Like all of these permalink solutions, friendly ID uses the parameterize
method to convert a string into a URL safe string. like so:
require 'active_support/all'
puts "Oh Hai There".parameterize
=> oh-hai-there
The problem comes in when you use non ASCII strings, which parameterize replaces with an empty string, causing your problem:
# encoding: UTF-8
require 'active_support/all'
puts "??".parameterize
=>
ActiveSupport provides a way to change non ASCII strings to a close approximate via the transliterate
method.
# encoding: UTF-8
require 'active_support/all'
include ActiveSupport::Inflector
puts transliterate("?r?sk?bing")
=> AEroskobing
But, if it doesn't know about a character, it'll default to ??
# encoding: UTF-8
require 'active_support/all'
include ActiveSupport::Inflector
puts transliterate "??"
=> ??
But, you can tell transliterate how to handle the characters. So in a Rails model
# Store the transliterations in locales/en.yml
en:
i18n:
transliterate:
rule:
?: "abc"
?: "def"
puts transliterate "??"
=> "abcdef"
So, you can use transliterate(title).parameterize
instead of just parameterize. And if you get the korean alphabet into transliterate section, you're close to golden.
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