-\xBF] # excluding overlongs
|[\xE1-\xEC\xEE\xEF][\x80-\xBF]{2} # straight 3-byte
|\xED[\x80-\x9F][\x80-\xBF] # excluding surrogates
|\xF0[\x90-\xBF][\x80-\xBF]{2} # planes 1-3
|[\xF1-\xF3][\x80-\xBF]{3} # planes 4-15
|\xF4[\x80-\x8F][\x80-\xBF]{2} # plane 16
)+%xs'
, $string);
}

?>
up
19
nat3738 at gmail dot com
15 years ago
A simple way to detect UTF-8/16/32 of file by its BOM (not work with string or file without BOM)

<?php
// Unicode BOM is U+FEFF, but after encoded, it will look like this.
define ('UTF32_BIG_ENDIAN_BOM' , chr(0x00) . chr(0x00) . chr(0xFE) . chr(0xFF));
define ('UTF32_LITTLE_ENDIAN_BOM', chr(0xFF) . chr(0xFE) . chr(0x00) . chr(0x00));
define ('UTF16_BIG_ENDIAN_BOM' , chr(0xFE) . chr(0xFF));
define ('UTF16_LITTLE_ENDIAN_BOM', chr(0xFF) . chr(0xFE));
define ('UTF8_BOM' , chr(0xEF) . chr(0xBB) . chr(0xBF));

function
detect_utf_encoding($filename) {

$text = file_get_contents($filename);
$first2 = substr($text, 0, 2);
$first3 = substr($text, 0, 3);
$first4 = substr($text, 0, 3);

if (
$first3 == UTF8_BOM) return 'UTF-8';
elseif (
$first4 == UTF32_BIG_ENDIAN_BOM) return 'UTF-32BE';
elseif (
$first4 == UTF32_LITTLE_ENDIAN_BOM) return 'UTF-32LE';
elseif (
$first2 == UTF16_BIG_ENDIAN_BOM) return 'UTF-16BE';
elseif (
$first2 == UTF16_LITTLE_ENDIAN_BOM) return 'UTF-16LE';
}
?>
up
10
dennis at nikolaenko dot ru
16 years ago
Beware of bug to detect Russian encodings
http://bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=38138
up
4
rl at itfigures dot nl
17 years ago
I used Chris's function "detectUTF8" to detect the need from conversion from utf8 to 8859-1, which works fine. I did have a problem with the following iconv-conversion.

The problem is that the iconv-conversion to 8859-1 (with //TRANSLIT) replaces the euro-sign with EUR, although it is common practice that \x80 is used as the euro-sign in the 8859-1 charset.

I could not use 8859-15 since that mangled some other characters, so I added 2 str_replace's:

if(detectUTF8($str)){
$str=str_replace("\xE2\x82\xAC","&euro;",$str);
$str=iconv("UTF-8","ISO-8859-1//TRANSLIT",$str);
$str=str_replace("&euro;","\x80",$str);
}

If html-output is needed the last line is not necessary (and even unwanted).
up
5
eyecatchup at gmail dot com
11 years ago
Just a note: Instead of using the often recommended (rather complex) regular expression by W3C (http://www.w3.org/International/questions/qa-forms-utf-8.en.php), you can simply use the 'u' modifier to test a string for UTF-8 validity:

<?php
if (preg_match("//u", $string)) {
// $string is valid UTF-8
}
up
5
hmdker at gmail dot com
16 years ago
Function to detect UTF-8, when mb_detect_encoding is not available it may be useful.

