際際滷shows by User: RayPaseur / http://www.slideshare.net/images/logo.gif 際際滷shows by User: RayPaseur / Tue, 09 Sep 2014 14:31:33 GMT 際際滷Share feed for 際際滷shows by User: RayPaseur Unicode, PHP, and Character Set Collisions /slideshow/unicode-php-and-character-set-collisions/38887597 unicodepresentation-140909143133-phpapp02
In recent years UTF-8 has become the dominant character encoding scheme, supplanting extended ASCII. This has led to an uneasy transition for users of PHP, where the assumption has always been that one character equals one byte. This presentation is for the DC PHP Developers' Community meeting on September 10, 2014. It examines the history of character set encoding and the ways that the PHP community is responding to the transition to UTF-8. Not surprisingly, there are surprises in the process! The slides are derived from the article here: http://iconoun.com/articles/collisions]]>

In recent years UTF-8 has become the dominant character encoding scheme, supplanting extended ASCII. This has led to an uneasy transition for users of PHP, where the assumption has always been that one character equals one byte. This presentation is for the DC PHP Developers' Community meeting on September 10, 2014. It examines the history of character set encoding and the ways that the PHP community is responding to the transition to UTF-8. Not surprisingly, there are surprises in the process! The slides are derived from the article here: http://iconoun.com/articles/collisions]]>
Tue, 09 Sep 2014 14:31:33 GMT /slideshow/unicode-php-and-character-set-collisions/38887597 RayPaseur@slideshare.net(RayPaseur) Unicode, PHP, and Character Set Collisions RayPaseur In recent years UTF-8 has become the dominant character encoding scheme, supplanting extended ASCII. This has led to an uneasy transition for users of PHP, where the assumption has always been that one character equals one byte. This presentation is for the DC PHP Developers' Community meeting on September 10, 2014. It examines the history of character set encoding and the ways that the PHP community is responding to the transition to UTF-8. Not surprisingly, there are surprises in the process! The slides are derived from the article here: http://iconoun.com/articles/collisions <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/unicodepresentation-140909143133-phpapp02-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> In recent years UTF-8 has become the dominant character encoding scheme, supplanting extended ASCII. This has led to an uneasy transition for users of PHP, where the assumption has always been that one character equals one byte. This presentation is for the DC PHP Developers&#39; Community meeting on September 10, 2014. It examines the history of character set encoding and the ways that the PHP community is responding to the transition to UTF-8. Not surprisingly, there are surprises in the process! The slides are derived from the article here: http://iconoun.com/articles/collisions
Unicode, PHP, and Character Set Collisions from Ray Paseur
]]>
1909 5 https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/unicodepresentation-140909143133-phpapp02-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&height=120&fit=bounds presentation Black http://activitystrea.ms/schema/1.0/post http://activitystrea.ms/schema/1.0/posted 0
https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/profile-photo-RayPaseur-48x48.jpg?cb=1523608739 Professional PHP developer www.iconoun.com