Why do some websites have ?utf8=✓ in their title?
I've noticed that a lot of websites, when searching or just browsing, will add a get variable called utf
and set it equal to a check mark (?utf8=✓
).
Two examples are:
Dotabuff has its search URL include it. Example: dotabuff.com/search?utf8=✓&q=PPD
Bibme also has its search URL include it. Example: bibme.org/mla/website-citation/search?utf8=✓&q=someurl.com
Solution 1:
URIs contain utf8=✓
to force the client to send UTF-8.
It works because the key-value-pair (which is ignored by the target) contains a unicode-only character.
From Is the use of “utf8=✓” preferable to “utf8=true”?:
By default, older versions of IE (<=8) will submit form data in Latin-1 encoding if possible. By including a character that can't be expressed in Latin-1, IE is forced to use UTF-8 encoding for its form submissions, which simplifies various backend processes, for example database persistence.
If the parameter was instead
utf8=true
then this wouldn't trigger the UTF-8 encoding in these browsers.