<?php
function is_utf8($str) {
$c=0; $b=0;
$bits=0;
$len=strlen($str);
for(
$i=0; $i<$len; $i++){
$c=ord($str[$i]);
if(
$c > 128){
if((
$c >= 254)) return false;
elseif(
$c >= 252) $bits=6;
elseif(
$c >= 248) $bits=5;
elseif(
$c >= 240) $bits=4;
elseif(
$c >= 224) $bits=3;
elseif(
$c >= 192) $bits=2;
else return
false;
if((
$i+$bits) > $len) return false;
while(
$bits > 1){
$i++;
$b=ord($str[$i]);
if(
$b < 128 || $b > 191) return false;
$bits--;
}
}
}
return
true;
}
?>
up
4
php-note-2005 at ryandesign dot com
19 years ago
Much simpler UTF-8-ness checker using a regular expression created by the W3C:

<?php

// Returns true if $string is valid UTF-8 and false otherwise.
function is_utf8($string) {

// From http://w3.org/International/questions/qa-forms-utf-8.html
return preg_match('%^(?:
[\x09\x0A\x0D\x20-\x7E] # ASCII
| [\xC2-\xDF][\x80-\xBF] # non-overlong 2-byte
| \xE0[\xA0-\xBF][\x80-\xBF] # excluding overlongs
| [\xE1-\xEC\xEE\xEF][\x80-\xBF]{2} # straight 3-byte
| \xED[\x80-\x9F][\x80-\xBF] # excluding surrogates
| \xF0[\x90-\xBF][\x80-\xBF]{2} # planes 1-3
| [\xF1-\xF3][\x80-\xBF]{3} # planes 4-15
| \xF4[\x80-\x8F][\x80-\xBF]{2} # plane 16
)*$%xs'
, $string);

}
// function is_utf8

?>
up
1
garbage at iglou dot eu
7 years ago
For detect UTF-8, you can use:

if (preg_match('!!u', $str)) { echo 'utf-8'; }

- Norihiori
up
1
maarten
19 years ago
Sometimes mb_detect_string is not what you need. When using pdflib for example you want to VERIFY the correctness of utf-8. mb_detect_encoding reports some iso-8859-1 encoded text as utf-8.
To verify utf 8 use the following:

//
// utf8 encoding validation developed based on Wikipedia entry at:
// http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UTF-8
//
// Implemented as a recursive descent parser based on a simple state machine
// copyright 2005 Maarten Meijer
//
// This cries out for a C-implementation to be included in PHP core
//
function valid_1byte($char) {
if(!is_int($char)) return false;
return ($char & 0x80) == 0x00;
}

function valid_2byte($char) {
if(!is_int($char)) return false;
return ($char & 0xE0) == 0xC0;
}

function valid_3byte($char) {
if(!is_int($char)) return false;
return ($char & 0xF0) == 0xE0;
}

function valid_4byte($char) {
if(!is_int($char)) return false;
return ($char & 0xF8) == 0xF0;
}

function valid_nextbyte($char) {
if(!is_int($char)) return false;
return ($char & 0xC0) == 0x80;
}

function valid_utf8($string) {
$len = strlen($string);
$i = 0;
while( $i < $len ) {
$char = ord(substr($string, $i++, 1));
if(valid_1byte($char)) { // continue
continue;
} else if(valid_2byte($char)) { // check 1 byte
if(!valid_nextbyte(ord(substr($string, $i++, 1))))
return false;
} else if(valid_3byte($char)) { // check 2 bytes
if(!valid_nextbyte(ord(substr($string, $i++, 1))))
return false;
if(!valid_nextbyte(ord(substr($string, $i++, 1))))
return false;
} else if(valid_4byte($char)) { // check 3 bytes
if(!valid_nextbyte(ord(substr($string, $i++, 1))))
return false;
if(!valid_nextbyte(ord(substr($string, $i++, 1))))
return false;
if(!valid_nextbyte(ord(substr($string, $i++, 1))))
return false;
} // goto next char
}
return true; // done
}

for a drawing of the statemachine see: http://www.xs4all.nl/~mjmeijer/unicode.png and http://www.xs4all.nl/~mjmeijer/unicode2.png
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-1
d_maksimov
2 years ago
It was helpful for my exec(...) call. When it returned cp866 or cp1251:

try {
$line = iconv('CP866', 'CP1251', $line);
} catch(Exception $e) {
}
return iconv('CP1251', 'UTF-8', $line);
up
0
emoebel at web dot de
10 years ago
if the function " mb_detect_encoding" does not exist ...

