If you see weird characters like this showing up on people’s ~ web pages, it’s because our HTML files are no longer being served as UTF-8 by default.
I have no idea when it changed, but possibly it's a bit of custom configuration that didn’t survive the server switch.
To fix your own stuff, just put a little magic in each page’s <head> section:
<meta charset="UTF-8">
In case anyone is interested, the semi-official name for these things is Mojibake (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mojibake)
-Travis
On 9/16/19 1:20 PM, Joel Dueck wrote:
If you see weird characters like this showing up on people’s ~ web pages, it’s because our HTML files are no longer being served as UTF-8 by default.
I have no idea when it changed, but possibly it's a bit of custom configuration that didn’t survive the server switch.
To fix your own stuff, just put a little magic in each page’s <head> section:
<meta charset="UTF-8">
I set charset = UTF-8 for the webserver, so hopefully it will find the correct default without needing to explicitly set it.
~ben
On 9/17/19 12:03 AM, Travis Briggs wrote:
In case anyone is interested, the semi-official name for these things is Mojibake (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mojibake)
-Travis
On 9/16/19 1:20 PM, Joel Dueck wrote:
If you see weird characters like this showing up on people’s ~ web pages, it’s because our HTML files are no longer being served as UTF-8 by default.
I have no idea when it changed, but possibly it's a bit of custom configuration that didn’t survive the server switch.
To fix your own stuff, just put a little magic in each page’s <head> section:
<meta charset="UTF-8">
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