There's no general way to know if a URI is UTF-8 encoded or not. See rfc RFC 2396:

In the simplest case, the original character sequence contains only characters that are defined in US-ASCII, and the two levels of mapping are simple and easily invertible: each 'original character' is represented as the octet for the US-ASCII code for it, which is, in turn, represented as either the US-ASCII character, or else the "%" escape sequence for that octet.

For original character sequences that contain non-ASCII characters, however, the situation is more difficult. Internet protocols that transmit octet sequences intended to represent character sequences are expected to provide some way of identifying the charset used, if there might be more than one rfc RFC 2277. However, there is currently no provision within the generic URI syntax to accomplish this identification. An individual URI scheme may require a single charset, define a default charset, or provide a way to indicate the charset used.

You could use decode('utf-8',$string) to get the right characters after uri_unescaping, provided the uris are always utf-8 encoded.


In reply to Re: uri_unescape not correct by Joost
in thread uri_unescape not correct by rsiedl

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