... try:

<?php
// ----------------------------------------------------
if ( !function_exists('mb_detect_encoding') ) {

// ----------------------------------------------------------------
function mb_detect_encoding ($string, $enc=null, $ret=null) {

static
$enclist = array(
'UTF-8', 'ASCII',
'ISO-8859-1', 'ISO-8859-2', 'ISO-8859-3', 'ISO-8859-4', 'ISO-8859-5',
'ISO-8859-6', 'ISO-8859-7', 'ISO-8859-8', 'ISO-8859-9', 'ISO-8859-10',
'ISO-8859-13', 'ISO-8859-14', 'ISO-8859-15', 'ISO-8859-16',
'Windows-1251', 'Windows-1252', 'Windows-1254',
);

$result = false;

foreach (
$enclist as $item) {
$sample = iconv($item, $item, $string);
if (
md5($sample) == md5($string)) {
if (
$ret === NULL) { $result = $item; } else { $result = true; }
break;
}
}

return
$result;
}
// ----------------------------------------------------------------

}
// ----------------------------------------------------
?>

example / usage of: mb_detect_encoding()

<?php
// ------------------------------------------------------
function str_to_utf8 ($str) {

if (
mb_detect_encoding($str, 'UTF-8', true) === false) {
$str = utf8_encode($str);
}

return
$str;
}
// ------------------------------------------------------
?>

$txtstr = str_to_utf8($txtstr);
up
0
bmrkbyet at web dot de
11 years ago
a) if the FUNCTION mb_detect_encoding is not available:

### mb_detect_encoding ... iconv ###

<?php
// -------------------------------------------

if(!function_exists('mb_detect_encoding')) {
function
mb_detect_encoding($string, $enc=null) {

static
$list = array('utf-8', 'iso-8859-1', 'windows-1251');

foreach (
$list as $item) {
$sample = iconv($item, $item, $string);
if (
md5($sample) == md5($string)) {
if (
$enc == $item) { return true; } else { return $item; }
}
}
return
null;
}
}

// -------------------------------------------
?>

b) if the FUNCTION mb_convert_encoding is not available:

### mb_convert_encoding ... iconv ###

<?php
// -------------------------------------------

if(!function_exists('mb_convert_encoding')) {
function
mb_convert_encoding($string, $target_encoding, $source_encoding) {
$string = iconv($source_encoding, $target_encoding, $string);
return
$string;
}
}

// -------------------------------------------
?>
up
-1
telemach
19 years ago
beware : even if you need to distinguish between UTF-8 and ISO-8859-1, and you the following detection order (as chrigu suggests)

mb_detect_encoding('accentu?e' , 'UTF-8, ISO-8859-1')

returns ISO-8859-1, while

mb_detect_encoding('accentu?' , 'UTF-8, ISO-8859-1')

returns UTF-8

bottom line : an ending '?' (and probably other accentuated chars) mislead mb_detect_encoding
up
-1
recentUser at example dot com
6 years ago
In my environment (PHP 7.1.12),
"mb_detect_encoding()" doesn't work
where "mb_detect_order()" is not set appropriately.

To enable "mb_detect_encoding()" to work in such a case,
simply put "mb_detect_order('...')"
before "mb_detect_encoding()" in your script file.

Both
"ini_set('mbstring.language', '...');"
and
"ini_set('mbstring.detect_order', '...');"
DON'T work in script files for this purpose
whereas setting them in PHP.INI file may work.
up
-2
lotushzy at gmail dot com
6 years ago
About function mb_detect_encoding, the link http://php.net/manual/zh/function.mb-detect-encoding.php , like this:
mb_detect_encoding('áéóú', 'UTF-8', true); // false
but now the result is not false, can you give me reason, thanks!
up
-5
lexonight at yahoo dot com
7 years ago
<?php
$file
= file_get_contents("somefile.txt");
$encodings = implode(',', mb_list_encodings());
echo
mb_detect_encoding($file, $encodings, true);
?>
seems to work
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