Differences between utf8 and latin1

MysqlUtf 8InstallationLatin1

Mysql Problem Overview


what is the difference between utf8 and latin1?

Mysql Solutions


Solution 1 - Mysql

UTF-8 is prepared for world domination, Latin1 isn't.

If you're trying to store non-Latin characters like Chinese, Japanese, Hebrew, Russian, etc using Latin1 encoding, then they will end up as mojibake. You may find the introductory text of this article useful (and even more if you know a bit Java).

Note that full 4-byte UTF-8 support was only introduced in MySQL 5.5. Before that version, it only goes up to 3 bytes per character, not 4 bytes per character. So, it supported only the BMP plane and not e.g. the Emoji plane. If you want full 4-byte UTF-8 support, upgrade MySQL to at least 5.5 or go for another RDBMS like PostgreSQL. In MySQL 5.5+ it's called utf8mb4.

Solution 2 - Mysql

In latin1 each character is exactly one byte long. In utf8 a character can consist of more than one byte. Consequently utf8 has more characters than latin1 (and the characters they do have in common aren't necessarily represented by the same byte/bytesequence).

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Content TypeOriginal AuthorOriginal Content on Stackoverflow
QuestionbinbashView Question on Stackoverflow
Solution 1 - MysqlBalusCView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 2 - Mysqlsepp2kView Answer on Stackoverflow