Utf-8

: Always set the charset in your HTML head using as the very first element.

UTF-8 (Unicode Transformation Format – 8-bit) is the undisputed champion of character encoding, powering over 98% of the modern web. It is a standard that strikes a near-perfect balance between efficiency and universal compatibility. The Core Strengths

: Unlike fixed-width encodings (like UTF-32), UTF-8 uses only one byte for standard English text, scaling up to four bytes only when necessary for more complex characters. : Always set the charset in your HTML

: It can represent every character in the Unicode standard , from basic Latin letters to complex emojis and ancient scripts.

: When processing strings, use multi-byte aware functions (e.g., mb_strlen() in PHP) because standard length functions will count bytes rather than the actual number of characters. The Core Strengths : Unlike fixed-width encodings (like

: The first 128 characters of UTF-8 are identical to ASCII, meaning any valid ASCII file is also a valid UTF-8 file.

: Save source files in UTF-8 without BOM (Byte Order Mark) to avoid unexpected "weird characters" in certain environments, though some legacy Windows applications may still prefer the BOM. The "Review" Verdict : The first 128 characters of UTF-8 are

For a "solid" setup, developers should follow these industry standards: