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56

answers:

2

Hi guys,

How can I stop mysql from converting ' into ’ when I do an insert?

i believe it has something to do with charset or something?

I am using php to do the mysql_insert.

A: 

Maybe someone will know the answer immediately, but I don't. However here are a few suggestions on what to examine (and possibly expand the question on)

When dealing with encodings and escaping you should include the full history of data

  • how was it created
  • what happened to it before the problem (did it have to go through backup, e-mail, was it created on a different server, OS, etc..; if it was transferred then was it as text file?)

The above is because anything that writes to a text file (browser, mysql client, web server, php application, to name a few layers that could have done it) can mess up character coding.

To troubleshoot, you can start eliminating, and thus the first step (in my book), is to

  1. connect to mysql server using mysql command line client.
  2. check the output of SHOW VARIABLES LIKE 'character_set%'
    (so even in this simple environment you have 7 values that can influence how the data is parsed, stored and/or displayed
  3. inspect SHOW CREATE TABLE TableName, and look for charset and collation info, both default for the table and explicit definition on columns

Having said all of the above, I don't think any western script would transcode a single quote character. So you might need to look at your escaping and other data processing.

EDIT Most of the above from answer and discussion here

Unreason
+5  A: 

The single quotation mark you posted is called an 'acute accent', which is often converted from the generic single quotation mark by some web applications. It's a UTF8 character, which when inserted into a Latin-1 database translates to '’'. This means that you need to change MySQL's charset to UTF8, or alternatively change your website's charset to Latin-1. The former would be preferred:

ALTER DATABASE YourDatabase CHARACTER SET utf8;
ALTER TABLE YourTableOne CONVERT TO CHARACTER SET utf8;
ALTER TABLE YourTableTwo CONVERT TO CHARACTER SET utf8;
...
ALTER TABLE YourTableN CONVERT TO CHARACTER SET utf8;
Ashley Williams
I did this and now the table is utf8_general_ci but I am still getting the same issue?
Hailwood
It is effecting the `’`
Hailwood
@Hailwood: You should check the connection encoding as well.
AndiDog
How do you do that?
Hailwood
I tried doing ` mysql_set_charset( 'utf8_general_ci' ,$this->link ); But it makes no difference
Hailwood
@Hailwood: Then you should post some code, or even better, a small snippet to reproduce the problem.
AndiDog